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Technology Stocks : The *NEW* Frank Coluccio Technology Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (29067)1/16/2009 12:47:30 PM
From: Elsewhere  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 46821
 
In a recent study, the researchers have predicted that the Internet will double in size every 5.32 years.

(Quote from the paper)

In Germany traffic doubles every year:

Internet traffic at German net node DE-CIX de-cix.net has doubled in 2008
[Der Internetverkehr am großen deutschen Netzknoten DE-CIX hat sich 2008 verdoppelt]
heise online Jan. 15, 2009
heise.de
moeller-horcher.de

Peak value in Dec. 2008 was 600 Gbps.
Another doubling is expected in 2009.



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (29067)7/27/2009 6:27:59 AM
From: axial1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 46821
 
Fascinating article, covering different technologies...

"Was Moore's Law Inevitable?"

- snip -

"The "technology road map" produced by Semiconductor Industry Association in the 1990s was a major tool in cementing the role of Moore's law in chips and society. According to David Brock, author of Understanding Moore's Law, the SIA road map "transformed Moore's law from a prediction to a self-fulfilling prophecy. It spelled out what needed to be accomplished, and when." A major factor in semiconductor manufacturing process are the photoresist masks which craft the thin etched conducting wires on a chip. The masks have to get smaller in order for the chip to get smaller. Elsa Reichmanis is the foremost photoresist technical guru in Silicon Valley. She says, "Advances in the [process] technology today are largely driven by the Semiconductor Industry Association." Raj Gupta, a materials scientist and CEO of Rohm and Haas, declares "They" -- the SIA road map -- "say what performance they need [for new electronic materials], and by which date." Andrew Odlyzko from AT&T Bell Laboratories concurs: "Management is *not* telling a researcher, 'You are the best we could find, here are the tools, please go off and find something that will let us leapfrog the competition.' Instead, the attitude is, 'Either you and your 999 colleagues double the performance of our microprocessors in the next 18 months, to keep up with the competition, or you are fired.'" Gordon Moore reiterated the importance of SIA in a 2005 interview with Charlie Rose: "the Semiconductor Industry Association put out a roadmap for the technology for the industry that took into account these exponential growths to see what research had to be done to make sure we could stay on that curve. So it's kind of become a self-fulfilling prophecy."



kk.org

Jim



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (29067)9/8/2009 12:52:21 AM
From: axial  Respond to of 46821
 
Why China's Chip Industry Won't Catch America's

Chinese semiconductor companies have produced some design wins, but they are still struggling when it comes to any true silicon breakthroughs

businessweek.com

Jim