You know you've done a good job with your videos when I saw the title and actually knew what it meant, and was actually excited 😂
@V0TION4 ай бұрын
nerd
@brodriguez110004 ай бұрын
Waiting for a boxed-set.
@toasterenthusiast61884 ай бұрын
Joe why do you like computer
@Roboss_Is_Alive4 ай бұрын
Good to see you again Mr. joe!
@st.john_one4 ай бұрын
hi there :)
@alexlowe20544 ай бұрын
It's surreal to see things that I remember as proof of concept research papers start to enter mainstream production.
@itissatno4 ай бұрын
Do you remember how long that is? Curious :)
@codejunki5674 ай бұрын
@@itissatno 15 years ago when I started building PCs, and the first core i7 came out, they talked about these types of processes. Its actually real now.
@matttzzz24 ай бұрын
Like what exactly? Why are you so vague?
@elliotfitzgerald8594 ай бұрын
@@matttzzz2 i like the part where you ask this , after he already posted a reply to someone else answering that question.
@gewdvibes4 ай бұрын
@@matttzzz2like the topic of the video you’re on????? Weirdo
@simonhanlon75184 ай бұрын
My Father used to work for GEC when they were making the first germanium transistors. He said they would use car headlamps as a heat source to attach the legs to the Germanium wafer. He kept a load of the prototypes that had exceptionally high gain.......I tested some the other day and they are still good 69 years later.
@warpspeedscp4 ай бұрын
Now that, that is history right there. Do yoy have any pictures? You should perhaps post a video demoing one.
@simonhanlon75184 ай бұрын
@@warpspeedscp I could do, an hfe of 163 is quite impressive. I have quite a few slides from back then as well.
@phil90644 ай бұрын
Nice
@foe111919694 ай бұрын
Now THAT's a great story.
@plumbthumbs95844 ай бұрын
so, your father commanded legions in Germanium. son of Maximums detected.
@johnmiller48594 ай бұрын
I have learned more about fab processes from your channel than I did getting an electrical engineering degree.
@ruffianeo34184 ай бұрын
When I studied, around 1992, the professor said, that replacing analog, chemical photography with digital cameras was impossible. It would require at least 8 Megapixel! Unimaginable at the time... In this industry, you are out of date every 6 months, so it appears. Others back then were positive, that the first 33MHz PCs (was it 286?) would never work, because it is just too high a frequency... And today, they still have some wiggle room left to improve electronic circuitry and the production process. But also that will end, rather sooner than later. I wonder what will then come next... Me personally, I have no idea. Nonlinear optics? Biotech? Maybe asianometry could enlighten us, how the non-electronical future might look like.
@its_jjk4 ай бұрын
Why would you learn about fab processes when getting an electrical engineering degree?
@OgbondSandvol4 ай бұрын
@neo3418 The first 33 MHz processor was i486. There was a 33 MHz i386, too (AMD took it further with 386DX40 MHz). Intel's fastest 286 was 12.5 MHz. After launching i386, Intel moved all its atention to it, and Intel didn't allowed that second source partners could make the chip. So the second source partners, stuck with the 16-bit 80286, had no other option than develop the chip clock. The fastest 286 achieve 25 MHz - made by Harris. Most 286 motherboards topped at 20MHz, due to the scarcity of higher speed chipsets. There's an additional problem about that, because AT(ISA) bus runs at 10 MHz max, so the chipset has to decouple the bus from the processor.
@ruffianeo34184 ай бұрын
@@its_jjk Was communications engineering - a specialized electrical engineering course. And it was a class about how integrated circuits are being made and how they work. We also had other peripheral classes like statistics and whatnot.
@organicfarm55244 ай бұрын
@@its_jjkbecause achieving design characteristics of a device/component depends heavily on how you fabricate it...And an EE student is meant to learn about designing physical aspects of transistors.
@teekanne154 ай бұрын
I like how you uses pauses that gives the viewer time to digest the heard and think about it.
@ragnarok79764 ай бұрын
Also know as: damn-thats-a-long-name-FET
@Dave-dh7rt4 ай бұрын
Go-Ask-A-Fucking-Engineer-The name
@JorenVaes4 ай бұрын
D-TaLN-FET
@briananeuraysem33214 ай бұрын
GYAATFET
@Dave-dh7rt4 ай бұрын
KZfaq deleted my reply. Fuck youtube
@briananeuraysem33214 ай бұрын
@@Dave-dh7rt agreed.
