• It's the first-order effect of Moore's Law--the flip side of Gordon Moore's formulation.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • The miracle of the digital age is not just Moore's Law, because Moore's Law only predicts burgeoning supplies of MIPs and RAM.

    FORBES: Digital Rules

  • The cheap revolution is a first-order effect of Moore's Law. (Moore's Law predicts the transistor density on silicon chips will double every 18 to 24 months.) For years if you said "Moore's Law, " people presumed you were describing a future of ever more powerful computers.

    FORBES: Jim Michaels Broke the Mold

  • First up for a makeover, should Winder's vision be realized, would be Fleming's second novel, "Live and Let Die, " initially made in 1973 in Moore's first appearance in the lead role -- something that would likely only raise eyebrows among Moore connoisseurs and fans of the original's epic Wings title track.

    CNN: James Bond: The world's favorite spy

  • Mary's Hospital didn't immediately respond to CNN's inquiry into Moore's condition.

    CNN: X Games competitor in critical condition after accident

  • "There's damage everywhere, " Moore's Mayor Glenn Lewis told CNN's Anderson Cooper.

    CNN: In El Reno, a tornado 'looking at us dead in the eye'

  • Mr Moore's estranged father, Graeme Moore, 59, who was not a nominated next-of-kin and had not seen his son for several years, criticised the Foreign Office's handling of the case.

    BBC: Anguish at hostage death reports

  • The explosive growth of the Internet is reminiscent of Moore's Law (named for Gordon Moore, the physicist, entrepreneur and now Intel billionaire).

    FORBES: Keep up or die

  • Moore's Law, advanced by Gordon Moore, an Intel founder, says that the number of transistors on a chip doubles every two years, creating ever more powerful--and cheaper--electronic devices.

    FORBES: Trick Of The Light

  • That invention sent computer performance on a rocket-like trajectory upward, its ascent governed by what became popularly known as Moore's Law, after Intel founder Gordon Moore who coined it.

    FORBES: Atoms Offer Giant Leap In Computing Power

  • Moore's Law, named after Intel founder Gordon Moore, says the number of transistors on a chip doubles every two years, creating ever-more-powerful and cheaper electronic devices.

    FORBES: Trick of the Light

  • "It was Bobby's ultimate goal to play for England, " Moore's wife Stephane told the English FA's website.

    CNN: STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • To support his applications, his firm files an affidavit signed by his client's parent or closest family member in support of Moore's request for a fatter fee.

    FORBES: Moore's Law

  • "Let's bring in the neurobiologists, hook their ideas to Moore's Law and have fun!"

    FORBES: INCOMPARABLE CARVER

  • Though clearly not to everyone's taste, the likes of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore's Derek and Clive sketches and George Carlin's Seven Dirty Words routine have influenced generations of humorists.

    BBC: Should swearing be against the law?

  • Gordon Bell, who was one of the great figures of Digital Equipment and is now at Microsoft, propounded Bell's Law, which is sort of a corollary of Moore's Law that the number of transistors on a chip doubles every 18 months or so.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • It's a small, small dysfunctional world after all, in Moore's depiction.

    CNN: Why Disney might want to 'Escape From Tomorrow'

  • There's no reason in the world that MRI scanning technology can't ride the same Moore's Law cost curve, going down 50% every 18 months.

    FORBES: Religious Left Returns

  • David Beckham's revitalised form on loan at AC Milan has won him inclusion in Capello's squad and put him on the brink of a 108th cap that would equal Bobby Moore's outfield appearance landmark.

    BBC: Capello wary of Spain's midfield

  • There's a dry, no-big-deal feeling about most of the relationships in Ms Moore's stories.

    ECONOMIST: Shorter fiction

  • And medical-malpractice lawyers have built some of the most lucrative legal practices in the U.S.--even in the face of laws trying to limit their fees (see " Moore's Law").

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • After Mr Moore's intervention, applicants for the 16 posts currently available can live within 30 miles.

    BBC: Sainsbury's Kelso store job application radius extended

  • He said Moore's class has given him the financial tools to support that decision.

    NPR: Future Heads Of Family Farms Dig Into Financials

  • Likewise, accepting Moore's Law (and its equivalents in storage and bandwidth) is not easy.

    FORBES: Digital Rules

  • Not in the semiconductor industry where brutal price cuts, la Moore's law, are the norm.

    FORBES: Beyond the sunset

  • Experts have long predicted that this leakage, or "tunneling, " would bring Moore's Law to a halt.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Moore's Law proved to be a force that nearly flattened both IBM and DEC.

    FORBES: Keep up or die

  • It took about ten years for Moore's Law to deliver the first personal computers.

    FORBES: Keep up or die

  • But now that telephony is going digital, it will be sucked into Moore's Law.

    FORBES: Digital rules

  • But Xerox knew that Moore's Law would soon deliver the goods, and then, boom, good-bye IBM.

    FORBES: Sudden death for brands

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