CEOs Diverge on Moore's Law
Architecture is the new driver, say Arm, Micron, Xilinx
By Rick Merritt, EETimes
July 19, 2019
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Chief executives of Arm, Micron, and Xilinx gave diverging views on the outlook for Moore’s Law but shared enthusiasm for the future of semiconductors in a panel hosted by the Churchill Club here.
Moore’s Law has run out of gas, “and that is profound,” said Victor Peng, CEO of Xilinx, pointing to the rising costs of increasing performance and reducing power and area of chips.
“You can get one of the three, it’s hard to get two of three, and I would challenge anyone who says they can get three of the three,” he said. Today’s extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems only remove the complexity of multi-patterning today’s chips, the 7-5-3-nm names of the latest nodes “are all marketing numbers, and no one has fixed the interconnect problem.”
![]() |
E-mail This Article | ![]() |
![]() |
Printer-Friendly Page |
Related News
Breaking News
- RISC-V International Promotes Andrea Gallo to CEO
- See the 2025 Best Edge AI Processor IP at the Embedded Vision Summit
- Andes Technology Showcases RISC-V AI Leadership at RISC-V Summit Europe 2025
- RISC-V Royalty-Driven Revenue to Exceed License Revenue by 2027
- Keysom Unveils Keysom Core Explorer V1.0
Most Popular
- RISC-V Royalty-Driven Revenue to Exceed License Revenue by 2027
- SiFive and Kinara Partner to Offer Bare Metal Access to RISC-V Vector Processors
- Imagination Announces E-Series: A New Era of On-Device AI and Graphics
- Siemens to accelerate customer time to market with advanced silicon IP through new Alphawave Semi partnership
- Cadence Unveils Millennium M2000 Supercomputer with NVIDIA Blackwell Systems to Transform AI-Driven Silicon, Systems and Drug Design