@bluegizmo19834 ай бұрын
What do transistors and professional athletes have in common? They both get their strengths from doping
@subliminalvibes4 ай бұрын
Athletes, and Cheech and Chong! 😆 Never thought they'd be categorised together, but there you go. 😎
@DerIchBinDa4 ай бұрын
Here, get your like...
@weareallbeingwatched46024 ай бұрын
And what's more, it's the same company - IG farben.
@Conorscorner2 ай бұрын
Hi Dad
@weareallbeingwatched46022 ай бұрын
@@Conorscorner hi Monica
@Vermilicious4 ай бұрын
You just have to appreciate all the scientific research done in decades past to make these advances possible only now. Also, I think an increase in competition in this space will further the progress made, and also reduce the risk of losing production capacity due to various outside factors. Semiconductors are vital to modern life and society.
@dante72284 ай бұрын
I really wonder why I subscribed this channel with all this in depth knowledge I don't have any use for... But it's fascinating!
@andersjjensen4 ай бұрын
Because you're a nerd like the rest of us.
@hennsbreit4 ай бұрын
It blows my mind, how precisely we actually get these chips done, how do you get the "edge stage" without brakeing these micro structures or cleaning the whole chip from the left overs?!😮 I love this ❤😊
@Mis73rRand0m4 ай бұрын
I am in an Automotive Tool group on social media and they were questioning Taiwan tool quality... I can't believe I had to remind them how the small country makes the highest precision instruments the world has ever known. Arguably the greatest human endeavors come out of Taiwan, akin to the space program and CERN.
@szurketaltos26934 ай бұрын
True, but that doesn't logically mean that the same precision applies to all Taiwanese manufacturing. Gearwrench is pretty good, but generic Taiwanese tools vary.
@dadrising64644 ай бұрын
@@szurketaltos2693 exactly. China has a functioning space station (amd an imptessive one at that), yet half their roads/buildings are collapsing, an they are known for cheap crap.
@lucasglowacki46834 ай бұрын
To be fair…the precision instruments come from Holland and mirrors from Germany…
@verigumetin42914 ай бұрын
@@szurketaltos2693 are you saying I shouldn't blindly follow the patterns my brain sees?
@michaelotoole18074 ай бұрын
@@dadrising6464 china's space station just looks like an empty shoebox in orbit. they must nee a deck of cards to keep themselves occupied. compare it to the international space station that has all types of equipment absolutely everywhere for tests and experiments.
@Roboss_Is_Alive4 ай бұрын
MOM MOM ASIANOMETREY MADE ANOTHER TRANSISTOR VIDEO, GRAB THE POPCORN
@brodriguez110004 ай бұрын
We do vest a lot in controlling electrons. Maybe it'll be photons turn next?
@michaelfoxbrass4 ай бұрын
@@brodriguez11000exactly
@kayakMike10004 ай бұрын
@@brodriguez11000 photonic control likely requires completely different materials. So much of this is material science that needs to be "compatible" with lithography techniques.
@SystemsMedicine4 ай бұрын
@@kayakMike1000Hi KayakMike. There has been a major photonics on silicon effort distributed across multiple universities for some years now. They are understandably decades behind transistors along multiple metrics, but they benefit greatly from all the silicon technology + AI. Time will tell how ubiquitous this becomes.
@msergio02934 ай бұрын
Let me correct that for you: Babe wake up, new asianometry transistor video just dropped
@michaelmoorrees35854 ай бұрын
2nm ! Damn, I got my EE degree less than a year before the 1um barrier was broken, back in 1985.
@royalwins20304 ай бұрын
We stand on the shoulders of giants
@JonS4 ай бұрын
The first chip I designed as a post-grad was in a 0.7um process node.
@deltax71594 ай бұрын
the GAA design offers great advantages for scaling down semiconductors. The normal problems we experience when scaling down lower and lower is reduced because of the enhanced electrostatics (reduced leakage currents and improved switching speed and energy efficiency). I can't wait to see the next gen semiconductors using this tech. It is going to be crazy!
@jorenboulanger43474 ай бұрын
Lol, that sudden picture of the IMEC building. My grandma lives across the street from it.
