The integrated chip (IC) is at the heart of all computer system. In fact ICs are found in almost all electrical devices like cars, televisions, CD players, cell phones etc. The miniaturisation that made the modern personal computer possible could never have happened without the IC. ICs are electronic devices that contain many transistors, resistors, capacitors, connecting wires - all in one package. You must have heard of the microprocessor. The microprocessor is an IC that processes all information in a computer, like keeping track of what keys are pressed, running programmes, games etc. The IC was first invented by Jack Kilky at Texas instruments in 1958 and he was awarded Nobel Prize for this in 2000. ICs are produced on a piece of semiconductors crystal (or chip) by a process called photolithography. Thus the entire information technology (IT) industry hinges on semiconductors. Over the years, the complexity of ICs has increased while the size of its features continued to shrink. In the past five decades, a dramatic miniaturisation in computer technology had made modern day computers faster and smaller. In the 1970s, Gordon Moore, co-founder of INTEL, pointed out that the memory capacity of a chip (IC) approximately doubled every one and half years. This is popularly known as Moore's law. The number of transistors per chip has risen exponentially and each year computers are becoming more powerful, yet cheaper than the year before. It is intimated from current trends that the computers available in 2020 will operate at 40 GHz (40,000 MHz) and would be smaller, more efficient and less expensive than present day computers. The explosive growth in the semiconductors industry and computer technology is best expressed by a famous quote from Gordon Moore: "if the auto industry advanced as rapidly as the semiconductors industry, a Rolls Royce would get half million miles per gallon, and it would be cheaper to throw it away than to park it."
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