this post was submitted on 05 Jan 2024
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I really don’t know why people keep taking CCP propaganda at face value. Taiwan is the global leader in chip lithography. It took South Korea a good long while and a hell of a lot of money to get to rough parity. The PRC isn’t going to have as smooth of a time as SK for multiple reasons.
It's also worth noting that not only can China not make 5nm but America can't either. It's literally just Taiwan and SK that make sub-7nm chips.
Intel fab does sub 7nm. Meteor Lake processors main die use Intel 4, and the gpu die uses TSMC 5nm.
Sort of. The nanometer number is mostly just marketing, and Intels “4nm” is really somewhere between TSMCs 5nm and 7nm as far as density goes. They’re still a ways behind, which is part of the reason their chips are so inefficient comparatively
You are ware that the nm value used for samsungs and tsmcs process is also marketing right?
The whole point of intel changing their name on their process is to allign closer with samsungs/tsmc. Its why intel 4's physical transitior size and depth to next transitor is in the same ballpark as samsungs, despite officially being called something different.
Intels density falls closer to 5nm, and far from 7nm. Intels 10nm was already on its own about the same as tsmcs 7nm. Intel 4 is roughly TSMC 5N.
Thr main thing is intel hasnt caught up to bleeding edge yet (tsmc 2/3nm) and is about a year behind, but they have already passed TSMC 7nm a while back.
I know it's more complicated than just node size, but you're making it sound like intel cpus are roughly the same transistor density as current AMD cpus, so why is amd that much more efficient?
Phoenix is on 4nm, Intel 4 is more comparable to 5nm, so its definitely not what ive been saying remotely when ive explicitly said that Intel 4 is comparable to tsmc N5 node.
If you're thinking about desktops, 0 desktop processors are on the Intel 4 node, so you couldn't even have a point of reference on it. If you want to compare Intels 10nm (renamed version being 7nm) to TSMC 7nm, that would be like comparing Alder Lake/Raptor lake to strictly Zen 3(AMD 5000 desktop cpus).
Do you have a source for that? According to WikiChip Fuse, Intel 4 is comparable to TSMC N3 in density and offers better performance: https://fuse.wikichip.org/news/6720/a-look-at-intel-4-process-technology/4/