Wow thats great!
I guess it been 32nm helps alot,What i want to know is though....they can only go so far with shrinking the die, 65nm,45nm,32nm....I wounder what will happen when they cant shrink them anymore?![]()
nanotechnology =]
Wow thats great!
I guess it been 32nm helps alot,What i want to know is though....they can only go so far with shrinking the die, 65nm,45nm,32nm....I wounder what will happen when they cant shrink them anymore?![]()
nm = nanometer ... so aren't we already using nanotechnology?
I guess we'll have to make the CPU's bigger... until they consume the earth.
Got any pics of the setup? Or is not as attractive in person as it is on CPU-Z?
nm = nanometer ... so aren't we already using nanotechnology?
I guess we'll have to make the CPU's bigger... until they consume the earth.
However, the device is many times smaller than the components found in chips in contemporary computers. On chips where components are 22 nanometres in size, transistor gates are about 42 atoms across
The transistor is not the smallest ever created as two research groups have previously managed to produce working single-atom transistors.