Intel is reportedly still struggling with a chipmaking process crucial to its future. Reuters reports that the company's 18A process is still producing low yields and high defect rates. Intel has ...
Intel Corp. is set to revamp its contract chip manufacturing business by pivoting away from its highly publicized 18A process and switching its attention to its next-generation 14A node in an effort ...
The final process node in Intel's foundry roadmap is now ready for production. Intel 18A should propel Intel close to TSMC in terms of performance and efficiency. Ramping up volumes will take time, so ...
Intel Corp. today showcased a new class of Intel Core Ultra X9 and X7 processors, the first new chips built on its most advanced 18A manufacturing process. Announced at the CES electronics trade show ...
Intel’s been trying to recapture its glory days and establish itself, once again, as a leading chipmaker. However, this dream has run into a major snag. The company’s next-gen manufacturing process, ...
Direct Connect Intel has revealed a pair of variants of its long-awaited 18A process node to make it better suited for, one, manufacturing mass-market processors and, two, complex multi-die ...
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) made significant progress last year in its server central processing unit (CPU) business. The company has been losing market share to AMD for years, partly because it was stuck on ...
The strongest argument you can make for Intel's strategy is that, long term, there's value in learning by doing how to package chiplets. But this could have been achieved by limiting chiplets to the ...
TL;DR: NVIDIA and Broadcom are testing Intel's new 18A process node, indicating potential confidence in Intel's semiconductor capabilities. These tests, not previously reported, suggest possible ...
The future of internal Intel CPU production is at risk, as the company has confirmed that if it fails to find external customers for its future 14A (1.4nm) semiconductor manufacturing process, then it ...
In a surprise announcement, Intel has revealed that it won't be making most of the silicon for its new range of desktop gaming CPUs itself. Instead, the forthcoming Intel Arrow Lake lineup will be ...