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At its fall 2013 investor meeting, Intel suggested the company will enjoy a 35% scaling advantage over TSMC at the 14 nm node and a ~45% advantage at 10 nm.
Intel is reportedly looking to outsource some of its 14nm CPUs and chipsets to rival semiconductor fab TSMC. The company's 14nm supply was already looking a little less than rosy, but off the back ...
Intel recently offered additional insight into its plans for new 14nm products as well as data on its 10nm difficulties. What's the overall prognosis?
Intel is actually a bit behind TSMC at the moment, but steep scaling from 22nm to 14nm for Intel gives it a huge edge by the next node, and a deeper advance by 10nm.
Even if Intel manages to get its own 10 nm process into production this year, it will be still be behind TSMC's 7 nm process, which is expected to be in production by the second quarter of this year.
Intel didn’t ship a 10nm chip until late 2019 and, as of writing, only a handful of 10nm Intel processors are found inside laptops, while its desktop chips are still on 14nm.
Intel launched its 14nm process back in 2013. As this year comes to an end and Intel's 10nm chips are still figments of imagination, TSMC has shown ...
According to a new report, Intel is planning to outsource some production to competing fabs, in particular chipsets to TSMC.
Sources close to Intel back up a report that Intel may try to move away from describing its chips as 10nm, 7nm, or something similar.
To that end, the adoption of nodes like 14nm, Intel 7 (10nm ESF), Intel 4, and Intel 3 by third parties is complicated.
Intel denies TSMC CPU outsourcing, relying on its own investment to cope with unexpected 14nm demand News spread that TSMC would be taking up Intel's 14nm production slack, which Intel has just ...
Intel 10 nm and TSMC 7nm processes both produce dies with approx 90 million transistors per sq millimetre.