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Reports have emerged that the company is mulling shifting away from the tech to better compete with rival TSMC.
A nother one bites the dust. According to a new report from Reuters, Intel's customer foundry business could largely give up ...
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan is weighing whether to stop offering the company's 18A technology to external clients and instead focus ...
In 2024, Intel’s stock declined by 60%, and the company fell from first to second place on Gartner’s list of top global ...
Intel's once-touted 18A chipmaking process, which former CEO Pat Gelsinger emphasized as a critical factor for surpassing ...
July 7 - n the latest development, Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) is weighing a fast-track pivot from its 18A foundry node to the more ...
Intel's new CEO Lip-Bu Tan is considering a shift in the manufacturer's contract chip-making business, a change that could ...
According to sources quoted by Reuters, Intel could face a major write-off – potentially amounting to billions of dollars – ...
The 18A node’s journey has been a sometimes rocky one including the CEO turnover and other issues. In the fall of last year, ...
Intel Corp. finally had some good news to share for a change, providing an encouraging update on the progress of its most advanced 18A fabrication process, which will be used to manufacture a new ...
Of course, 18A is the final part of Intel's bold "five nodes in four years" plan (also known as 5N4Y), which kicked off with Intel 7, then went to Intel 4 as used in the Meteor Lake mobile CPU ...
The company’s more interesting claims boil down to this: a chip based on the 18A process can be up to 25% faster. If you stick to the same speed as Intel 3, 18A is 36% more efficient. That sounds ...