[citation][nom]americanbrian[/nom]My only concern is that the heating effects will be increasingly difficult to manage. Clocking down the chips may be the only way to get them to not overheat, which will still be ok I guess but you lose single threaded speed for presumably higher core counts. We already see that this approach has been a mixed success on our desktops. It is kind of exciting though. It is like the Terminator 2 brain chip.[/citation]
single thread exclusive programs will most likely be dead by the time this comes, or we will have moved to something like graphene, which can handle high clock rates at low temps.
but with a full 3d core, you could cut the travel time for data by a crapton, meaning that even if the clock is slower, the data moves more efficiently, leading to an over all increase in speed, with a shrink of the chip size, or if the process to make the chips 3d is fast, you could see a 16 core chip with 4 cores with 4 stacks, and than adding hyper threading making it a 32 thread chip, as cheap as our current quad cores.