Video Animation: Mark Bohr Gets Small: 22nm Explained | Intel
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Video Animation: Mark Bohr Gets Small: 22nm Explained | Intel
/ intel - วิทยาศาสตร์และเทคโนโลยี
imagine being that chill after your shrink ray malfunctions
4:04 Quality intel cooler right there
Lol
such a cheesy ending lol
"Large unindentifiable object to my left"
*Identifies it*
Well, it was unidentified up until that moment. He was not wrong.
I wonder if he's made it home yet... or at least made it to the next floor tile.
he just made it to the door 2 years after lol
He just made it to the dining table after 2 years😂😂
I don't think he did
He did not leave the building yet
2024 now, he's probably still on the first tile...
And 9 years later you are still on 14nm.
So, you can do 22nm, but can't swing 1080p? :P
Is this some kind of illiterate joke I'm too literate to understand
@@adityasinghkshatri2199 no, you are just not paying attention.
This was extremely adorable and informative at the same time. Geeky cuteness goes a long way!
Now a days we have 4nm transistors.
What did I learn from this.
Intel - "Our stuff breaks down right when you need it most."
The cheesiness reminds me of the 90's, lel.
oh man, thank you so much. this is the only source, i could understand the principal function of the finfet and why it is so much better than mosfet
There was like 20 seconds of info in this clip that I didn't know yet, but I'm a trained electronics engineer. Still it's nice to learn about new technology, and I'm glad it's explained in the way that at least half of the world would get it. Good job, Intel, I'm your big fan, despite you didn't hire me. ;)
he looks like the brain from "pinky and the brain"
sounds like him too. hmmmmmm
4:04 will be another bruh moment
MIND..BLOWN...
Just imagining how do they make these crashes my brain.
Mr_ Underscore I feel with you😂
The percision is unreal
Photolithography!
wow this vid is 11 yrs old.. amazing
Awesome video ! I love it. To me this is about “what” they do , I’d love to see the “how” they do it. Can’t imagine how the machines to do the prehistoric transistors have been evolved to become the Integrated Circuits, then to the single layer microprocessors and now this 3D chips
Now a days we have 4nm transistors.
Photolithography!
Please make more of these!
Beautifully done and witty - great
Great video! good information and interesting script. love it!
Incredible!!!
3d transistor...
Great video, very informative and clear delivery. Thanks!!!!!
I wanted this video to go on forever.
The precision of that shrink ray is AMAZING. It can hit him but not the chip in his hand. Flawless.
Great video thanks 😊
the "defeat" tune at the end is in Metal Knights lol
@abdelrrazak its said to be in the Ivy Bridge which would be the socket 1366 equal to the old 1156/1366 socket, right now the 1155 socket is in the mid end of cpu's like the old 1156 was and the new socket for ivy bridge will be the high performace and workstation/server cpu's like the 1366 socket was
This video totally blows my mind!
I need to work for intel.
Watching this in 2021....makes this even more mindblowingly awesome!! Wow!! #respect
I love you, technology.
Great need to plan for the future
That 22nm has changed to 3nm
damn, this is crazy how this stuff works
I was like why the camera zoomed out so much and then was like oh they had to bring out the shrink ray
It's funny how all that explanation (including as much that I had already read) went into what they showed us in a few seconds with the "gate" turning into a fin. It's also rather underwhelming as far as change goes, but that suggests that the really interesting part might actually be how they do it. They had been using a photographic etching type of process. I wonder what about that process has changed. Now what about 3D processors (as opposed to just transistors)?
dude this is honestly completely mind blowing , i dont think the childish way the presented this respects the pure magic that intel or any cpu manufacturer does
"Senior Intel Fellow"
Okay, Intel, I'll be taking that rank now. :>
"we don't hire boat fuckers." -intel
I liked this video. Some of the effects could have been better done, but I liked that it kind of showed how some things work.
*Neo's voice* "Whoa..."
Thank u
Very good. Thanks you
SICK!!! 14NM chipset by 2014?!
Yeah! And also, for the next 7 years...
