Sentences with phrase «more transistors»

Historically, we have achieved faster processing speeds by cramming more transistors onto silicon chips.
The processor is more efficient than current 14nm processor as it includes more transistors in a similar surface area on the chipset.
For decades, progress in electronics has meant shrinking the size of each transistor to pack more transistors on a chip.
By Mores law it should be able to have 16 times more transistor on the same size chip for the same price let alone the other improvements that have been done like clock speed, new ways to dope and multi core.
By shrinking the process, Apple was able to include more transistors in a smaller space, which is expected to boost performance and battery life.
The 835 packs in more transistors using the same surface area as the 821, which makes it more performance - efficient, as it will require less battery and have more output in terms of processing power.
For example, the type of computing logic the team used requires more transistors than other approaches, largely wiping out gains from more closely packing the components.
While computer chips are typically made of bulky carbon compounds, scientists at the Center for Sustainable Materials Chemistry at Oregon State University are looking to replace these bulky compounds with metal oxides, which would allow more transistors to fit on a chip.
One potential application for these lies in the production of computer chips, allowing them to bear more transistors and thus increase the speed of computers in an unprecedented way.
The processors built using this technology can fit 30 percent more transistors compared to 14nm processors.
The internal hardware is top - notch as well: Samsung is using its latest 10nm node for the Exynos 8895, and what it essentially translates to is that the manufacturer figured out a way to cram more transistors into a smaller package.
But speed has plateaued, the energy required to run systems is rising sharply and industry can't indefinitely continue to cram more transistors onto chips.
Instead of talking about how it might power the next wave of slick laptops, automated drones, or self - driving cars, Intel executives on Tuesday explained how the company could make its chips more powerful and energy efficient by cramming more transistors and other features onto the silicon wafers.
The key is making the insulator as thin as possible in order to switch the channel faster and pack more transistors onto a chip.
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