Moore's law

noun, often capitalized L
\ ˈmȯrz- How to pronounce Moore's law (audio) , ˈmu̇rz-\

Definition of Moore's law

: an axiom of microprocessor development usually holding that processing power doubles about every 18 months especially relative to cost or size

First Known Use of Moore's law

1977, in the meaning defined above

History and Etymology for Moore's law

Gordon E. Moore born 1929 American computer industry executive

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More Definitions for Moore's law

Moore's law

noun

Financial Definition of Moore's law

What It Is

Moore's law describes the computing hardware trend that transistors on an integrated circuit will double every two years.

How It Works

In 1965, Gordon E. Moore, the co-founder of Intel published a paper predicting that the integrated circuit could be expanded exponentially at a reasonable cost approximately every two years.  At the time, the integrated circuit, a key component in the central processing unit of computers had only been around for seven years.   Indeed, the trend has continued for over fifty years with no sign of abating.

For the consumer, Moore's law is demonstrated by a $1500 computer today being worth half that amount next year and being almost obsolete in two years.

While Moore's law is a really just an observation of a trend, it has also become a goal of the electronics industry.  The innovation of electronic design and manufacturing costs, including the objective of placing whole "systems" on a chip, miniaturization of electronic devices, and the seamless integration of electronics into social fabric of daily life are outcomes from these industry goals.

Why It Matters

Moore's law has been applied (though not by Moore) across the entire electronic sector, marking the price-performance trends for processing speed, memory, storage, digital networks, and picture resolution by the same exponential growth measure while controlling for cost.

Most agree that the trend of continued price-performance improvements cannot continue at this exponential rate forever.  While the price may remain constant, performance cannot exceed physical limitations of processors.

Source: Investing Answers