@Kabodanki4 ай бұрын
shoutout to your grandma, she can be an insider, if she open a kimchi/ramen/shushi shop and listen to conversation
@JorenVaes4 ай бұрын
That tower is a bane on the view of Arenberg Castle.
@kayakMike10004 ай бұрын
Small world
@filthyE4 ай бұрын
Hi grandma!
@tokk34 ай бұрын
Worked there. Even cooler from the inside
@wokeupina4 ай бұрын
i am 22 and seriously thinking about studying engineering at this age, thanks to you. i am quite speechless with this content, thanks.
@Gameboygenius4 ай бұрын
Do it!
@andersjjensen4 ай бұрын
If you like being presented with math problems that seriously bake your noodle for several hours before you finally crack it: Do it! If you hate the problem solving part and just want to get to the dopamine rush, from getting the solution, quickly.... keep playing computer games.
@beardoe68744 ай бұрын
Most EEs at 22 already have their EE Batchelor degree and are deciding if they need to get a Masters or Doctorate degree for the job they want. You better be very motivated to get in starting at 22. An alternative is getting in to Integrated Circuit Mask Layout Design. Get in to that and you'll be down in the weeds battlng the process. It's not hard to get in to that and much less schooling but you wind up with lots of schedule pressure because you are in the critical path. If you are good with spatial relations and things like Tetris, packing suitcases, grocery bags and you can understand resistors, capacitors and transistors, you might have the talent for it. With that said you will never have the influence in a company that an EE has even if you design devices and libraries that allow the EEs to design circuits with better electrical characteristics and lower die area. You'll have to reinvent the wheel often because most rookie EEs won't believe that your experience is worth listening to and there is a chance that your job will be replaced by some AI Place & Route tool even if you specialize in full custom analog or you are a guy that runs a Place & Route tool. I did it and felt like a whore being used for my mind. But I quit and I prefer mindless work so I can keep my mind to myself. That's a much better way for me to live.
@IainShepherd14 ай бұрын
Jump in and make the future for us. :)
@frankstrawnation4 ай бұрын
You are still very young, sure you should try studying engineering.
@MA-cw5fk4 ай бұрын
9:35 minor correction. Epitaxy is not a deposition technique, it is the process of growing a single-crystal film on top of a different material with similar lattice constants. Epitaxy can be achieved with different deposition techniques such as evaporation or sputtering.
@JohnHoranzy4 ай бұрын
I remember back in 1968 reading a Scientific American article on how to make a transistor by spraying various chemicals on a piece of glass on a hot plate. Things have evolved!
@fredinit4 ай бұрын
Jon, Thanks for the update. Was wondering where GAA was at from a production perspective after you mentioning it in prior reports.
@johndoh51824 ай бұрын
Samsung already uses it.
@bort64144 ай бұрын
Minor correction; at 6:05 you talk about the effects of dielectric permittivity on gate function, and while obviously higher dielectric materials produce a higher capacitance, the electric fields within the substructure are actually *reduced* as an effect of the polarization, which can be essentially described as the realignment of electric charges inside the dielectric that cancels out the external field.
@Martinit04 ай бұрын
So the actual benefit of using high-k gate dielectric would be? Is is that the electric field is lower in the volume of the dielectric but then higher at the interface of dielectric-channel?
@bort64144 ай бұрын
@@Martinit0 Correct, charge density at the gaussian surface of the electrode increases as relative permittivity increases, increasing total work capacity. It's easier to think about when you look at what we consider ,"charge" in electromagnetism as an imbalance of electrons and protons throughout a system. A dielectric essentially acts as a material with quasi-free electrons; similar to a metal, but instead their movement is limited to their immediate surroundings. When an electric field is applied to the material, the charged particles inside rearrange in order to achieve electrostatic equilibrium, which means there is no imbalance of charge, so the field on the inside from the perspective of the system is zero. It also increases charge density disproportionate to voltage, meaning increased efficiency, but I'm not sure how pertinent that is to transistor design specifically. More applies to capacitors and electrostatic motors.
@frankwales4 ай бұрын
Can't believe they didn't call DIBL DrIBL, given what it meant
@yahdood60154 ай бұрын
we’ve had MOSFET and now we will have GAAT 😂
@roc78804 ай бұрын
dude, I cannot imagine your level of energy when you post so many great docs about tech and the economics and/or politics of tech, so often, and with such great ease. congrats.
