Intel Opening Foundry To Third Parties
angry tapir writes "Intel is exploring whether it can branch out as a foundry by opening its chip manufacturing facilities to more third-party customers. Intel has expanded its chip-to-order business by signing up additional customers to take advantage of its 22-nanometer process facilities."
In particular, two FPGA design companies will be using Intel's fabrication plant, and "the unit has more than two customers but others are not disclosing their plans yet."
But AMD could use a good fab.
Just sayin'
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
Just imagine nVidia makes GPUs at Intel to get a full process node ahead of ATI/AMD. It seems unlikely they'd let AMD use their 22nm process to compete with themselves. OTOH, nVidia is now a competitor as well.
I was wondering if/when Intel would do this, since they are essentially a full process generation ahead of the whole world.
I wonder if Apple's rocky relationship with Samsung could be a motivator. Intel would love some of the iDevice revenue.
I'd love to see Atmel microcontrollers made on 22nm process. ATtiny85, 84, 861, etc running faster than 20MHz with twice the flash and RAM, anyone?
Larrabee almost certainly lowered future expectations for discrete graphics chips, fearing that Chipzilla would enter their market. I'm guessing this is the same for the foundry business, scaring away potential investors in TSMC, UMC and GloFo. Huge, huge investment costs that take years to materialize and are extremely time-to-market sensitive, any uncertainty you can add to that is advantage Intel. I very much doubt that anything remotely competing with Intel will ever get their hands on their crown jewels.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
Tabula has some cool tech. Their current chips aren't dense enough for what we wanted to do with them, but at 22nm they might be.
From my understanding FPGAs is a type of integrated circuit. A camera sensor like CCD or CMOS sensor are other types of ICs. Their manufacturing is different as well as their functionality. You cannot use a FPGA as a camera sensor any more than you can use your car transmission as your engine.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
they are different electrical devices, FPGAs only allow you to implement different logical functions.
Only in the similarity that a x86 chip is manufactured generally in the same process as a DSP. But specifically you cannot take the chips out of your stereo and build a computer to run Windows. Specifically making a CCD or CMOS sensor is very different than making a FPGA. Specifically they have different functionality and are not interchangeable.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
No. I'd imagine that some digital cameras use FPGA's though, but only as a way to get high speed image processing capabilities (performed in parallel)
Ask the folks over at Digital Equipment Corp how well that worked for them. -oh wait.
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/media/news/1997/10/8024
I wonder if this will ultimately lead to them spinning off their foundries...in the past, I thought they have viewed their foundries as a competitive advantage against other chip makers. I wonder if that's still the case.
My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
Ahh, good to know. Thank you!
Maybe Intel is hoping nVidia or AMD will use their foundry to fab their GPUs. And then Intel magically comes out with a GPU that doesn't suck 6 months later.