Intel Says 14A Is on Track for 2028 Risk Production, 10A and 7A Now in Development
6 Articles
6 Articles
Intel's foundry reset: 14A, 10A and tougher engineering rules
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan is reshaping the chipmaker's engineering culture and foundry strategy, confirming that 14A remains on track while revealing that early development has begun on next-generation 10A and 7A nodes.
Intel says 14A is on track for 2028 risk production, 10A and 7A now in development
Speaking at J.P. Morgan' 54th annual Global Technology, Media and Communications Conference in Boston, Tan revealed that development of Intel's 14A process node is progressing as planned, with risk production scheduled for 2028 and volume manufacturing expected in 2029. The timeline largely aligns with TSMC's A14 roadmap.Read Entire Article
Lip-Bu Tan is back in charge, and this time it has done so with something as important for Intel’s future as the lithographic nodes. In fact, Intel 14A is back at the center of Intel Foundry’s plan, this time with a specific date for one of its most important steps: the PDK 0.9 will reach external customers in October 2026. The node points to “risk production” in 2028 and volume production in 2029, a window that Intel places near the TSMC A14 ca…
Intel 14A Node Enters Risk Production in 2028, 10A and 7A Nodes on the Roadmap
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan spoke at the J.P. Morgan TMT Conference, providing more details about the company's roadmap for future node developments. According to Lip-Bu Tan, Intel now forecasts the 14A node risk production run in 2028, with high-volume manufacturing in 2029. This is expected to coincide with major customers ramping up their designs and starting to ship 14A silicon worldwide. Intel plans to utilize the node both internally and offer it…
Intel CEO looking beyond 18A and 14A to 10A and 7A
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan is looking beyond the 18A and 14A processes to 10A and 7A, he told the JP Morgan Global Technology, Media and Communications Conference on Tuesday. “Now ... The post Intel CEO looking beyond 18A and 14A to 10A and 7A appeared first on Electronics Weekly.
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