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Latest about TSMC

Looks like Intel has quietly killed the 20A process, announcing that no Arrow Lake chip will use its first Angstron Era node
By Dave James published
news The Intel 20A process seems like it's going to go down in history as purely a test platform for backside power and GAAFET.

OpenAI plans to build its own AI chips on TSMC's forthcoming 1.6 nm A16 process node
By Nick Evanson published
news The report suggests that Broadcom or Marvell will design the chip, but Apple might be a partner, too.

As Intel's struggles continue, rumours are now emerging that plans are afoot to flog its chip-manufacturing fabs
By Jeremy Laird published
news Is Intel's future a fabless fait accompli?

Microsoft, Meta and more might have to wait for their shiny new AI hardware as Nvidia's Blackwell server GPUs are reportedly delayed
By Andy Edser published
news Sources say the first half of 2025 is more likely.

TSMC's chairman hints at potential higher prices for Nvidia—'I think those products are really valuable...but I am thinking about showing our value as well'
By Andy Edser published
news The AI profits are flowing, and TSMC's new chairman may be looking to divert a little more in its direction.

Intel's latest processor is mostly made by its biggest manufacturing rival because it had 'a better process technology at that point in time'
By Jacob Ridley published
News Though for its successor, Panther Lake, "almost all of the tiles are on Intel."

Apple reportedly seeks to lock out its competitors from TSMC's 2nm process, by booking all of its manufacturing capacity
By Chris Szewczyk published
News That looks nice. We'll take all of it.

The world's largest chipmaker could flip a kill switch and remotely disable its machines in the event of an invasion
By Jacob Ridley published
News That's one helluva kill switch.

Intel's Lunar Lake is here to remind you x86 still has a place in laptops: 'You've never seen x86 power characteristics quite like this'
By Dave James published
news It's coming out swinging, promising faster AI, CPU, and gaming performance than AMD and Qualcomm

US Commerce Secretary says if China seized TSMC it would be 'absolutely devastating' to the US economy, as it buys 92% of its cutting-edge chips from the Taiwanese manufacturer
By Andy Edser published
news As Chinese relations with Taiwan remain strained, the US continues to reinforce the importance of chip manufacturing on home soil.
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