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GLink
I'd also like to point out that once we hit the physics-based limit on feature ...
Embd SW netwk
Failure to account for Moore's Law has resulted in a number of projects being ...
Moore's Law trumped by Wright's Law
R Colin Johnson
3/7/2013 2:43 PM EST
PORTLAND, Ore.—When it comes to predicting the future, Moore's Law has been a time-worn bell-weather. But did you know its just one of several competing laws with names like Sinclair-Klepper-Cohen's, Goddard's and Wright's Law?
Recently researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) compared the accuracy of each competing law in both its short- and long-term predictions. MIT claims their findings will improve the accuracy of future predictions about technological change, candidate technologies and policies for global change.
Overall the best long-term predictor is Wright's Law, which improves its accuracy over Moore's law by framing its horizon in terms of units-of-production instead of absolute time. For instance, Moore's Law predicts that every 18 months the density of semiconductors will double, whereas Wright's Law predicts that as the number of units manufactured increases the cost-of-production decreases (no matter how long that might take). Thus Wright's Law--named after aeronautical engineer, Theodore "T.P." Wright--offers more accurate long-term predictions since it automatically adapts to economic growth rates.

Growth of prediction errors for competing laws to Moore's Law shows Wright's Law the best at long-time horizons, Goddard's Law as the worse at short time horizons, and Sinclair-Klepper-Cohen the worst for long-time horizons.
Wright's and other alternatives, such as Goddard's (which postulates that progress is driven only by economies of scale) and Sinclair-Klepper-Cohen's (which combines Wright's and Goddard's), were compared to the actual cost and production units in 62 different technologies, including computers, communications systems, solar cells, aircraft and automobiles. Historical data allowed accurate comparisons using "hind-casting" whereby a statistical model was developed to rank the performance of each postulated law over time.
MIT claims its results show that with careful use of historical data, future technological progress is forecastable with a typical accuracy of about 2.5 percent per year. The research was conducted by MIT professor Jessika Trancik, professor Bela Nagy at the Santa Fe Institute, professor Doyne Farmer at the University of Oxford and and professor Quan Bui at St. JohnÕs College (Santa Fe, N.M.).
Recently researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) compared the accuracy of each competing law in both its short- and long-term predictions. MIT claims their findings will improve the accuracy of future predictions about technological change, candidate technologies and policies for global change.
Overall the best long-term predictor is Wright's Law, which improves its accuracy over Moore's law by framing its horizon in terms of units-of-production instead of absolute time. For instance, Moore's Law predicts that every 18 months the density of semiconductors will double, whereas Wright's Law predicts that as the number of units manufactured increases the cost-of-production decreases (no matter how long that might take). Thus Wright's Law--named after aeronautical engineer, Theodore "T.P." Wright--offers more accurate long-term predictions since it automatically adapts to economic growth rates.

Growth of prediction errors for competing laws to Moore's Law shows Wright's Law the best at long-time horizons, Goddard's Law as the worse at short time horizons, and Sinclair-Klepper-Cohen the worst for long-time horizons.
Wright's and other alternatives, such as Goddard's (which postulates that progress is driven only by economies of scale) and Sinclair-Klepper-Cohen's (which combines Wright's and Goddard's), were compared to the actual cost and production units in 62 different technologies, including computers, communications systems, solar cells, aircraft and automobiles. Historical data allowed accurate comparisons using "hind-casting" whereby a statistical model was developed to rank the performance of each postulated law over time.
MIT claims its results show that with careful use of historical data, future technological progress is forecastable with a typical accuracy of about 2.5 percent per year. The research was conducted by MIT professor Jessika Trancik, professor Bela Nagy at the Santa Fe Institute, professor Doyne Farmer at the University of Oxford and and professor Quan Bui at St. JohnÕs College (Santa Fe, N.M.).
