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<div style="display:inline-block; float: left; padding: 10px;">[[File:tech node.svg|100px]]</div>
 
<div style="display:inline-block; float: left; padding: 10px;">[[File:tech node.svg|100px]]</div>
The term itself, as we know it today, dates back to the 1990s where microprocessors development was driven by higher frequency while [[DRAM]] development was dominated by the evergrowing demand for higher capacities. Since higher capacities were achieved through higher density, it was DRAM that became the driver of [[technology scaling]]. This continued to be the case well into the 2000s. The [[International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors]] (ITRS) provides the semiconductor industry with guidance and assistance with various technology nodes. By 2006, as microprocessors started dominating the technology scaling, ITRS replaced the term with a number of separate indicators for [[Flash]], [[DRAM]], and [[MPU]]/[[ASIC]].
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The term itself, as we know it today, dates back to the 1990s where microprocessors development was driven by higher frequency while [[DRAM]] development was dominated by the evergrowing demand for higher capacities. Since higher capacities were achieved through higher density, it was DRAM that became the driver of [[technology scaling]]. This continued to be the case well into the 2000s. The [[International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors]] (ITRS) provides the semiconductor industry with guidance and assistance with various technology nodes. By 2006, as microprocessors started dominating the technology scaling, ITRS replaced the term with a number of separate indicators for [[Flash]], [[DRAM]], and [[MPU]]/[[ASCI]].
  
 
The ITRS traditionally defined the process node as the smallest half-pitch of contacted metal 1 lines allowed in the fabrication process. It is a common metric used to describe and differentiate the technologies used in [[fabricating]] [[integrated circuit]]s.  
 
The ITRS traditionally defined the process node as the smallest half-pitch of contacted metal 1 lines allowed in the fabrication process. It is a common metric used to describe and differentiate the technologies used in [[fabricating]] [[integrated circuit]]s.  

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