Prolegomena To Any Future Device Physics
Adam L. Friedman, Aubrey T. Hanbicki

TL;DR
This paper critiques the reliance on Moore's law in the semiconductor industry, arguing for a shift in perspective and language towards a broader, more innovative framework called the Feynman Mandate to guide future device physics advancements.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of the Feynman Mandate as a new paradigm and advocates for changing the language and metrics used to measure progress in device physics.
Findings
Moore's law's language inhibits revolutionary progress.
Proposes the Feynman Mandate as a new guiding principle.
Suggests a new metric for measuring technological advancement.
Abstract
For the last 60 years, advances in conventional computing platforms have been driven by the empirical notion known as Moores law. In its essence, Moores law is a ubiquitous description of the exponential increase in transistor density acting as a proxy for computing power as a function of time. While this trend started as an interesting observation, it has evolved into a self-fulfilling prophecy used to drive the entire semiconductor industry. Arguments for or against the end of Moores law have proliferated and the reluctant consensus is that Moores law will disappear. Warnings of the end of this trend have been repeatedly thwarted by advances in many different aspects of the computing ecosystem including materials improvements, device design, device or circuit cleverness, and software and architectural innovations. While many have argued the impending doom of Moores law is the ultimate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing · Ferroelectric and Negative Capacitance Devices · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms
