witeken
Diamond Member
- Dec 25, 2013
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I'm not arguing that Intel is going to launch 7nm at a specific time, because I clearly have no idea what is going to happen in the next 4 years. Neither do you. And you know what? Neither does Intel!
I am pointing out that your claims that Intel "knows" that it will outperform Moore's Law are ridiculous. They can certainly predict and hope that they will, but there are always unknown unknowns. Never take anything as a certainty, especially when dealing with risky cutting edge technology.
I was referring to this slide:
Transcript:
William Holt said:So I think you talk about the cost chart where at the very end I put a few little dotted points. That was intentially ambiguous. What we want to make clear to you is that we believe that the cost reduction historical trend can be continued. So we're extending the dotted line on the historical trend. What we didn't say is exactly how far below that line we think we'll be and how that trend will be the previous generation exactly because that stuff we don't know. It will be below the historical trend, that much we know. [...] Yes [we can get below that line without EUV], but I don't want to: I want to be further below the line. William Holt, Intel
This slide, by the way, is for a mature process. If Intel has yield issues, which like I said is possible, although might be much less of a concern/issue because they'll probably use EUV, then the slide will not be true. So if Intel can get successfully back into Tick-Tock cadence with Skylake and Cannonalake, I wouldn't worry too much about the next few generations.
