Intel, Toshiba, Samsung To Form Chip Alliance
Lucas123 writes "According to a report from a Japanese news agency, semi-conductor leaders Intel, Samsung and Toshiba are forming a development alliance to halve the size of chip circuitry in order to create more dense NAND flash chips and more powerful processors. The vendors would not confirm the news report, but the Nikkei Daily said they hope to reduce lithography technology from the 20 nanometer size used today to something below 10nm. The news agency also said Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry may fund up to half the project's cost, or roughly $61 million."
I read that "halve the size of the chip industry". Didn't they do that already when Hint and Opti left the chipset industry?
Or collusion?
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I'm forming an alliance with Pringles, Frito-Lays and Doritos!
An alliance of this sort most probably also means some price fixing deals already on the table. But if we get some decent capacity SSD's for reasonable price a bit sooner, for a few bucks more, I think its worth it.
Going deeper submicron is all well and good, but it doesn't mean much to the place where I work. We're a MIPS house and can't use Atom. But there's chatter around the cubes about Atom getting a badly needed facelift, licensing an encryption CPU from some startup in Europe and maybe making Atom synthesizable - could affect us big time if Intel finally gets serious about embedded.
Wouldn't this allow quartering the size, since you have this halving in both dimensions?
Yes! It's about time somebody formed their own chip alliance and stood up to Frito-Lay!
at puny attempt of competitors to create so called 'alliance.' Nothing can beat the mighty Apple! HA! Ha! Ha ha ha ha!!!!
Intel is starting to feel the heat from ARM. Sooner than later datacenters will be running on ARM processors, and doing the same work per time unit at a fraction of the power cost.
This is a new market that they wish to stomp on before it can get started.
Here's hoping Foxconn doesn't start the Chip Entente and start the First Nerd War.
There are all kinds of alliances going on in industry at any given moment. How is this any different?
Absolutely I do.
Common Platform Alliance - IBM, Global Foundries (you know, the former fabs of AMD), Samsung. Chartered, now part of Global Foundries, was a member too.
So, Samsung must be giving some kind of assurances to Intel they're not going to let ideas and techniques spill over into the Common Platform Alliance...
You want to embed x86?
For real?
Seriously?
You're not just joking?