Gordon Moore: The Visionary Who Predicted the Future of Technology with Moore’s Law | Funifytools
| (Published in Electronics Magazine, April 19, 1965, pp. 114–117.) |
| From left: Andy Grove, Robert Noyce, and Gordon Moore. |
| (Photo courtesy of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.) |
| Gordon Earle Moore (1929 – 2023) |
Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, predicted in 1965 that transistor counts on integrated circuits would double roughly every two years — later known as Moore’s Law.
His insight became the guiding principle of the semiconductor industry, driving decades of exponential progress.
From the Intel 4004 microprocessor with 2,300 transistors to today’s chips with tens of billions, his prediction shaped modern computing.
Though physical limits now challenge miniaturization, innovators like Jensen Huang, Bill Gates, and Ray Kurzweil see Moore’s Law living on through AI, software, and system design.
Moore’s Law ultimately symbolizes human imagination and the will to push beyond limits, not just transistor counts.
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