@accessiblenow4 ай бұрын
Amen to that
@antonleimbach6484 ай бұрын
I remember when MOS/FET’s were new. I was an electronics technician for many years and they were somewhat different to troubleshoot but very reliable.
@MO_AIMUSIC4 ай бұрын
TSMC Backplane Power Delivery would act as a flavour than a specific node, and there would be backport possibility for other node.
@brodriguez110004 ай бұрын
My understanding is the software has to catch up to make BPD viable.
@MO_AIMUSIC4 ай бұрын
@@brodriguez11000 The software is already support this. (I can't disclosure more)
@aekue64914 ай бұрын
@@MO_AIMUSICwait who do you work for or can you not answer?
@andersjjensen4 ай бұрын
@@aekue6491 I work for a sub contractor for a big international defence contractor. We have long since been briefed that porting existing GAA designs to BPD-GAA will be, and I quote, "a largely automated process for embedded memory and gate logic, but will require substantial consideration and planning ahead of time for analog circuits". Since we work almost exclusively in the boundary layer between analog and digital (such is the nature of real-time signal analysis and shaping) we are currently "a little bit freaked out" as we are in mid-stage design of a GAA based solution that would ideally be finalised and rolled out as BPD-GAA, as that offers vastly superior noise characteristics. However, we are only now starting to get the builtin points on what to account for early to facilitate a reasonably straight forward porting process. Everything is still tightly under NDA from "the big three" but from the gossip I hear the situation is largely identical everywhere: The EDA tools will a breeze for the logic folks (CPUs, GPUs, accelerators, PLCs, FPGAs, etc, etc) but us analog folks (memory controllers, radio spectrum technologies, PCIe/CXL, optic signal modulation, etc, etc) will be the whipping boys as usual. We generally only get good EDA automation and integration of a node once it is no longer relevant for us (aka, once it's mature and cheap enough to make bulk crap products on like wireless doorbells and fridges and what have you). I hope that satisfies your curiosity, as I can't really divulge anything that is more specific than this.
@AlexFoster22914 ай бұрын
Thank you. Your explanation was the lightbulb moment for me. I've heard and read a multitude of explanations of goafet transistors and it didn't quite click for me. Thank you for breaking it down so eloquently.
@MrMaxcypher4 ай бұрын
Both lucid and precise, gotta love it!
@Conservator.4 ай бұрын
5:35 “kind of like loud talk from your neighbours in a bar messing with your attempts to say, sweet, romantic things to Siri” 🤣🤣🤣
@wilhelmvanbabbenburg8443Ай бұрын
I had to scroll too long for this... And with so few likes. Geeze, engineers, geeks and nerds are so much fun!
@Conservator.Ай бұрын
@@wilhelmvanbabbenburg8443 Thanks for scrolling that far to my comment. These subtle jokes make his videos even more enjoyable to watch.
@timwildauer50634 ай бұрын
I’d be very interested in seeing a graphical explanation of how these structures are constructed. You had part of an explanation but then it never finished. Either way, your videos are incredible resources!
@manitoba-op4jx4 ай бұрын
long story short the screen grid and supressor grid from the vacuum tube era ARE making a comeback. i missed them. :)
@JamesWang0074 ай бұрын
Yes!
@andersjjensen4 ай бұрын
Uh... that was a highly entertaining, but also actually accurate, way of looking at it. Thanks for the chuckle!
@manitoba-op4jx4 ай бұрын
@@andersjjensenyou know what's really funny? i was talking to a friend and he said "oh boy, i can't wait to use beam-power tetrode mosfets!"
@Jagentic2 ай бұрын
Informative presentations - makes far away things feel satisfyingly not unfamiliar. I especially appreciate your perfect captioning so I can read as I listen, to these new words and to what they refer.
@atheistbushman4 ай бұрын
How on earth do you produce highly technical and qualitive videos so regularly? Do you have a team helping you? Always interesting and informative.
@Sams_Uncle4 ай бұрын
We are so lucky to have this channel. Thank You 🙏
@artysanmobile3 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. I appreciate the background and detailed descriptions of competing methodology, and as an investor, the anticipated timeline of new methods. Great stuff. Thanks.
