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Labrish
Nyuuz
Intel admits defeat, uses rival TSMC for its Nova Lake-S CPUs
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 51044, member: 636"] Intel engineers finished their Nova Lake-S processor design work at TSMC factories using the advanced N2 manufacturing technology. The chip giant surprised industry watchers by choosing TSMC's 2-nanometer process instead of sticking with their internal 18A production methods. Sources reveal Intel made the switch to protect against potential delays and supply shortages from their internal manufacturing facilities. The decision gives the company backup options when mass production begins later. Tech insiders say the move shows Intel playing it safe with their next-generation desktop chips. The massive processor packs an incredible 52 processing cores across three different performance tiers for various computing tasks. High-performance cores number 16 while efficiency cores reach 32 with an additional 4 cores designed for ultra-low power consumption. Memory speeds will hit 8,800 megatransfers per second through the advanced controller system built into each chip. Graphics processing gets handled by the Xe3 Celestial architecture while Xe4 Druid manages video playback and display functions. The complex design splits different jobs between specialized computing sections. Laboratory testing begins after the tape-out phase wraps up with validation typically requiring about one month of intensive work. Engineers activate the silicon components and put them through rigorous performance checks under different operating conditions. Mass production cannot start until the validation process proves the chips work reliably across all test scenarios. Manufacturing ramp-up demands several additional months before retail availability becomes possible. Consumers will likely see Nova Lake-S processors hitting store shelves during the third quarter of 2026. [/QUOTE]
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Labrish
Nyuuz
Intel admits defeat, uses rival TSMC for its Nova Lake-S CPUs
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