• Breaking News

    Wednesday, June 23, 2021

    Hardware support: China-made 14nm chips expected to be mass produced next year

    Hardware support: China-made 14nm chips expected to be mass produced next year


    China-made 14nm chips expected to be mass produced next year

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 08:55 AM PDT

    Arm Introduces Its Confidential Compute Architecture

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 07:09 AM PDT

    NVIDIA announces DOOM Eternal GeForce RTX 3080 Ti Limited Edition Demon Slayer Bundle

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 07:20 AM PDT

    Lenovo launches ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen4 with up to Tiger Lake-H Core i9 CPU and GeForce RTX 3080 16GB GPU

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 05:45 AM PDT

    Anandtech: "Using AI to Build Better Processors: Google Was Just the Start, Says Synopsys"

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 06:19 AM PDT

    IPMI EVERYWHERE! w/The Pi-KVM

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 12:16 PM PDT

    Windows 11 vs. Windows 10, Gaming and Application Benchmarks

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 04:36 AM PDT

     Semiconductor CapEx strong in 2021 - Semiwiki

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 10:03 AM PDT

    [Gamers Nexus] Lian Li Odyssey X $500 Case Review: "Transforming" Full Tower

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 11:48 AM PDT

    NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 supply to increase in July, focusing on Internet Cafes -

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 01:32 PM PDT

    ASRock announces 10L DeskMini Max Concept PC supporting up to AMD Ryzen 9 5950X

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 05:45 AM PDT

    The IMPOSSIBLE PC | "tiny PC case to build"

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 12:21 PM PDT

    interview with Jeff Powers "Challenges of AR Hardware Startups" (co-founder of occipital)

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 06:56 AM PDT

    Quantum tunneling solutions

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 08:26 AM PDT

    I work on the software side of things, and have been battling some nasty bugs lately.

    While banging my head against the wall, I started thinking about the bugs/issues that must be produced from quantum tunneling.

    How does hardware work to fix this problem? Any good stories out there?

    submitted by /u/skirtlz
    [link] [comments]

    In 2023, will Intel still be behind AMD in process technology?

    Posted: 23 Jun 2021 05:38 AM PDT

    A year ago, the internet expected Zen4 to get released in late 2021 or early 2022 on 5nm. The thought was that Apple usually eats first (5nm), then a year later, AMD eats. This is turning out not to be the case.

    First, AMD won't release any 5nm product this year. Second, the recent reports suggest that Zen4 won't come out until late 2022 on 5nm. This is one year later than people expected. Lastly, it makes sense that AMD previewed 3D cache on Zen3 on TSMC's 7nm because they need something to compete with Alder Lake due to Zen4's late release date.

    Meanwhile, Intel's 7nm (equivalent to TSMC's 5nm), is scheduled for mass production in 2023. That would mean that AMD has only a few months of process lead over Intel if Meteor Lake launches in early 2023.

    In addition, Intel has publicly stated that they will release CPUs based on their 7nm tech and CPUs based on TSMC tech in 2023. Perhaps Intel will use TSMC 5nm for their consumer CPUs and their own 7nm for server CPUs.

    So it seems like, by 2023, Intel will no longer be in a deficit when it comes to process technology because of the Zen4's late 2022 release, their own 7nm tech going online, and their deal with TSMC.

    This seems like a great thing for consumers because AMD's prices have crept way up due to low competition and the two companies will battle over architectural improvements rather than node leads.

    submitted by /u/senttoschool
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