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iniewski
3/7/2013 3:46 PM EST
Why do people refer to those observations as laws? They are trends which last for a while until they stops working. The Ohmic law etc is probably applicable for eternity...Kris
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v1kran7
3/7/2013 3:56 PM EST
the ohmic law has already lost to the laws of Quantum Mechanics and super conductivity etc
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v1kran7
3/7/2013 3:59 PM EST
Just joking @iniewski, you're absolutely right though.
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v1kran7
3/7/2013 3:59 PM EST
Just joking @iniewski, you're absolutely right though.
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Chuck Chung
3/8/2013 11:47 PM EST
But aren't all "Laws" observational? Example: Newton's Laws are observations about mass, force, and motion.
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Sparky_Watt
3/12/2013 1:40 PM EDT
No, there are actually four types of physical laws: Definitions (e.g. F=ma, which defines the concept of force), Empirical (which is strictly observational), and Theoretical (which embodies an understanding), and derived (which can be mathematically produced from other laws, e.g. torque). Derived laws stand and fall with the laws they are derived from. Theoretical laws apply wherever the understanding they are based on applies. Definitions are true no matter what; the question with definitions is not "are they true" but "are they relevant".
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MI6
3/7/2013 4:35 PM EST
I agree always left that the word “laws” was way to overused especially when this “law” actually describes a Goal to the drive market demand by pushing technology
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Larry M
3/8/2013 11:11 AM EST
Fermat's Last Theorem really should have been named Fermat's Last Conjecture.
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pomartel
3/8/2013 4:25 PM EST
but he had a proof... It was just too large to fit in the margin...
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Steven.Herrrick
3/14/2013 2:28 AM EDT
so he claimed.
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Sparky_Watt
3/12/2013 1:43 PM EDT
Moore's "Law" describes what is feasible. Its weakness is that there are physical limits to how far it can go.
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R_Colin_Johnson
3/7/2013 5:02 PM EST
I think people use "laws" out of optimism--they really want to improve our predictive powers and "wish" that they could come up with a black-or-white "law" to help out. Of course, as you say, the world is shades of grey :)
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daleste
3/7/2013 8:05 PM EST
Oh, don't bring up the shades of grey. Can't get my wife away from those books...
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Jack.L
3/7/2013 8:38 PM EST
Guys, stop just thinking like engineers.
Being able to predict possible change means being able to plan for it. That can have significant impacts on cost predictions, market growth, and investment.
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Sparky_Watt
3/12/2013 1:44 PM EDT
Since when is being able to predict the market not thinking like an Engineer? Making decisions by throwing darts is not thinking like and Engineer.
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Comfortable
3/7/2013 9:19 PM EST
The Higgs Boson was confirmed based upon a statistical observation and now most particle physicists believe the standard model to be accurate. I don't see a problem with claiming something is a law if the statistical analysis supports the claim. Even our own existence is based upon statistical interactions with photons. If you don't believe that, turn off all the light in your bedroom tonight and tell us tomorrow if you could still see yourself in the mirror.
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kenny.g
3/7/2013 9:19 PM EST
Moore's law is not a law,people don't give a shit about it! it is a trend for the company to follow to make money which in this case flawed due to major miscalculation of not taking into account of the whole semiconductor eco-system.
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nastaynas
3/7/2013 11:30 PM EST
At least Mr. Moore has enjoyed his fame for a while
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AntoineB
3/8/2013 4:03 AM EST
Moore's law might have been based on observation at first, but it has changed. It is now nothing more than an implicite objective followed by semiconductor companies. They adapt their efforts in order to reach this objective. If Moore's law has been "correct" for so long it is only because SC companies made it correct. I don't think it is of any statistical relevance nowadays.
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CharlieCL
3/8/2013 9:16 AM EST
@AntoineB Agree. Moore's Law is not a Law. It is a theory for SC companies to spend money.
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Comfortable
3/8/2013 10:01 AM EST
A physical law,according to the Oxford English dictionary, is "a theoretical principle deduced from particular facts, applicable to a defined group or class of phenomena, and expressible by the statement that a particular phenomenon always occurs if certain conditions be present."
