Gordon Moore: Software is too complex
News Gordon Moore, who famously coined the law that has described - and to some extent driven - the increasing power of computer chips over the past 40 years, warned on Wednesday that in one sense at least computers have got just too complicated.
[April 13, 2005, 12:45]
Gordon Moore: How I came up with the Law
News Intel co-founder and former chief executive Gordon Moore, who became famous for the eponymous law that describes how the number of transistors on a processor will increase, took time out on Wednesday to explain how he came up with his famous law...
[April 13, 2005, 11:40]
Gordon Moore: How I came up with the Law
Talkback How strange for a technology article that you use phrase ".the author dialled in from Hawwai to tell us. Why not say ".he telephoned us. I am quite sure that his telephone would no longer have a dial and that future generations reading this article...
[April 14, 2005, 8:45]
Moore's last sigh
Leader Like the medieval Vatican chasing a holy relic, Intel has sent out a declaration to all the lands: "Deliver unto us the original magazine containing Gordon Moore's famous law, and we shall shower you with gold".
[April 12, 2005, 12:00]
Barrett and Grove: two contrasting styles
News He had been groomed for the top spot both by Grove and Chairman Emeritus Gordon Moore. His complement has been Gordon Moore, who's more of a behind the scenes technician. In fact, analysts said Barrett is more akin to Moore than Grove, both details...
[March 27, 1998, 8:48]
Lacey's Paper Round
News Intel's Gordon Moore gives £7.4 million to Cambridge University - Financial Times Intel's Gordon Moore gives over £7 million to Cambridge University, Sunday Business reports on the looming battle for interactive services as part of digital...
[October 6, 1998, 12:47]
Giving by tech leaders tumbles
News Intel co-founder Gordon Moore was third on the list with a pledge of $300m for the education and science programs at the California Institute of Technology. In 2000, Moore was second on the list behind Gates with a $5bn gift to endow the Gordon E...
[January 3, 2002, 6:31]
Barrett extends silicon roadmap
News Moore's Law is the 1965 projection by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore that the number of transistors on a chip will double about once every two years. I've told Gordon I plan to help him celebrate the 50th anniversary of Moore's Law in 2015, and...
[March 2, 2005, 9:30]
The transistor turns 60
News Noyce, Gordon Moore, Eugene Kleiner and five other employees one day bolted to Fairchild Semiconductor. In a gesture of solidarity, Kilby invited Gordon Moore to join him at the Nobel ceremonies. Every year, someone claims that Moore's Law — which...
[December 17, 2007, 12:25]
Moore has trouble seeing past silicon
News Although many believe the future of the computing industry lies with building chips out of carbon nanotubes or other novel materials, Intel co-founder Gordon Moore predicted it won't be easy to replace silicon.
[March 10, 2005, 8:30]
Moore: No more Moore's Law
News At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Intel co-founder Gordon Moore discusses the end of Moore's Law, which he believes will hit a wall in the next 10 to 15 years.
[September 20, 2007, 17:23]
Moore's Law to roll on for another decade
News Moore's Law will continue for at least another 10 years, according to Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, but it's going to take a lot of work. Another decade is probably straightforward," Moore said, speaking at the International Solid-States Circuits...
[February 11, 2003, 7:59]
Librarians mutiny over Moore's Law bounty
Talkback Why Mr Gordon Moore himself didn't keep a copy of the original with him? It's strange.
[April 15, 2005, 23:55]
Librarians mutiny over Moore's Law bounty
News The April 19, 1965, issue of the magazine contained an article by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore that described how the number of components on integrated circuits was doubling every year. A day after Intel said it would offer $10,000 (£5,315) for a...
[April 15, 2005, 9:50]
What's the best way to increase processing power?
News Most IT professionals who have been in the business for any length of time are intimately familiar with the effects of Moore's Law, first postulated by Gordon Moore of Intel in the 1960s, which estimates that computer processing power roughly...
[August 2, 2006, 16:40]
'Slacking' can speed up complicated computer work
News The research is entitled "The Effects of Moore's Law and Slacking on Large Computations" making reference to the "law" famously expounded by Intel founder Gordon Moore in 1965, that computational power doubles roughly every 18 months.
[January 7, 2000, 6:50]
Intel uses EUV tool to speed chips
News Moore's Law, formulated by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, has to do with the pace of chipmaking advances. The use of EUV will allow us to keep on the Moore's Law path with a new technology generation every two years," Peter Silverman, director of...
[April 23, 2002, 8:22]
Intel celebrates 35 years
News Thirty-five years ago, the semiconductor industry as a whole accounted for $1bn (£0.63bn) in revenue, said co-founder Gordon Moore. In the late 1960s, Noyce and Moore worked at Fairchild Camera and Instrument.
[July 17, 2003, 13:32]
News Schmooze: Tech industry gets re-stated
News Intel's Gordon Moore thinks his namesake law regarding the increase of processor power is still going strong, which is possibly a veiled plug for Itanium 2. There's life in the old law yet, says Moore
[July 12, 2002, 11:11]
Infineon and IBM in Ovonic collaboration
News Intel co-founder Gordon Moore predicted Ovonics would become popular 30 years ago, but it hasn't happened yet. Researchers around the globe are searching for materials and structures that will enable their companies to get off the hamster wheel of...
[May 24, 2005, 15:45]



