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As strictly an IDM, Intel has historically capitalized on its investments in the physical fab structures by retrofitting the fabs after three process nodes, on average.
Intel announced today that it no longer plans to use its own 20A process node with its upcoming Arrow Lake processors. Instead, it will use external nodes for all of the compute tiles, and then ...
Intel's internal foundry model and IDM 2.0 strategy aim to enhance competitiveness, attract external customers, and drive cost savings.
Multi-generational agreement advances Intel’s IDM 2.0 strategy. Partnership broadens and accelerates IP access for Intel foundry ecosystem. Agreement builds on longstanding IP and EDA strategic ...
This dismal recent history and risky outlook led to Intel's IDM 2.0 announcement in 2021. They hope to reclaim manufacturing leadership by delivering five process nodes in four years and ...
Forget about those five nodes in four years, here comes Intel 14A and 10A.
Intel executives that turning to outside foundries was necessary to enable its aggressive plan to move through five production nodes in four years.
At the same time, it's already pledged to move through five nodes in four years as part of its IDM 2.0 strategy to take the performance and efficiency lead back from TSMC.
Funnily enough, that's pretty much in line with Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger's Intel IDM 2.0 plans and claims for regaining chip production "leadership".
Intel engineer says next-gen 'Griffin Cove' development is underway, notes that relying on Intel's nodes alone 'got them into trouble' in the past.
Today, Intel finds itself in a precarious position. Its once-vaunted manufacturing machine has fallen behind Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp., which dominates advanced process nodes.
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