From Ladyelec@aol.com Tue Apr 12 15:16:33 2005 From: Ladyelec@aol.com To: test-drb@ccmp.vtda.org Subject: Intel offers $10, 000 for Moore's Law article Firm seeks pristine copy of founde Date: Tue, 12 Apr 2005 16:16:33 -0400 Message-ID: <15a.4e869749.2f8d86a1@aol.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="===============8272248566446649501==" --===============8272248566446649501== Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Intel offers $10,000 for Moore's Law article / Firm seeks= pristine copy of=20 founder's prescient words Intel offers $10,000 for Moore's Law article=20 Firm seeks pristine copy of founder's prescient words Intel Corp. lives by Moore's Law, but it apparently doesn't have a copy of=20 the magazine in which the law was first laid down. The Santa Clara chip giant= =20 has posted a $10,000 bounty on eBay for someone who can provide a pristine Ap= ril=20 19, 1965, copy of Electronics magazine. That issue of the magazine contained = an article by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore that described how the number of = components on integrated circuits was doubling every year. The article became= =20 the foundation for his famed dictum. "We have photocopies of the article but = not the actual issue of the magazine," an Intel spokesman said. "Gordon doesn= 't=20 have it and the Intel Museum doesn't either." Electronics magazine went out o= f=20 business several years ago. Intel turned to the online auction site on=20 Monday, posting a message on eBay's Want It Now page offering $10,000 for a c= opy of=20 the magazine in mint condition. (The company may buy more than one copy but a= t=20 a lower price. Intel employees and their families are ineligible.) Moore's=20 Law -- which has since been revised to estimate that the number of transistor= s=20 doubles every 18 months -- has been the cornerstone for the information=20 technology industry for decades as it has defined how products can simultaneo= usly=20 drop in price while improving in performance. This has created a situation in= =20 which users upgrade well before their equipment breaks, a boon for the indust= ry.=20 Despite its historical significance, the article at the time wasn't considere= d=20 a monument. "I didn't think it would be especially accurate," Moore said in a= =20 recent interview. Moore, 76, was born in San Francisco and received a=20 bachelor's degree in chemistry from UC Berkeley. He was research director at = the=20 Fairchild Semiconductor division of Fairchild Camera and Instrument Corp. whe= n he=20 wrote the Electronics magazine article in 1965, and in 1968 he co-founded=20 Intel. Chronicle staff contributed to this report. Page D - 1=20 URL:=20 http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/chronicle/archive/2005/04/12/BU= G63C6H4V1.DTL=20 =20 --===============8272248566446649501==--