John Nash received a Nobel Prize on game theory with lots of mathematical equations describing how humans interact. As engineers, let's not always look at things so black and white.
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Larry M
3/8/2013 11:15 AM EST
To be more precise, John Nash won the Nobel Prize for Economics, not exactly a deterministic or exact science, and only provable by statistical measures. (There is no Nobel Prize for Mathematics.)
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Comfortable
3/8/2013 6:14 PM EST
What do you mean by exact science? Exact like in Newton's equation for gravity or Einstein's later revised one?
Nothing in life is exact science. Not even ohm's law. But it works well enough today to be a useful tool for getting work done. Moore's law does the same thing and for whatever observable reason it may be.
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Duane Benson
3/8/2013 11:20 AM EST
There's also Duane's law, which is corollary to the two-car garage syndrome. Even if not by name, many people are likely familiar with. It states that no matter how large your garage is, the amount of stuff you accumulate will fill it such that there is never more than just less then enough room required to put one car in.
That, by inference leads to Duane's law which postulates that no matter what the performance of your computer system, the operating system will lug it down to the point at which it performs at a level just slightly less than the first computer you ever owned. Unfortunately, Duane's law has a tendency negate the effects of Moore's law and presumably the others.
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WHP
3/8/2013 11:46 AM EST
Duane, I think everyone has observed that phenomenon but I think you may be the first to actually give it a name. So as far as I'm concerned, Duane's Law it is.
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DWilde1
3/8/2013 11:43 AM EST
Which is why even Intel finally loves Linux on x86, finally, Duane [my opinion, not my employer Intel's].
AFA Moore's law, whether it was ever "true" or not, it sure drove a revolution we've all benefited from. I'm not sure whether Wright's correlation really means a whole lot, it's one of those "yeah, so?"s.
Gordon Moore caught the imagination of a generation of engineers, and the rest is history.
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georgegrimes
3/8/2013 12:15 PM EST
This discussion would not be complete without someone point out that Moore never claimed that it was a "law". Everything that I've read from him called it his "observation". That was his preference.
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georgegrimes
3/8/2013 12:17 PM EST
Sigh, I can't type today. That should be "pointing out", not "point out". Is it Saturday yet? I need a weekend!
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dbsavant
3/8/2013 12:56 PM EST
Some marketing guy with an eye towards a political run applied the term "law" to these "observations". Let's hope he doesn't get elected!
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KRS03
3/8/2013 2:04 PM EST
OK, all agreed I see... So it's "Wright's predictor of long-term economic growth". WPLTEG. Say that ten times.
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Duane Benson
3/8/2013 2:49 PM EST
And I won't say "Duane's Law", but rather "Duane's observation of the completely obvious." :-)
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MikeSmith2011
3/8/2013 3:39 PM EST
Talking about laws - Murphy's law trumps any other law.
I can personally attest to observing Murphy's law at work.
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Mark.Rackin
3/8/2013 4:09 PM EST
I've been watching this thread, wondering how long it would take for someone to bring up Mr. Murphy's immutable law!
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Mark.Rackin
3/8/2013 4:11 PM EST
and, of course, once you mention "observing .... at work..." that brings to mind Parkinson's Law!
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Some Guy
3/8/2013 4:56 PM EST
Two criticisms: 1) Wright's law is worthless as a prediction; it is parametric in units. You need the prediction in time. So I have to have an Oracle predictor of units over time, and if I have that, who needs Wright? Not surprised it came out best in "hindcasting".
2) With Moore's Law, don't confuse cause and effect. Moore's Law is not an immutable cause. It was the target to which the semiconductor industry managed itself to, thus, get the doubling effect.
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resistion
3/8/2013 10:37 PM EST
Just noticed the y axis. So the laws all suck, essentially.
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MClayton
3/9/2013 12:21 AM EST
Fuzzy stuff of course.
"Predictions are hard, especially about the future."
