Название | : | Physics of Computer Chips - Computerphile |
Продолжительность | : | 12.00 |
Дата публикации | : | |
Просмотров | : | 608 rb |
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Amazing, thank you Comment from : appidydafoo |
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haha this guy is awesome Comment from : Nick Fruneaux |
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maybe they can do that electrical serial one but send currents from different directions at the same time Like as in doing it all in parallel Comment from : BobbyBoyGaming |
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Aye we're now to 4nm, 6 years is a long time I guess Comment from : MrSanemon |
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Thanks for Turkish subtitles Comment from : Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart |
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This whole thing is just magic Comment from : Creachter |
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"I don’t think a regular person appreciates how insane it is that computers work I propose we stare at each other mind-blown for about 1 hour/day, in small groups in circles around a chip on a pedestal, appreciating that we can coerce physics to process information like that"" Comment from : Luis Schwab |
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Awesome oo Comment from : EFFML |
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silica Comment from : George N |
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Raman effect Comment from : George N |
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i don't know if i understood at least half of the video, but what i do know now is that things just do their thing in physics Comment from : Wolfsmaul-GER |
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I love the 50fps video :D Comment from : Guy Marshall |
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Lol “does that confuse you? Good”brAndbr“You don’t understand it you just get used to it”brThat was me trying to remember the speed of holes is slower than the speed of electrons despite’s holes being caused by electrons leaving You’d think they should be the same, but ya know… quantum physics Comment from : ryan quinn |
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Big man working on small stuff, respect Comment from : Aiden Winter |
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bquantum•mindset/b Comment from : MetraLight |
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I freaking love this video, man Comment from : MetraLight |
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👎 Comment from : cali |
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This interview elevated my understanding of how we're able to manipulate atoms Thank you Comment from : Shane Cormier |
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It behaves like a behavior? No wonder modern physicists are confused Comment from : Tre Johnson |
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Based and quantum pilled Comment from : jtfoog |
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👏👏👏 Comment from : Joseph Liang |
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I love how excited he gets to answer each question and you can tell it’s genuine too Comment from : Derek John |
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Double patterning is so arcane; especially when looking at super small designs like SRAMs Comment from : Nitewave |
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Wow 14nm was still the standard, now we have 2nm transistors Yes I'm still using 32nm & really dont have a need for any more computational power The FX-8350 is holding up well Comment from : Level Up |
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I DIDN'T DO MY MATH WRONG! i JUST ACCIDENTALLY QUANTUM COMPUTED Comment from : mbian0 same |
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these videos are like the best thing in my life sometimes thanks for continuing to make them :) Comment from : Jake Downs |
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I wish they explained all these details at computer science classes in universities Comment from : Shogo 昇剛 |
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clever semiconductor industry: how about we name nanometers stop meaning nanometers?brbrpeople: so, like lies?brbrclever semiconductor industry: no, no, we'll just pretend that it's just a name and call it an advertising term Comment from : RenchesAndSords |
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Please do an updated one of these about the current physics of the newest chips Comment from : Jared Norton |
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I doubt there's a smarter man on the planet Comment from : Liam Ward |
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Nuclear scientist are nanoscientist aka atomic engineers are basically Physicists Comment from : Kenneth The Great |
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Sorry to be a stickler, but the hair growth rate for younger folk (1nm/sec) seems a bit off I've never tried to measure hair growth rates, but I do know a billion seconds is a bit shy of 32years I've known people whose hair seems to grow 20cm (a guess!) in only one year Comment from : Rusty Cherkas |
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5:40 "as a physicist, it's not that you understand it you just get used to it" wise words I tried understanding the wave nature of electrons, lost half of my hairs just to get my head around that thing and I am not even a physicist Physics can be addictive also, it can be intuitive and unforgivingly confusing at the same time I know a person who'd agree to the last statement That is, Mr Erwin Schrodinger Comment from : Minhazul Islam |
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The people that say we live in a boring period in history should watch this video Comment from : L Adams |
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Consumer CPUs today have transistors that are 5 nanometers! Comment from : Sledzeppelin |
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14nm is just a name for the process Comment from : Hassan |
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seems kinda simple tbh Comment from : Glory2thelord999 |
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Being a chemist, just having listened to a physicist, talking about mechanics, for the purpose of computing, I just realized that the electron couldn't care less about how it's manipulated and by whom Comment from : David Wensbo Posaric |
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Hello there! I am not educated in science or anything related to the topic I am an analog photographer I think I understand the basic function of what he is explaining but I have one question the answer was not given too In photography the resolution on the film is partly due to the size and shape of the silver crystals that later turn into metallic silver What is the light sensitive layer on the wavers made out of? Or how is it able to render such little detail, that most of the worries expressed in this video goes into making the exposure wavelength smaller That would be very interesting to me Thanks! I really liked this video of yours, truly amazing Comment from : Rene B |
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The energy you get when you've taken on wizardry as a career Comment from : thecaveofthedead |
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You can't beat physics, but you can beat physicists by using confsing marketing terms Comment from : josir1994 |
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You can tell that Phil has been driven to the point of insanity by Quantum Mechanics just by this video Comment from : Plan2001 |
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Globes and ball atoms belong in Scifi Comment from : Zero Sugar |
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Chemistry is a bottom up approach to the macro world, and physics is a top down approach to the micro world Two different paradigms of the same thing: material science They both inform the other Comment from : Robert McGarry |