@WhyWhatWhoWhenWhyAgain4 ай бұрын
Loved the video, and I greatly appreciate your continuing education of computer science, break-throughs, and history. ❤
@kgriffin10324 ай бұрын
What is this channel I randomly stumbled across? This video was extremely well done. Love it, will definitely check out other videos on the channel
@tomenglishmusic68084 ай бұрын
Outstanding as ever - clear, concise and informative.
@lincolnkarim12 ай бұрын
A transistor is not just a switch (on/off). it can also behave like a variable resistor (linear operation). Even if in the field of Digital Electronics, it is always operated (biased) to perform as an on/off switch, the device can also be operated on its linear response characteristics to perform as an amplifier in the analog world. On the input and output sides of a digital circuit we still use transistors as linear devices. After the junction voltage is overcome, there is a nice linear response of changes in current to voltage (smooth changes in input current produces proportional changes of output voltage), before the transistor goes into saturation (completely On). If someone ever invented a true 'digital relay', transistors would become obsolete.
@stevebabiak69974 ай бұрын
4:31 sounds like Officer Dibble from the “Top Cat” TV cartoon ;)
@thom12184 ай бұрын
Grok's custom ASICs are using 14nm established process node and demolishing GPU based AI accelerators - these new transistor designs aren't needed for AI acceleration as there's lots more headroom in transitioning to custom ASIC designs with integrated memory for example, than what can be squeezed out of an evolutionary step in transistor design.
@darkfeeels3 ай бұрын
I work as an analyst and your channel is truly one of the rich resources for my learning. You're one of a kind and your videos will forever be a treasure to anyone who wants to learn about these topics. Thanks a lot man!
@dids3094 ай бұрын
I work for imec on CFET. It's nice helping to shape the future🙂
@manw3bttcks4 ай бұрын
2:16 "names are surprisingly descriptive in semiconductor land" That's something that bugged me in Physics, there's so many effects named after the discoverer like "Hall Effect", "Nyquist noise" and so on.
@peterfireflylund4 ай бұрын
But you also have Bremsstrahlung and Hohlraum radiation :)
@wilhelmvanbabbenburg8443Ай бұрын
That's because physicists are delusional narcissists
@TheEVEInspiration4 ай бұрын
9:28 This looks pretty insane.
@sunnyscaper85604 ай бұрын
For the basic drawing of the transistor some sort of PowerPoint Animation might have helped to better visualise the gate getting thinner, source/drain pool becoming shallower/deeper, etc. but regardless loved the video. Thank you :)
@larryfulkerson45054 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for these uploads. Great job.
@natetite4 ай бұрын
I've only seen a few of your videos but each time a third of the way you get through it you get silly and I love it EDIT: not silly as in old-school @ThioJoe but silly as in just a little bit fun with the delivery
@philosothink4 ай бұрын
Nice work. You successfully made this knowledge digestible to someone in rural Tennessee. Whomever writes these has a talent for explaining things.
@DrHarryT4 ай бұрын
The amazing part is that they are doing this at the near atomic level. I was thinking that the next level is to use the photon combined with wavelength and polarization to do switching thereby eliminating EMF issues related to latency and wasted heat energy.
@talinpeacy72224 ай бұрын
How would that work exactly?
@DrHarryT4 ай бұрын
@@talinpeacy7222 It's above my paygrade to specify.
@mattmurphy70303 ай бұрын
@@talinpeacy7222_m a g i c_
@LuisAldamiz4 ай бұрын
As always, absolutely amazing. TY.
@VioletPrism4 ай бұрын
Hey just wanted to say your videos are amazing keep up the good work :)
@bgd734 ай бұрын
amazing stuff.. its like making a nano casting, sacrificial space to hold up a shape. from linear, to lateral to 3d.. and it is not even farctal geometry. It all has a purpose/destination.
