09.01.2021., 16:23
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#4018
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McG
Datum registracije: Feb 2014
Lokacija: Varaždin
Postovi: 8,161
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Citiraj:
Autor guerra
Ono sto ryzena 3 spasava je povecani IPC, a latencije jos uvijek nisu tu gdje bi trebale biti. Jednostavno manjkava tehnologija.
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E, jebiga, ali ovo jednostavno nije istina, jer izlaskom Zen 3 arhitekture, skoro svi koji drže do svojih članaka i informacija koje plasiraju u javnost putem službenih recenzija su testirali i latencije, te naravno da je AMD tu napravil itekakav posao. Napravili su ga već s Renoir APU modelima koji su baš kao Zen 3 također samo jedan CCD bez dodatnog CCX preklapanja. Reći da je tehnologija manjkava ne stoji ni u kojem pogledu, jer ne bi svi brže-bolje nakon orginalne Zen arhitekture nahrlili u tom smjeru. Kužim da zagovaraš Intel na svakom koraku, ali jedno je biti obožavatelj firme, a sasvim drugo je žmiriti pred očitim i govoriti da je tehnologija manjkava samo zato, jer ovi nisu u stanju to sprovesti u djelo. Nije da Intel ne želi krenuti tim putem, jer su itekako krenuli, ali je sad problem uistinu inovirati kad su zatečeni sa svih strana, dok istovremeno konkurencija (AMD, ARM, nVidia i ostali) ni malo ne popušta.
EDIT:
Citiraj:
Intel talks with TSMC, Samsung to outsource some chip production
Citiraj:
Intel Corp. has talked with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Samsung Electronics Co. about the Asian companies making some of its best chips, but the Silicon Valley pioneer is still holding out hope for last-minute improvements in its own production capabilities. While Intel has outsourced production of lower-end chips before, it has kept the manufacturing of its best semiconductors in-house, considering it a competitive strength. Its engineers have historically tailored their designs to the company’s manufacturing processes, making a shift to outsourcing of flagship products unthinkable in the past.
After successive delays in its chip fabrication processes, Santa Clara, California-based Intel has yet to make a final decision less than two weeks ahead of a scheduled announcement of its plans.
Any components that Intel might source from Taiwan wouldn’t come to market until 2023 at the earliest and would be based on established manufacturing processes already in use by other TSMC customers.
Talks with Samsung, whose foundry capabilities trail TSMC’s, are at a more preliminary stage, the people said. TSMC and Samsung representatives declined to comment. TSMC, the largest maker of semiconductors for other companies, is preparing to offer Intel chips manufactured using a 4-nanometer process, with initial testing using an older 5-nanometer process. The company has said it will make test production of 4-nanometer chips available in the fourth quarter of 2021 and volume shipments the following year. The Taiwanese company expects to have a new facility in Baoshan operational by the end of this year, which can be converted to production for Intel if required.
AMD and others have partially mitigated the risk of manufacturing advances not proceeding at the expected pace by segmenting their designs, allowing the assembly of various component parts of the processor in stages.
Intel has said it’s also moving toward that modular approach.
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Izvor: Bloomberg
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Zadnje izmijenjeno od: The Exiled. 09.01.2021. u 17:30.
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