Imagine you have a tiny box full of little workers. Each worker does one job, like adding numbers or sending messages. When the box is small, it's easy for everyone to work together, but as more workers are added, things get crowded. To make space, we shrink each worker so that there’s still room for them all.
Examples
- Shrinking transistors are like making the workers in a factory smaller so more can fit in the same room.
- Microchips power your phone, and shrinking them means you don’t have to carry a bigger phone.
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See also
- How Do Microchips Actually Control Everything?
- How Can a Tiny Chip Control an Entire Computer?
- How Do Microchips Actually Work Inside Your Phone?
- How Do Microchips Talk to Each Other?
- How Do Microchips Control the World We Live In?