Computer Science, asked by Veskelverry, 9 months ago

Moore's law states that computing power and memory increases by a factor
of about 2 every 18 months. The total number of bits stored in encoding the
distribution of matter in the Universe is about 1e120. Assuming Moore's law to persist in the coming years, when can we expect to build a computer reaching
this cosmological bound? Is this a reasonable expectation?​

Answers

Answered by akm26381
0

Answer:

Explanation:

More of an empirical observation than an actual law, Gordon E. Moore, the co-founder of Intel, first stated in 1965 the fact that computers/computing devices have tended to double in capacity/complexity every 18 to 24 months since 1900. This observation has come to be called "Moore's Law."

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