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Intel Hardware

Intel Has Killed off the 10nm Process, Report Says (semiaccurate.com) 116

Charlie Demerjian, reporting for SemiAccurate: SemiAccurate has learned that Intel just pulled the plug on their struggling 10nm process. Before you jump to conclusions, we think this is both the right thing to do and a good thing for the company. For several years now SemiAccurate has been saying the the 10nm process as proposed by Intel would never be financially viable. Now we are hearing from trusted moles that the process is indeed dead and that is a good thing for Intel, if they had continued along their current path the disaster would have been untenable. Our moles are saying the deed has finally been done.

This isn't to say the road to this point has been easy or straightforward, and the road ahead is even less solid. Intel has continually moved the public bar on 10nm back, incrementally, while singing a different song internally. In their Q1/2018 earnings call they moved the timetables and spun it in a curious way but were telling partners a different story.
UPDATE: Intel tweeted on Monday morning: "Media reports published today that Intel is ending work on the 10nm process are untrue. We are making good progress on 10nm. Yields are improving consistent with the timeline we shared during our last earnings report."
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Intel Has Killed off the 10nm Process, Report Says

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  • End of the line for ever more powerful digital computing is coming fast. Better be prepared.
    • Prepared how? You say it like it's gonna change anything.
    • There are plenty of gains to be had by optimizing all the sloppy and inefficient code that has been written and re-used through the years which was accepted thanks to constant hardware improvements.
      • by Anonymous Coward


        There are plenty of gains to be had by optimizing all the sloppy and inefficient code that has been written and re-used through the years which was accepted thanks to constant hardware improvements.

        Absolutely true. However, hardware improvements are a one time cost that makes all your software faster. Improving software speed is a painstaking process of going through and re-writing code.

        In other words, hardware improvements are practically free. Software optimization is incredibly expensive. My expectat

        • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

          In other words, hardware improvements are practically free. Software optimization is incredibly expensive.

          Hey, it's good for job security. I shouldn't say that because I often rant about the how stupid web (non) standards turned simple inhouse CRUD dev into a labor-intensive Dagwood Sandwich mess and fashion contest.

    • End of the line for ever more powerful digital computing is coming fast. Better be prepared.

      While Moore's law is definitely in big trouble, the spirit of what it hoped to offer may not be. The cost of chips continues to come down. The power consumption continues to come down. While the transistor density may no longer be increasing as fast, they continue to increase CPU core counts on larger dies.

      CPU chips for most real world applications haven't been the bottleneck for a while. Solid state non volatile storage continues to advance and this is the primary remedy for most application slowness.

      • Parallelism has been on the drawing board for over a generation in prep of the end of Moore's Law, Within the past decade parallel cores have became popular. My Laptop Today with a good video card with nearly 2000 Cuda cores, give more parallel computing power then a MassPar mainframe With (1024 CPUs) I used back in my college days, learning parallel processing.

    • End of the line for ever more powerful digital computing is coming fast. Better be prepared.

      There is plenty of room for improvement just very few niche applications to pay for it. The demand is currently not there. A 5 year old laptop was faster than most current laptops/desktops/tablets/phones. Most people have stopped demanding high performance CPUs. Even gamers have shifted their focus to the video cards not the CPUs and a majority of games are now written for tablets/phones that have little more processing power than a 486. Because of the low processing power and low energy requirements of ph

    • Re:Moore's Law (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jwhyche ( 6192 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @11:40AM (#57517919) Homepage

      Be prepared for what? We reached a plateau of power vs need a long time ago. The average consumer the plateau topped out about 10 years ago. I am a power user and I'm having to make up excuses to upgrade my 6700K to something more powerful. It does everything I need it to do and with plenty of processing room left over.

      • by short ( 66530 )
        Just start developing some larger real-C++ codebase.
    • It's not that difficult for Intel to prepare. They can buy chips from AMD. They can license ARM.
    • AMD will likely have 7nm chips out sometime in late 2019.

  • by swinferno ( 1212408 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @09:06AM (#57516955)

    Interesting move. Time will tell if this move is more in the interest of shareholders and will hinder technological advancements...