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Physics???? I would say mathematics Comment from : J D |
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Complex concepts beautifully explained This guy has a gift for simplifying things to layman language Comment from : 83vbond |
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Really cool to see semiconductor fab processing explained here! Comment from : Richard Risner |
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2021 intel still use 14nm Comment from : Adam Keków |
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Can exactly pinpoint that accent Comment from : marcux83 |
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5 years later, now at 5nm moving to 2nm Comment from : Alteran Republic |
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' its not that you understand quantum mechanics, you just get used to it 'brwow Comment from : Raphy |
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I'd love to hear an update, now that Industry has processors at the 5 nm level Comment from : Geoff Paulsen |
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Hearing about 14 nanometers being the smallest you can go, while my cpu is made with 7 nanometers manufacturing just shows how fast technology moves on This is 4 to 5 years ago, and at that time, their ultimate goal was 135 or something like that! Science moves fast! Comment from : Expired Lamb |
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He, four years later I am watching this on a 5nm iphone But I do know what he’s talking about Not much room left Comment from : MashupDad |
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watching this in 2020 on a device that has 5nm from the future Comment from : Fernando De Leon |
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watching this on a system built @ 7nm :-) Comment from : Raymond Tant |
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4 years later apple is putting 5nm chips in phones Comment from : Excalibur |
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I come from the future, Phil We have transistor size down to 5 nm We’re close to the end Save us! Comment from : Greg Hartwick |
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This guy has more energy than a split atom Comment from : Hasty One |
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3 years of studying in 12 mins ! Comment from : AHMED S |
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Correct me if I'm wrong, I looked into this recently… but we can't physically "see" individual atoms because they're mostly empty space (and something to do with the wavelength of light) We can only observe the effect of individual atoms on their surroundings, which is what our images show Comment from : Andrew Robinson |
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FascinatingbrSPOCKGIF Comment from : Squish Mastah |
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Can you make light to behave like electrons or electrons to behave like light in terms of that serial and parallel illumination of object ? Comment from : Milorad Menjic |
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Now we have 7nm, quite astounding Comment from : Shreyas R |
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Three years ago they were talking about 14 nm, today we're talking about 5 nm; so this video becomes history in less time than it would take to study Electronics Comment from : LowLightVideos |
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Since we're getting 5nm chipsets this year Will we get an update video? Comment from : uskro |
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I love how you can see how passionate this man is about what he does Comment from : Jake Sousie |
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Need to do an update video with Phil now that it's 2020 Comment from : Nazgul Linux |
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EUV technology? Comment from : Azrul Nizam |
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My favorite connection from physics to electronics, is the fact that quantum tunnelling effects are at the heart of how flash memory and EPROMS work Comment from : Tyler Barnes |
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You're a gifted explainer of these topics Comment from : Leon Jones |
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4 years later and I'd point out that the current mfg state of the art is 5nm not 14nm Comment from : Rennie Allen |
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Title should be "Very informal talk about a loosely related wide array of topics" Comment from : IAmAgainst |
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( - -- - ) Victer Comment from : joe bkfd* |
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1:46-1:56 this triggers me Why is the smaller reference box not level with the bottom?brbriWHY?!/ibrbr Like, I get it, they re-used the animation frame and just replaced the abbreviated measurements rather than making a new one each time butbrbrbiWHY?!/i/b Comment from : KuroReanimation |
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If i knew I could do the math I’d apply every year to be in his class And Brailsford Comment from : Woody Woodlstein |
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2019 update: 5nm in the works, 7nm in production (AMD Ryzen 3000 series, eg) Comment from : Roger Barraud |
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His accent is very strong and hard to understand Sounds like a sheep farmer from Ireland or Scotland Comment from : Antoniija Larsson |
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1 word "cocaine" Comment from : David Spicer |
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Can you use xray lithography in order to make the smaller structures? That would keep the speed of traditional methods Why limit to the ultraviolet range? Comment from : Honk Honk |
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Watching this in 2019, they are now manufacturing 7nm microprocessors, how things move on Comment from : Paul Bell |
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best video i'm seen on computer chips Comment from : Joel Amoako |
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Watch in 20 years some kid will be watching cat videos on his quantum computer cellphone with 100 trillion gigs of memory while sitting on the toilet Comment from : mastercheif1989 |
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This gentleman is incredible Comment from : j rodman |
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Eternity-now is the reciprocating e-Pi-i timing spacing "Computing Driver", and ultimate, temporally-substantiated modular substrate, and maybe the actual limit of calculations is the Observable Universe, for Gaia with what is available to us if the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy guessed rightbrbrIt's all "wave mechanics" of the Universal Holographic Image projection resonance "particle of particles", to frame the picture Comment from : David Wilkie |
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Photo or electron beam lithography processes seem as though they could present issues passing light beams through small adjacent slits on the masks to produce high resolution formations using sharp focused beams How are they avoiding wave shaped interference patterns, such as are produced in the double slit experiment? My understanding of both these processes and the double slit experiment are about as novice and rudimentary as this video If anyone having more knowledge and understanding on this matter may be so kind as to enlighten me on why this is or is not a limitation to these processes, both your time and effort to respond is greatly appreciated Thanks Comment from : Chris Rickey |
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Come to commercial photonics, photolith is not running out of steam ;-) Comment from : The Technodruid |
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At 9:10, what does the offsetting of the masks accomplish? Comment from : Señor Poodles |
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I worked in a research dept, they had great ideas Comment from : Aaron Risley |
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