Amd talks about the future of its products with tsmc and globalfoundries
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AMD is the only company in the computing world to offer high-performance CPU and GPU products. In the past 18 months, they have successfully introduced their strongest suite of products in over a decade, and their business volume has grown, gaining market share in PCs, games and data centers.
AMD will bet on TSMC and Globalfoundries for their new products
The industry is at a major tipping point as the pace of Moore's Law slows, while the demand for graphics and computing performance continues to grow. That is why in A MD they have invested a lot in their architecture and product roadmaps, while making the strategic decision to bet heavily on the 7nm process node.
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AMD's next big milestone is the introduction of our next 7nm product portfolio, which includes initial products with the second-generation “Zen 2” CPU core and its new “Navi” GPU architecture. Several 7nm products have already been recorded on TSMC, including the first 7nm GPU planned for launch later this year, and its first 7nm server CPU they plan to launch in 2019. AMD's work with TSMC on their 7nm node has gone very well, and they have seen excellent results. To streamline development and align investments closely with each of their foundry partners' investments, they announced today that they intend to focus the breadth of their product portfolio on the industry-leading 7nm process at TSMC.
They will also continue to have a broad partnership with Globalfoundries, spanning multiple 14nm and 12nm process nodes and technologies, at their New York factory to support the ongoing ramp of their AMD Ryzen, AMD Radeon and AMD EPYC processors.
Techpowerup fontEvga teases for its future products
EVGA has decided to tease some of its upcoming products, including a GTX 1080 Ti FTW3 edition of the HYBRID.
Tsmc talks about its manufacturing process at 5nm finfet
TSMC is already planning its process roadmap to 5nm, which it hopes to have ready at some point in 2020, all the improvements it will offer.
Intel talks about specter and meltdown, in addition to its processes at 14 nm and 10 nm
In a recent conference call with JP Morgan, Intel has addressed issues like 10nm production, 14nm longevity, and Specter / Meltdown vulnerabilities in great detail.