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Whistling Past the Graveyard: Why the End of Moore’s Law Matters to All of CS
Chairs: Tom Conte, Georgia Tech, and Margaret Martonosi, Princeton UniversitySpeakers: David Brooks, Harvard University, Paolo Gargini, IEEE International Roadmap of Devices and Systems, Mark Hill, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Krysta Svore, Microsoft Research
“Moore’s Law is ending!”
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Which is true (show of hands):
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“Moore’s Law ended a long time ago!”
Which is true (show of hands):
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“Moore’s Law will never end!”
Which is true (show of hands):
“Moore’s Law is ending!”
5
“Moore’s Law ended a long time ago!”
“Moore’s Law will never end!”
Which is true:
Moore’s Law means computers double in speed every X months
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Moore’s Law means usable transistor speed increases every X months
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Moore’s Law means the number of transistors per unit area for a given cost increases every X months
Moore’s Law means computers double in speed every X months
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Moore’s Law means usable transistor speed increases every X months
Moore’s Law means the number of transistors per unit area for a given cost increases every X months
Architects have been working hard to hide this from you
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Moore’s law
Processorperformance
Source: Sanjay Patel, UIUC (used with permission)
7/19/16
logic
device
FU
Microarchitecture
ISA
Architecture
API
Language
Algorithm
Differing Levels of Disruption in Computing Stack
Adiabatic,Reversible,Cryogenic
Neuromorphic
ApproximateStochastic3D Moore
Quantum
LEGEND: No Disruption Total Disruption
New switch
Level 1 2 3 4 5
Panelists
David Brooks, Harvard UniversityPaolo Gargini, IEEE International Roadmap of Devices and SystemsMark Hill, University of Wisconsin-MadisonKrysta Svore, Microsoft Research
7/19/1613
Question 1
There have been lots of “End of Moore’s Law” predictions over literally decades. For those in the audience who might still be wondering, what makes the current “End of Moore’s Law” situation one worth paying attention to?
7/19/1614
Question 2
It might be tempting to view End of Moore’s Law issues as mostly affecting the hardware portion of the field, with lesser impact on other aspects of CS. What are some specific examples you see regarding its impact on all aspects of CS departments and of the field as a whole?
7/19/1615
Question 3
How has your research changed as a result of technology trends like the deceleration of Moore’s Law and Dennard Scaling?
7/19/1616
Question 4
The hope is that new technologies and techniques might emerge to overcome the slowdowns being seen in CMOS semiconductor technologies. What are some of these new technologies, and how might they influence CS as a whole?
7/19/1617
Your questions
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