Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

Outline · [ Standard ] · Linear+

 BREAK: China Finally Has EUV Machine

views
     
Wedchar2912
post Mar 15 2025, 09:12 PM

Look at all my stars!!
*******
Senior Member
3,687 posts

Joined: Apr 2019
yay... does this mean we can get cheaper chips thanks to china's overproduction and overcapacity?

that's all I care... but please allow English version of softwares to run on all chips... pls pls pls... else life will be tough for many of us...

lol
Wedchar2912
post Mar 15 2025, 11:02 PM

Look at all my stars!!
*******
Senior Member
3,687 posts

Joined: Apr 2019
QUOTE(lurkingaround @ Mar 15 2025, 10:19 PM)
.
Intel's 13th-gen and 14th-gen processors are 7nm node, not 14nm.
.
*
did you forget to upgrade your search engine? lol
Wedchar2912
post Mar 16 2025, 12:12 AM

Look at all my stars!!
*******
Senior Member
3,687 posts

Joined: Apr 2019
QUOTE(lurkingaround @ Mar 16 2025, 12:11 AM)
.
Fyi, .......

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raptor_Lake
Raptor Lake is Intel's codename for the 13th and 14th generations of Intel Core processors based on a hybrid architecture, utilizing Raptor Cove performance cores and Gracemont efficient cores.[3][4][5] Like Alder Lake, Raptor Lake is fabricated using Intel's Intel 7 process. ...
[attachmentid=11511189]
.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/7_nm_process
....
On July 26, 2021, Intel announced their new manufacturing roadmap, renaming all of their future process nodes.[27] Intel's "10nm" Enhanced SuperFin (10ESF), which was roughly equivalent to TSMC's N7 process, would thenceforth be known as "Intel 7", while their earlier "7nm" process would erstwhile be called "Intel 4".[27][38] As a result, Intel's first processors based on Intel 7 were at that time planned to have started shipping by the second half of 2022,[needs update] whereas Intel announced earlier that they were planning to have launched "7nm" processors in 2023.[39] ...
.

Process nodes and process offerings

The naming of process nodes by 4 different manufacturers (TSMC, Samsung, SMIC, Intel) is partially marketing-driven and not directly related to any measurable distance on a chip – for example TSMC's "7nm" node was previously similar in some key dimensions to Intel's planned first-iteration "10nm" node, before Intel released further iterations, culminating in "10nm Enhanced SuperFin", which was later renamed to "Intel 7" for marketing reasons.[76][77] ...
.

Intel's new "Intel 7" process, previously known as "10nm Enhanced SuperFin" (10ESF), is based on its previous "10nm" node. The node will feature a 10-15% increase in performance per watt. Meanwhile, their old "7nm" process, now called "Intel 4", was at that time expected to have been released in 2023.[101][needs update] Few details about the "Intel 4" node had at that time been made public, although its transistor density had at that time been estimated to be at least 202 million transistors per square millimeter.[27][102][needs update] As of 2020, Intel had been experiencing problems with its "Intel 4" process to the point of outsourcing production of its Ponte Vecchio GPUs.[103][104]

.
*
like I said, its time you upgrade your search engine... or ai chat bot... no need to be stuborn one...


 

Change to:
| Lo-Fi Version
0.0259sec    0.79    7 queries    GZIP Disabled
Time is now: 20th December 2025 - 01:44 AM