  • mac pro now delayed to 2020 (intel may it so AMD is not going to happen)

    • mac pro now delayed to 2020 (intel may it so AMD is not going to happen)

      I'm struggling with what you're trying to say here. "may it so"? "AMD is not going to happen?" Huh?
      I don't think Apples "tech refresh" is in any way dependent on Intel's process size. There hasn't been any correlation that I've seen between process size and "mac[book] pro" releases. Despite not yet hitting 10nm, Intel has still released new iterations of their i-series chips pretty consistently.

      Intel has done some underhanded things in the past to push AMD out - and got slapped with anticompetitive lawsuit

  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @09:24AM (#57517057)

    If what the report says is correct

    This isn’t to say the road to this point has been easy or straightforward, and the road ahead is even less solid. Intel has continually moved the public bar on 10nm back, incrementally, while singing a different song internally. In their Q1/2018 earnings call they moved the timetables and spun it in a curious way but were telling partners a different story.

    Nothing however tops the masterful “Hyperscaling” stunt where Intel brought in press and analysts to a ‘manufacturing day’ in early 2017 to explain how the crippling slide of 10nm was not actually a slide, it was a good thing and not a delay at all. SemiAccurate laughed and stopped just short of calling Intel liars.

    The company redefined terms well past the breaking point to show that scaling was ‘on track’ even if node cadence was ‘intentionally’ longer. As you can see from the above graph, all was good publicly, internally SemiAccurate was hearing a very different story. (Note: Intel was on track to miss that graph by 1+ year and sliding before 10nm was killed.)

    Be interesting to see how this plays out.

  • Moles (Score:2, Troll)

    by Nukenbar ( 215420 )

    I find it hard to take any article seriously that uses the word "moles" multiple times that isn't discussing a skin issue.

    • by tsa ( 15680 )

      There must be many articles written on the behaviour of moles and the damage they cause to fields and dykes.

      You choose how to interpret that ;)

    • by Hrrrg ( 565259 )

      I find it hard to take any article seriously that uses the word "moles" multiple times that isn't discussing a skin issue.

      I tried to RTFA, but it appears that semiaccurate.com is down. Heh, haven't seen a site be slashdotted in a long time. I guess by moles you don't mean 6.02310^23?

  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @09:31AM (#57517101)

    Intel hasn't killed off anything. This idiot Charlie Demerjian quotes his own site to "prove"...what?

    fact is Intel is delaying 10nm (a marketing term more than an actual chip feature size, doesn't mean half pitch any more) to 2019

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Being someone who works out there and have seen the problems with the 10nm stuff, I'd say this is accurate. Can't see why they'd quit it completely instead of falling back to regroup as it were. But the fact is the 10nm stuff has all sorts of problems that would mean too many dies per wafer would not pass testing.
  • by pak9rabid ( 1011935 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @09:38AM (#57517125)
    Seems to be doing just fine [wccftech.com] with their venture into 7nm land.
  • We are approaching the limit for CMOS-based electronics, for many years there has been a lt of research for an alternative, although none are here yet. But when one of those alternatives finally arrives, it will be a second revolution of computing, like being back in the 90s. One promising technology is vacuum channel transistors, for example.

  • Semiaccurate? (Score:5, Informative)

    by The Cynical Critic ( 1294574 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @10:36AM (#57517467)
    Ummm.... You people do know that Semiaccurate is a kind of notorious for being run by an insanely zealous AMD fanboy? We're talking about the same person who made some absolutely crazy misreading of a number of documents to arrive at a conclusion that Nvidia's Fermi architecture had sub 5% yields as devices based on that architecture were shipping in good numbers.

    A reliable source this is not, particularly when it comes to AMD's or it's direct competitors, so wait for some more trustworthy sources before making your mind up on this subject.
    • Yeah well fermi was a disaster producion-wise mate, nobody really knows why that implosion of heat sold that good that it did. I guess marketing and loyalism was strong in that age too.
  • Wall Street Analyst just upgraded Intel this morning in large part based on the move to the 10nm process. Stock jumped on the upgrade.

    Seems he is misinformed or SemiAccurate is off base

    https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/2... [cnbc.com]

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