@michaelfoxbrass4 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this extraordinarily clear and interesting video on a subject I wouldn’t have otherwise stuck with, let alone begin to understand. What I found most exciting about all of this is that this work at the atomic level reveals a nexus chemistry and physics, but also origami! As you presented each new photographic or diagrammatic depiction of architecture evolutions from FinFET to GaaFET, I began to imagine something like the Forksheet. Hello origami! Then, (whoop!) there it was! So what theoretically lies beyond 3d transistors? When you mentioned techniques for 3D chip making borrowed from MEMS, it made me think about how switching photons vs electrons changes things. So how far are we from building photonic processors of similar density/efficiency? (Begging forgiveness for my ignorance and possible/likely misuse of terms referenced and engineering concepts please! I’m a technology sales rep and avocational musician, not a theoretical physicist or electrical engineer!)
@anthonysmith40724 ай бұрын
Thank you for explaining in an intelligent, thorough and graspable form…I actually understood😅
@jefferychartier25364 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks for posting.
@Pinstripe04514 ай бұрын
Excellent video. Thanks.
@puppy75054 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@andrealibanori31164 ай бұрын
I LEARNED WHAT A TRANSISTOR IS
@zachreyhelmberger8944 ай бұрын
Wow! Great stuff! I learned a few things.
@dmd7d44 ай бұрын
Excellent video. Thank you
@bb5a4 ай бұрын
2:07 Hey, that's Richmond Park! Jon, if you ever visit London, I'll take you to see that gate.
@neverknowit114 ай бұрын
Many types of transistors. FET as they were describing. Standard, MOS FET’s for power applications. N Channel P Channel FET’s low Power Application.
@frederickheard20224 ай бұрын
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic
@alexlo77084 ай бұрын
I see the benefit from this GAA is only that one gate controls 3 channels. Just bring benefit to only memory system such NAND that has several fan in - fan out.
@user-cd9uz4fq8f3 ай бұрын
"Some guy starts playing darts and billiards in a pool hall."
@ricolorenz73074 ай бұрын
4:40 "Like a rabbit" is hilarious. The pause afterwards is amazing.
@user-mc7ez6lm4x4 ай бұрын
Really exciting narration
@jakegarvin76344 ай бұрын
Sir, I could listen to you say the word "dibble" all day
@rejectioncrew1014 ай бұрын
Man I have been waiting so long for the GAAfet to be consumer viable! very hyped
@user-pz2lt7ox1r3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video
@Cracktune3 ай бұрын
some of the best content on the internet. Thank you.
@danytoob4 ай бұрын
Always so fascinating ... and if I understood more than a fraction of it, just think of the descriptors I could be using. But since I don't I can't. But much thanks nonetheless.
@privacyvalued4134Ай бұрын
5:11 There probably was always a parasitic drain from source to drain even in larger nodes. They just happened to be outside the realm of measurement or significant meaning. But as you close the gap, the electromagnetic field will naturally jump past. This seems like it would be kind of obvious.
@benmcreynolds85814 ай бұрын
I have no idea how we every figured out how to DO anything with these developments..? It's basically magic
@Bomkz4 ай бұрын
In essence, WW2.
@Gameboygenius4 ай бұрын
@@Bomkz Eh what? Cold war, I could get some degree, space race and all that. But what does WW2 have to do with the last 50 or so years of semiconductor development?
@Bomkz4 ай бұрын
@@Gameboygenius while yes, technology advanced quickly during the cold war, the _foundations_ for a lot of very _very_ important science fields and technologies were created during WW2, as well as the push towards creating more advanced computers during such times and a lot of very important discoveries. It wasn't until the cold war that we realized how to merge all these advancements done during WW2 to create what would be a mass producible transistor, and eventually, the computer. WW2 also laid the foundations necessary for the cold war to be a thing in the first place as well, and showed america(ns) how science and technology can be very beneficial for war, and coincidentally civilians as well via the trickling down of such discoveries into consumer products. It propelled america into a global superpower who eventually was able to monetarily back a bunch of research and development.
@IainShepherd14 ай бұрын
I have a memory from 1992-ish of an adult telling me that computers are alien technology, he reasoned this by saying that no one could fully explain how they worked. There was no Asianometry at that time so I forgive him.
@Gameboygenius4 ай бұрын
@@Bomkz Ok, I get your perspective. However. Fundamental physics is important, however, I can easily imagine an alternate timeline where the development was 2-4 times slower. In this timeline, the collective economic interests of the world got complacent and didn't decide to plough in the ginormous R&D investments that it took to get to where we are today. In my view, what happened after WW2 was much more pivotal for the world of electronics.
