- Jan 16, 2003
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Originally posted by: pm
Actually, if anything it's getting longer from concept to shipment for microprocessors. Fabrication takes longer (more steps), mask prep takes longer (fracture, OPC, etc.), design teams are larger and more cumbersome, the fab process is introducing new issues and backside debug (C3) is a lot harder and slower than front-side debug (wirebond). 10 years ago the design cycle was shorter than it is now.And every month/year/decade somebody finds a way to do something faster and better than before. So who's to say that the concept to fab process isn't considerably shorter than it was say 10 years ago. Anyway, Intel should have "reacted" a lot sooner than they did. They finally are, but it took them sooooo long.
So your point is that Intel's management didn't react quickly enough - and my point is that it takes 4-5 years to create a new design. How fast can you react when it takes an absolute minimum of 3 years to bring a product to market?
So what you're saying is, Intel has done the best it could at all times? I don't think that at all if that is what you mean. It's not like Intel had to start from scratch to bring back the PIII, PM, Dothan, Yonah architecture now correct? How long ago did the Pentium 4 debut? 3rd or 4th Quarter of 2000. How long have Pentium M's been available in laptops? February 2003. When the Pentium 4 debuted, it flopped in every way possible except for Quake. WARNING!! Athlon blew its doors off and the Pentium III seriously outperformed it clock for clock. CLUE!!! Intel was 100% counting on the P4 to scale to 10GHz over time. That's great and all, but a big company like Intel should not have all its eggs in one basket, right? So they kept chugging along, raising clocks, adding cache, increasing FSB at an alarmingly slow rate. Not until 2.4GHz did Northwood scale well enough to pull ahead of AMD. VICTORY!!! (Not quite) Say hello to A64 with on die memory controller. How long has AMD had an on die memory controller now? September 2003. Intel had the resources to make sudden changes in their roadmaps, but the embarrassment factor was probably too high and they stuck it out, if not for any other reason, to keep stockholders faith in check. Didn't want to set off any alarm bells by saying, "Oops, we really did screw this pony royally.".
So, it seems to me you are saying Intel is going the fastest it possibly can. You are probably the only one who believes this. If they were, they would be looming large still over the Green Team. Intel got a dose of bad management. Correct me if I'm wrong. Please.