DocumentCode
1169987
Title
Bell's Law for the Birth and Death of Computer Classes: A theory of the Computer's Evolution
Author
Bell, Gordon
Author_Institution
Microsoft Research, Silicon Valley
Volume
13
Issue
4
fYear
2008
Firstpage
8
Lastpage
19
Abstract
In 1951 a man could walk inside a computer. By 2010, a computer cluster with millions of processors will have expanded to building size. In this new paper Gordon Bell explains the history of the computing industry, positing a general theory ("Bell\´s Law) for the creation, evolution, and death of computer classes since 1951. Using the exponential transistor density increases forecast by Moore\´s Law in 1965 and 1975 as the principal basis for the life cycle of computer classes after the microprocessor was introduced in 1971, he predicts that the powerful microprocessor will be the basis for nearly all computer classes in 2010, from personal computers and servers costing a few thousand dollars to scalable servers costing a few hundred million dollars. Soon afterward, billions of cell phones for personal computing, and tens of billions of wireless sensor nets will unwire and interconnect everything.
Keywords
CMOS integrated circuits; Cellular phones; Computers; Data mining; Evolution (biology); Supercomputers; Workstations;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Solid-State Circuits Society Newsletter, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1098-4232
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/N-SSC.2008.4785818
Filename
4785818
Link To Document