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FBMcGalliard
3/9/2013 11:56 AM EST
Moor's law is based on a short term and totally unustainable condition that market demand drives technological advances. We are begining to hit the limits of they physics, but have not yet even come close to the limits of the marketed hardware. The hard question is whether there can be any breakthroughs the equivalent of phase shift masks and the like. Crystaline like quantum logic structures appear to be a long long ways off.
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jg_
3/9/2013 8:50 PM EST
We need another 'Law', that tracks the media's obsession with the 'sound-bite', and desire to appear educated, to try to disguise the vacuous fluff they write about.
Thus there is an increasing divergence of the claims from reality.
My Physics teacher, always pointed out that extrapolation was dangerous.
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seaEE
3/9/2013 11:10 PM EST
It's possible that Moore's law may even be applicable into the future, aided of course by Necessity is the Mother of Invention Law. How many nanometer interations are left in silicon, and what will happen after that?
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MEMS, Microsystems
3/9/2013 11:54 PM EST
Moore (personally)with his predictive law enjoyed lot more success than the semiconductor industry......
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Mike Santarini
3/11/2013 12:55 PM EDT
What's interesting is of course that Moore's law predicts a doubling every 22 months, not 18 months. I heard it from the man directly at a talk back in 2005 at the computer history museum. He was being interviewed by Carver Mead. Google the following "Computer History Museum Presents The 40th Anniversary of Moore's Law with Gordon Moore and Carver Mead." There is a video of the interview somewhere too.
If memory serves he explained that originally he had said it would double every two years but a few years later scaled it back by two months to doubling every 22 months. A few years later, Intel's marketing started a campaign in which they were saying that processor performance would double every 18 months (likely from refinements and jumps to half-step processes). In the talk, Moore explained the two numbers got confused and thus most folks wrongly say Moore's law predicts a capacity doubling every 18 mos. It is actually every 22.
That said, what does it mean for this study?
You can take the reporter out of the investigation, but you can't take the investigation out of the reporter.
Cheers,
Mike
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Greg Thorson
3/11/2013 4:48 PM EDT
The problem is not with the accuracy of Moore's law or other laws. The problem is with your misinterpretation of the word. A "law" is not a fundamental of nature. It is simply a statement or formula. It can be completely wrong and still be a law.
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DrQuine
3/12/2013 9:15 PM EDT
I completely agree with "iniewski". Nevertheless, I predict that when computer chips have shrunk to their physical limit and Moore's Law has clearly reached the end of the line, there will be headlines that a "law" has been violated or found invalid. In any case, the longevity of this trend has been remarkable - in part because nobody wants the trend to end on their watch so the R&D efforts are redoubled when the end of the law's reign seems to be coming. The consumers of electronic products are the winners.
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peralta_mike
3/13/2013 1:25 PM EDT
Moore's Law (Trend) is amazing. I have been in the Semiconductor Industry since 1982 and every five years or so (1987, 1993, 1998, 2003, etc. etc.)I hear someone predicting that it will no longer hold -- but it does -- decade after decade.
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Embd SW netwk
3/16/2013 9:02 PM EDT
Failure to account for Moore's Law has resulted in a number of projects being prematurely cancelled. Just because a technology does not yield a cost-effective product today, does not mean that the same product won't be cost effective in 2-4 years. Maybe the product needs to be put on the back burner, but way too often I have seen the project to be killed, only to be resurrected by another company a few years later when the costs become attractive.
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GLink
4/15/2013 11:29 AM EDT
I'd also like to point out that once we hit the physics-based limit on feature scaling, we still have the third dimension to keep us busy for a while, as well as ever-larger chip sizes. The actual Moore's law isn't just about speed, nor feature size - it's about computing power available at the most economic price point, which means that bigger, cheaper chips, still count. Once we hit the physics-limit, the foundries that can hit that will eventually get paid off, and chip prices will decrease, giving us an increase of computing power at a given price point, and thus, giving a bit of new life to the observation for a few more years.
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