The rapid development of IT industry, let electronic products flooded our life, today's everything seems to have been labeled "electronic" label.
Change your phone, computer, system upgrade, download a variety of apps or software, work notes to play games ... These seem to have become the daily lives of modern people.
Have you ever thought about what IT industry laws are like in this kind of marketing? Moore's Law
Speaking of it and marketing, each of ITER's first thought must have been the most widely known and most classical Moore's law in the computer field.
Why electronic products are often updated every two years. This can be explained by Moore's law-Moore's Law: When the price is constant, the number of components that can be accommodated on an integrated circuit will increase by a factor of about every 18-24 months, and the performance will be increased by one time. In other words, the computer performance that every dollar can buy will be doubled by more than every 18-24 months.
Of course, Moore's Law is merely a conjecture or observation, but the law has lasted for more than half a century.
Nonetheless, the limitations of Moore's law remain clear: from a technical point of view, the complexity and error rate will increase exponentially as the line density on the silicon chip increases, and the complete and thorough testing of the chips is almost impossible.
In fact, the speed of silicon wafer renewal has gradually slowed down, Moore's law will gradually lose its feasibility. Andy-Bill's Law
Once you know Moore's Law, you may have a question: what drives the continuous updating of silicon wafers?
The rules of the market are very good explanations: demand drives product updates. And in the IT industry there is a similar saying-
Andy Bill theorem is a generalization of the relationship between software and hardware upgrading in IT industry. The exact words are "Andy gives, Bill takes away." Andy refers to Intel's former CEO Andy Grove, Bill, the predecessor of Microsoft's former CEO Bill Gates, which means that hardware-enhanced performance is quickly consumed by software.
Anti-Moore Law
Anti-Moore's law is proposed by Google's former CEO, Eric Schmidt: If you look at Moore's law in turn, an IT company will have to halve its turnover if it sells the same number of products today and 18 months ago. It is called the anti-Moore law of the IT community.
For all IT industry companies, anti-Moore law is a near-death presence. The anti-Moore law reveals the brutal competition and ruthless elimination mechanism in the industry. Many companies that cannot keep up with the progress of the IT industry are overwhelmed by the great tide of the times.
However, the anti-Moore law has led to the continuous development and progress of technology, so that the entire IT industry presents a vigorous development posture.