DocumentCode
112459
Title
Moore´s Law is Dying (and that could be good)
Author
Huang, Andrew
Volume
52
Issue
4
fYear
2015
fDate
Apr-15
Firstpage
43
Lastpage
47
Abstract
Companies that produce open-source hardware are few and far between. At least, they are if you define them in the usual way: an enterprise that provides documentation and permission sufficient for others to re-create, modify, improve, and even make their own versions of the devices it sells. And although open hardware has made strides in recent years-including an increasing number of companies adhering to these practices along with the establishment of the Open Source Hardware Association-it remains a niche industry. You might guess the reason to be simple-such companies must be set up and run by idealists who lack any hardheaded business sense. Not true! What´s held back the opensource hardware movement is not a lack of business acumen; it´s the rapid evolution of electronic technology. The reasons for this are subtle, but as I will explain below, swift advances in electronic technology inherently favor large “closed” businesses at the expense of small teams or individual innovators, who benefit most by working with open systems. At least that´s the way things have been. But there are changes coming that I expect will tilt the balance the other way.
Keywords
innovation management; integrated circuit technology; Moore law; electronic technology; innovation; microelectronic miniaturization; open-source hardware; Companies; Computers; Field programmable gate arrays; Moore´s Law; Multicore processing; Transistors;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.2015.7065418
Filename
7065418
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