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by sigmoid10
1372 days ago
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Graphics between an end-of-life and a new next-gen console are a bad comparison. Late PS3 and early PS4 games also saw only small improvements. But compare early PS3 to late PS4 titles and the differences are staggering. The PS5 has about an order of magnitude more processing power than the base PS4 and Moore's law states that computing power doubles every two years, which means it gains an order of magnitude every 6 or 7 years - which is precisely the time frame between the PS4 and PS5 release. Moore's law definitely isn't dead and the new console generation proves it. |
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That's not what moore's law is. Moore's law says that TRANSISTOR COUNT will double every 2 years.
> Moore's law is the observation that the number of transistors in a dense integrated circuit (IC) doubles about every two years
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moore%27s_law
Back to the ps4 and ps5:
> Each of the PS5’s CUs has roughly 60 percent more transistors
- https://www.digitaltrends.com/gaming/ps4-vs-ps5/
From the same page, the original PS4 had 18 CUs, the PS5 has 36 CUs.
So if the PS4's transistor count is (n x 18), the PS5's transistor count is (n x 38 x 1/0.6) = (n x 63.3333) - which is only 3.5x
If moore's law had held you'd expect a multiple of 8 or 16, not 3.5.
Moore's law is dead, and the new console generation proves it.