By: Björn Ragnar Björnsson (bjorn.ragnar.delete@this.gmail.com), June 13, 2022 9:08 am
Room: Moderated Discussions
David Kanter (dkanter.delete@this.realworldtech.com) on June 12, 2022 7:05 pm wrote:
> Hi Everyone,
>
> Happy Sunday! I am thrilled to bring you my latest article, which focuses on the Intel
> 4 process that was presented at the VLSI Symposium in Hawaii. Here's a quick summary:
>
> The Intel 4 process achieves 20% better performance and scales logic density by 2X while reducing costs
> through extensive design co-optimization, adoption of new materials, and judicious use of EUV lithography.
> The first product, the Meteor Lake compute tile will ramp to high volume manufacturing in 2023.
>
> Read more here: Intel 4 Process Scales Logic with Design, Materials, and EUV
>
> And as always, feel free to discuss or drop questions in this thread!
>
> David
>
Does anyone know whether Intel could have gotten acceptable yields when they were struggling with their 10nm/Intel 7 process for any part of a SOC? I'm asking: if they'd had their tile/chiplet tech done could they have had good yields for certain types of tiles?
Just curious.
> Hi Everyone,
>
> Happy Sunday! I am thrilled to bring you my latest article, which focuses on the Intel
> 4 process that was presented at the VLSI Symposium in Hawaii. Here's a quick summary:
>
> The Intel 4 process achieves 20% better performance and scales logic density by 2X while reducing costs
> through extensive design co-optimization, adoption of new materials, and judicious use of EUV lithography.
> The first product, the Meteor Lake compute tile will ramp to high volume manufacturing in 2023.
>
> Read more here: Intel 4 Process Scales Logic with Design, Materials, and EUV
>
> And as always, feel free to discuss or drop questions in this thread!
>
> David
>
Does anyone know whether Intel could have gotten acceptable yields when they were struggling with their 10nm/Intel 7 process for any part of a SOC? I'm asking: if they'd had their tile/chiplet tech done could they have had good yields for certain types of tiles?
Just curious.