@starbase51shiptestingfacil97Ай бұрын
Backside power delivery is kind of funny. You can imagine some engineer raising their arms and putting their hands on their head, exclaiming, "OH NO, it's upside down. We've been doing it wrong the whole time!" They seem to have prioritized power (because it won't work without power) as the first layer and worked it out backwards. And some time later, after some frustration, they figured it would work better in reverse order, data line first. And the anecdote goes, "we'll never ever talk about this again." "Marketing says they're going to call it PowerVia." And the guy's head drops, and thinks to himself, "I'm just never going to hear the end of this."
@0p3nh4ym3r4 ай бұрын
Superior content as usual, sir.
@eugeniustheodidactus88904 ай бұрын
I love your work.
@justindressler59924 ай бұрын
I really enjoy your channel it takes me back to my Electronics days but I'm a software engineer now. But I studied electronics when I was young. Its interesting they will be able to get to n2 by using established techniques 30% power gain is significant even if performance was to stay nearly the same. Do you think gate all around will make it into high power devices like desktop CPU's
@Dave-dh7rt4 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Sounds like your audio is clipping
@thelandofnod1234 ай бұрын
I have little idea what you’re talking about, however it is super interesting.
@htomerif4 ай бұрын
I like how the relevance of this really pushes everything back into data centers. Welcome back to the age of the mainframe and the thin client. Your rectangle is a brick without a half ton space heater sitting in a warehouse.
@moritzheintze76152 ай бұрын
15:43 - The field effect trnasistor was concieved and postulated as early as the late 1920'ies. Then however, no semiconductor could be made to sufficient purity, though...
@lomotil33704 ай бұрын
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:41 *🔄 Next-gen transistors.* 03:38 *⚡ Short Channel Effects.* 07:33 *🔄 Gate-All-Around (GAA) transistors.* 11:27 *🌐 GAA vs. FinFET power draw.* 13:52 *⚙️ Intel's Ribbon FET.* 14:32 *🌐 GAA's industry impact.* 15:00 *🔄 Future transistor designs.* 15:42 *🚀 Looking ahead to N2.* Made with HARPA AI
@skmgeek4 ай бұрын
thank you for being the reason we should normalise bullying
@ayylmao24104 ай бұрын
@@skmgeek ??? wtf how is that justified for the reason to normalise bullying?? I think you are the reason why we should normalise bullying.
@lomotil33704 ай бұрын
@@skmgeek Sad
@skmgeek4 ай бұрын
@@lomotil3370 simply don't clutter the comments section with useless ai-generated stuff that barely even helps anyone ❤️
@AC-jk8wq4 ай бұрын
Yay Jon! Wise beyond his years!!! 😃
@BosonCollider4 ай бұрын
Imagine when chips become a full millimeter thick and double as a solder iron
@brycemartin76704 ай бұрын
Great video!
@dcolb1214 ай бұрын
Fascinating.
@ivanrodriguez11344 ай бұрын
Also I think that Gate-All-Around will be a revolution on the radiation harden transistors, as we have seen with the resilience of FinFet
@timnorth90784 ай бұрын
"Burrowing under the gate, Like a rabbit"
@dr.brysonsfamilymedicine24534 ай бұрын
Thanks again
@carnage2374 ай бұрын
Never change please
@FloydMaxwell4 ай бұрын
Great explainer. God Bless Engineers.
@wangshuoleon44004 ай бұрын
XI in Greek sounds like Kai. not shi. we use it in electrodynamics as relative permittivity
@Holfax3 ай бұрын
I think "shi" came from a confusion with a Chinese pronunciation.
@enduroman28344 ай бұрын
Super interesting topic, is it possible you and I were listening to the same presentation a few weeks back?
@googlehomemini20594 ай бұрын
Jon is amazing, that is all!❤🎉
@mumblbeebee65464 ай бұрын
“Like a rabbit. Nibl….” 😂 Great storytelling of technical concept, respect!
@cantkeepitin4 ай бұрын
Hi, great Video! I wonder can we expect such GAA transistors also in analog applications like RF power amps?
@wilurbean4 ай бұрын
Short channel sounds a lot like space charge limits in vacuum tubes
@fnersch33674 ай бұрын
Most of this followed my 45 years working in the electronics field. The technology marches along. I hope the USA keeps pace.