With the new Ryzen being released, this was most interesting:
Isnt 7nm pretty much hitting the limit of what silicon can do?i thought we would be working more on 128 bit computing by now, over the 5 ghz that processors can hit now.
I believe that this might help explain the limitations that are coming close.Isnt 7nm pretty much hitting the limit of what silicon can do?
Electrons are jumping around at this point.
edit: Samsung has 5nm production, but estimates are transistors stop getting smaller by 2021
Isnt 7nm pretty much hitting the limit of what silicon can do?
Electrons are jumping around at this point.
edit: Samsung has 5nm production, but estimates are transistors stop getting smaller by 2021
Not mine, ripped off r/pcmasterraceWow, I remember building computers with the K7. Amazing you still have that!
I don't normally comment on or describe this kind of stuff, it becomes a kind of messy thing really quickly because of the amount of speculation and misdirection in marketing. And marketing is something these companies have in spades. I do think they will get to 3nm, but it will be marketing that gets there first, and they will get there in 2021. Come hell or high water. We call it marketing jiz (or jizz), by the way. Just so you know.Isnt 7nm pretty much hitting the limit of what silicon can do?
Electrons are jumping around at this point.
edit: Samsung has 5nm production, but estimates are transistors stop getting smaller by 2021
"IT"LL BLOW YOUR MIND!" Classic 90's.With the new Ryzen being released, this was most interesting:
Yep. And 8" single sided floppy disks before that. 120Kb ftw. I remember going to a hospital to help configure a system, and they had the boot disk stuck to the side of the computer with a magnet, for "safe keeping close to the computer"... Seriously.I remember when you use to have to use a pair of 5" floppy disks with 1 running the OS & the other whatever program that you wanted to use. Which often required switching the 2nd disk to perform extended functions.
They did what? *epic cringe* I'm guessing that they periodically needed new disks programmed for them.Yep. And 8" single sided floppy disks before that. 120Kb ftw. I remember going to a hospital to help configure a system, and they had the boot disk stuck to the side of the computer with a magnet, for "safe keeping close to the computer"... Seriously.
There were a lot of funny things happening back then. We had the IBM PC, and the Apple LISA ... the Mac didn't come out until Superbowl Sunday in '84. (Apple also apologized for the LISA) "They'd never be more than toys, mini-computers are where it's at." That's the thinking. Inside of 2 years, all that was history. IT departments all over the globe have been trying to find a way to return to the Mini-Computer ever since.They did what? *epic cringe* I'm guessing that they periodically needed new disks programmed for them.