Intel Foundry demonstrates first Arm-based chip on 18a node

hothardware.com

117 points by rbanffy 3 days ago


testdelacc1 - 19 hours ago

Assuming they’re telling the truth, they’ve successfully built one chip from that fab. That’s good, but it doesn’t mean the fab is capable of manufacturing at scale while turning a profit.

They need an external customer for the fab so they can iterate and work out the issues. It’s anyone’s guess if someone trusts intel to manufacture on their behalf instead of sticking with an established player. They’re stuck in a chicken and egg situation - can’t reach high yields without a customer, but a customer only wants to sign up if the yields and future deliveries are guaranteed.

Intels only hope might be that someone, not naming names, coerces an established company to sign up.

threatripper - 20 hours ago

If we assume that intel gets successful with 18A with their x86 processors, would they even have the money to finance the node after that? And the node after that which gets exponentially more expensive?

In the past x86 raked in enough money to burn a lot of it on new fab tech but non-x86 has grown immensely and floods TSMC with money. The problem for intel is that their fab tech was fitted to their processor architecture and vice versa. It made sense in the past but in the future it might not. For the processor business it may be better to use TSMC for production. For the fab it may be necessary to manufacture for many customers and take a premium for being based in a country in need. So, a split-up may be inevitable and this fabbing a competitive ARM chip surely helps in attracting more customers. Customers who may pay a premium for political and security reasons.

cameron_b - 13 hours ago

I understand the part where Intel is trying to get external customers interested in the output of their fab by exhibiting an implementation of an ARM processor.

In the past I understand that they did some custom implementation of Xeon cores for hyperscalers, but the meat and potatoes was the chip they designed.

Do we take this to mean that the current leadership assess the value proposition -of Intel- to be in the /making/ of the chips, akin to TSMC, and not in the /designing/ of them, as in all past seasons at Intel?

I suppose a key factor here is how far from reference this chip is. If they mean to innovate in ARM ISA territory, that's a development to ponder. But if this is a "we can also make those things" statement, I'm hearing bears in the woods.

Havoc - 9 hours ago

I really hope they manage to pull something out of the hat here.

Own a bunch of AMD shares so cheering for them naturally...but we don't need a monopoly in CPU space.

mrbluecoat - 13 hours ago

> Intel is effectively saying "Hey, we can make Arm chips!"

Makes sense since they were once popular in the NUC space and Apple has shown high-end ARM has a market.

qwertytyyuu - 12 hours ago

Too bad they fired the ceo that made it happen

hereme888 - 11 hours ago

Is Intel's 18A actually 1.8 nm, or is this one of their usual marketing terms?

- 12 hours ago
[deleted]
nxobject - 17 hours ago

Random question: where did the ARM core design come from?

2OEH8eoCRo0 - 11 hours ago

It's going to be fun in two years when Intel is golden child again because TSMC has bomb damage and Taiwan is blockaded.

gjvc - 11 hours ago

Someone moved Intel's cheese, and they didn't go after it until it was too late.

Nobody is going to be switching their ARM-based chip provider from TSMC or anyone else (with whom they've only just built up enough trust) to even thinking of changing.

Without a track record of delivery, intel is just there to be used in leverage with price negotiations with TSMC.

1oooqooq - 14 hours ago

why only apple and Nvidia are left buying from foundries. is the market for cpu/gpu that bad? zero innovation and other players even in niche markets?

sylware - 17 hours ago

It should be RISC-V... who is in charge at Intel??

Is this related to the rumors of softbank (ARM) money injection in Intel?

dlojudice - a day ago

Very unlikely to happen but Intel could release an Arm chip with native x86 translation. Arm and AMD IP would be needed but this would be the best chip for Windows