@@unexpecteditem7919 lmao. Meanwhile at IBM they invented a 2nm process.
How does the transistor know when to allow current and when not to allow current?
He looks like that short guy from the Lone Gunmen. Cool video!
10 years ago, where are we now 🤯
fascinating.
@abduman3 its the transistors that are smaller, not the chip
That is so cool.
Really amazing
Do they have an official release date yet?
Fair Juice, you made a technically complex and deep topic….. Fun.
@izlude2 see the video carefully, 3d in the sense gate or control switch wraps around substrate or conducting wire instead of just sitting on it like in 2d. Imagine having magnets in all directions to attract an iron nail, instead of just one strong magnet in one direction. Replace magnet with gate/switch and nail with current and you have your explanation !!
astonishing
Great video. Very informative.
Oh, wow, thanks for clearing that up, I wasn't too sure if it was real or not.
It looks as if the image on the "ground" is a single-atom resolution graph of a bunch of transistors.
wow...
Wow, fantastic. Mad props to the Intel engineers :-)
Now a days we have 4nm transistors.
It's amazing that we're able to construct and operate at such a smaller scale, nanotechnology can be used to do extraordinary things, well extraordinary to us. I wonder what the future holds for us....
Nice video, nice explanation.
@SlowDownSmutty Well, that particular chip he had in his hand will be outdated, but the 3D transistor technology will be used for a long while.
waiting for this
0:09
Can i PLEASE put all those in my computer?
@abdelrrazak Yes, this comes right after Sandy Bridge (Ivy Bridge)
Very nice video. Bravo Intel.
Why don't they just make transistors that are based on light. Why are they still messing around with electrons when photons are clearly the future?
mark bohr is the great grandson of niels bohr, danish phisicist who discovered discreet quantum energy that the electron has when it leap from one level to the other by absorbing a photon. the formula is E=hf
h= planck constant
f= frequency of the radiation of the photon
So awesome
Very fun presentation
I will take that as a compliment to the maker.
Moores law states the number of transistors per unit area will double every 2 years. So in 2015 it will be 5.5nm. However this cannot go on indefinetly, a single atom is about .5nm, and these transistors have to use a few of 'em. So it's believed the furthest Moores law can sustain itself is until 2015 :(
Good thing he hasn't met any bugs scattering around.
Awesome! Great Video! Intel rules! Thanks for all the great technology over the years. Much love!
Now a days we have 4nm transistors.
awesome
wow 8 years ago, wow
I like presentation like this!
The problem would be to evenly distribute the heat throughout a fully 3D chip, think for example a cube
@ShadowwwLFS We will see. They only customized Arm chips because they needed better power management and size. With trigate offering 3x the data flow at lower power and smaller, I dont see how they will resist as Apple prefers partnerships over spreading themselves too thin.
nicely explained.
Humor and informative, awesome video
i've been thinkin' about optical transistors for optical 3D chip.
but this info about tri-gate 3D transistor for 3D chips has surprised me in good way :-)
Nice video, and enough educational to any average computer geek understands it.
How do you guys do these awesome stuff ?
that is the best video I've ever seen.
Its kind of funny realizing that one of their transistors is around 20x smaller than one wave of the color red.
Future aperture!
sick, how do they make this!!
Nice explanation
dear people of Intel,
my homie and I are gonna start our own transitor/cmos company today. so if u want us stop what we are doing, we can negotiate..
happy aifb week,
KF-Solutions
LMAO
do you think they really care
Nice video !
The laser is a chaingun attached to a fan..lol
Really like the video, love complex things in simple words. Now I Wanna see this guy walk his way out of this chip. Have a nice 1 Billion transistor walk.
Now a days we have 4nm transistors.
You should hire the engineering guy to explain this
thats a good use of redstone
very cool
@MitchH452 Yeah, I don't understand as well. :S
it is 2019 and this is the best comedy sketch i have seen
So cool, recently gave a presentation on transistors. Reminds me of Wonkavision from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
This is the greatest video I have ever watched in my entire life.
you don't get out much do you?
You don't have much of a sense of sarcasm do you?