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Labrish
Nyuuz
Chip rivals flirt with Intel's 14A node
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 78374, member: 636"] Big news in the silicon gossip mill. Intel's upcoming 14A manufacturing node is apparently getting serious looks from major players like Nvidia and AMD, especially for their future server CPUs. This is a huge deal for Intel Foundry, which has been desperate to prove it can compete with TSMC for external clients. Analysts suggest the interest extends to advanced packaging tech, too. The 14A process is their next big leap, building on the 18A node. It promises solid gains in power efficiency and chip density. Intel has basically staked its whole future on this, hinting it would bow out of the cutting-edge race if the industry didn't bite. With potential customers like Apple also in the mix for later dates, it seems the aggressive strategy under their foundry leadership might be paying off. This move could diversify the supply chain for chip designers who've been locked into TSMC. Having a competitive alternative, especially one based in the U.S., is a big deal for companies wanting options. The tech inside 14A, including things called RibbonFET and PowerDirect, is aimed at keeping Moore's Law on life support. For now, the vibe is that Intel might actually pull this off. [/QUOTE]
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Chip rivals flirt with Intel's 14A node
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