Kevin O'Buckley, senior vice president and general manager of Intel Foundry Services, confirmed that risk production has ...
"We think it is always good to have at least some of our wafers with TSMC. They are a great supplier. This creates healthy competition between them and Intel Foundry." While Intel's upcoming ...
We think it's always good to have at least some of our wafers with TSMC. They're a great supplier. It creates a good competition between them and Intel Foundry. Not quite sure what the right sort ...
Intel Corp. is reportedly producing initial runs of its most advanced chips ever produced, the 18A wafers, at its Chandler factory, suggesting that the company’s new fabs at its Ocotillo plant ...
But the test wafers suggest that Intel is on pace, or maybe even a bit ahead of schedule, for producing 1.8nm-class chips in the middle of this year. If Intel can prove wrong the rumors about it ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Tom's Hardware While the whole market was looking at the appointment of Lip-Bu Tan as ...
TL;DR: Intel announced Lip-Bu Tan as CEO and achieved a milestone by testing its 18A process node wafers at its Arizona fab, marking a significant step for U.S. semiconductor manufacturing.
TechPowerUp, citing Intel’s engineering manager Pankaj Marria, reports that initial 18A wafers are already rolling out from the Arizona plant. The progress, according to ijiwei and Commercial Times, ...
Copper is the material of choice for the billions of nanometer-scale wires that move power and data around inside the chip in ...