It's amazing how much technology has progressed over this past decade....and now it's even more amazing how it has seemingly hit a ceiling with respect to CPU clock rate speeds. An Intel Pentium4 first hit the market with an advertise 3GHZ clock rate and after almost 7 years...it seems that has gone no where with the highest speed of 3.33GHZ for the E8600 Wolfdale (at least according to newegg...although there may be faster business/commercial CPUs that I'm unaware of). Now obviously, there's more to it than simply the GHZ clock speed in terms of performance and newer CPUs are faster performers when benchmarked with Pi calculations and whatnot. And obviously enthusiasts have pushed clock rates into the 4GHZ territory, but imagine if the clock rates came stock at 4GHZ...!
I'm just curious as to why, with regard to the basic clock rate of CPUs, they seem to be hovering at around 3GHZ. I've heard that this is because they couldn't physically manufacture for higher clock rates at our current production technology (hence, they just put more cores into each CPU: dual core, quad core, etc.)
So is this a limit to our progress in computational power? Or are we just going to add more cores to each CPU? Or maybe we need to dig up some alien technology they've been hiding under Area 51?
I'm just curious as to why, with regard to the basic clock rate of CPUs, they seem to be hovering at around 3GHZ. I've heard that this is because they couldn't physically manufacture for higher clock rates at our current production technology (hence, they just put more cores into each CPU: dual core, quad core, etc.)
So is this a limit to our progress in computational power? Or are we just going to add more cores to each CPU? Or maybe we need to dig up some alien technology they've been hiding under Area 51?
