If Moore's law is dead then does that mean we will never ever see 100000x performance gains again?

If Moore's law is dead then does that mean we will never ever see 100000x performance gains again?

Not with silicon

Yes

if you package 4 cpus together on one PCB does that count towards moore's law ?

Just wait for (((them))) to release quantum computing to the public

The real gains are in storage tech right now. In the time that most people are still being blown away by simple SATA SSDs, the top of the line stuff has gone through like 5 or 6 different speed upgrades.

It means we finally have to pick up where they left off in the 70s and solve the Von Neumann bottleneck. Non-Vons in 5 years, tops.

Sadly, decreasing the chip size became a giant monster.

Which means it's time to megazord!

If you put multiple cores on a single die does that count towards moore's law ?
If you put multiple pipelines in a superscalar CPU does that count towards moore's law ?

>people that are not 25 and own a computer will never experience the wonders of Moore's Law

I think it will be more interesting when they start to assemble CPUs with several parts, like separate cache, separate FPU and Integer units, scheduler and so forth.
Something worthy of the power rangers theme.

If they retire silicon and start to build upon unobtainium we will truly see technology.

yeah, I would rather have GOOD games again, thanks.

for some reason, I thought I was on Sup Forums hmm

The solution is the same.
Just get a retrothing.
Good games, no RGB shit, no windows 10 spyware hell, no intel ME spyware hell, true mustard race 3Dfx card, no shitty laggy LCD screens...

what the hell, that would be a huge step backwards.

Well, fuck you then.

we will get performance gains, in the form of better designed programs.
cant rely on computers getting better to fix your garbage code anymore.

Learn fpga stuff. They can do this, plus much more.

Anyone else get the ending where the tree is literally you?

When quantum/binary hybrids are made and affordable to the public, it'll probably start again.

>CPUs transistors parts are the size of atoms
>We discover that Element X if used in Z way is a lot better semiconductor than silicon
>Smart CPUs?
>We manage to make base3 stable CPUs
>Quantum computers Don't require 0.01 Kelvin to work properly (or we figure out a cheap way to cool it)
>Quantom base3 CPUs become stable
>(Technology we haven't discovered yet and won't be able to because to that time we'd be probably dead because of our greed that made us evolve to what we are)
Ther are a lot of possibilities

Not with anything. the atomic limit would have been reached.

I hope gaymers will leave this board.

last time i heard the awesome propierties of graphene being able to place atom structures on 2d and 3d and even more overlap the layers is literally the future

>wonders
buy a 1000$ computer
3 years later
500$ is twice as powerful

Pretty sure they basically already do this. Everything is just really close together so the signals can move more quickly between the components.

So i have a 7970 and an i5 2500k, what is the 500 usd 2x power equivalent?

during the mid-2000s
it would be the difference between a P4 32-bit single core processor and a C2Q 64bit quad core processor