QCOM is exclusive to TSMC at 3nm and 2nm so there is no new Samsung Foundry business. It is legacy QCOM chips. Intel 18A beats Samung 3nm/2nm.
IMO, That confirms that the QCOM exec is a bit clueless then during this interview.
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QCOM is exclusive to TSMC at 3nm and 2nm so there is no new Samsung Foundry business. It is legacy QCOM chips. Intel 18A beats Samung 3nm/2nm.
Not my strong suit, but according to my good friend google. "semiconductor cell libraries with different heights offer distinct power, performance, and area (PPA) trade-offs. A taller standard cell can increase circuit performance at the expense of area and power, while a shorter cell sacrifices performance for improved density and lower power consumption."I just rewatched this..... Wow... that is most blunt comment I have heard on Intel foundry. Its TSMC and Samsung.
I thought @Scotten Jones had said Intel was good on performance to power but not on density for 18A. Is it just pure power that is the issue for Intel?
No? I don't think the leakage current is that bad considering the original purpose of Intel products.Not exactly news that 18a isn't the best for mobile, Intel's nodes have traditionally especially struggled with leakage, especially at low voltages. Even Zinsner doesn't think they will get much mobile business until 14a. Lines up with what Amon said. 14a or bust!
This exists for every customer? I will not be surprised for AMD/Nvidia thoughNote: Internal is not the same as foundry..... what made Intel great on IDM (Manufacturing, TD, Design, marketing working together ... no IP arguments) is the opposite of what they need for foundry (deliver a stable product and low cost for multiple customers). LBT has already reset the "dont share info with customers, customers are potential enemies" culture... so that is good
IMO, That confirms that the QCOM exec is a bit clueless then during this interview.
18A was announced in 2021 as undisputed leader for foundry. Pat thought every customer would sign up and be happy to use Intel. Everyone ran a test chip. No one has taped out. Qualcomm seems completely disinterested in what Intel does.
Qualcomm seems completely disinterested in what Intel does.
That's one way to look at it.He just wants to be polite, and for good reasons.
That's one way to look at it.
I think the deeper game is it's in Qualcomms interest for Intel to fail and lose it's potential IDM advantages -- so the playing field is more level between Qualcomm and Intel for x86 Windows PCs. Qualcomm has been trying for a while to break into x86 server and PC markets - so the weaker Intel becomes, the better for them.. so they have little incentive to 'help' Intel by using their nodes.
Samsung is an IDM as well and even more complex than IntelI’ve always felt that Intel’s IDM business model is too complicated to manage. There are many serious internal and external conflicts of interest that make Intel difficult to manage, let alone win over customers who are also competing with Intel.
excellent point.Samsung is an IDM as well and even more complex than Intel
And Samsung has fabbed Qualcomm chips though I think that's also due to Samsung buying silicon from Qualcomm for its phones..Samsung is an IDM as well and even more complex than Intel
so answer me if Samsung hasn't screwed over the foundry part and 10nm didn't happen do you think they would still struggle? It's all about decisions you need to make the correct decision. For Intel that include not screwing up AI/Optics/GPU and stuffBoth Intel and Samsung were dominant leaders, very aggressive and very scary. Both are struggling now in this new world. Is it a coincidence?
Personally, I think the issues is that both were arrogant and had a business model based on being the dominant leader and people had to work with them as they delivered and you had to work with them (reluctant customers). When they made the mistakes, the dominance changed, the "no one got fired for choosing IBM" changed, customers got screwed.so answer me if Samsung hasn't screwed over the foundry part and 10nm didn't happen do you think they would still struggle? It's all about decisions you need to make the correct decision. For Intel that include not screwing up AI/Optics/GPU and stuff
If I were Nvidia or Apple sized, I'd be wary of being required to buy from a monopoly permanently going forwardIf you were fabless, would you sign up for 14A as a primary source for a volume product. would you spend the money to develop a sku on 14A?
But they did come, although they also left... The issue was, at least if we are to believe Zinsner, that 18A yields were simply rubbish and the process was not ready. So in reality Intel did not really build it. Going by what Dave said, yields on PTL are still not good enough and this is a small die.They built it and people did not come.
Completely agree, Intel missed the PDK window for 18A. By the time they were where they needed to be the TSMC ship had sailed. If Intel foundry is going to work 14A PDK 0.5 must be out by end of Q4 or early Q1'26.I think Pat said the PDK was really delayed before he left.