Originally posted by: magreen
So this bodes well for The Foundry Company, which has already perfected 45nm, does it not?
(Idc, nice to see you over here helping make the video forum a better place

)
Without a doubt TFC's xtor parametrics are going to be zippier than what TSMC is fielding, but they are also SOI-based and (for a myriad of design related reasons) can't be compared to TSMC's 45nm (or 40nm) xtors on an apples-to-apples basis.
There are industry standards for normalizing xtor parametrics in a way that does lend themselves to apples-to-apples comparison, e.g. casting Idrive into length normalized values (micro-amps per micron) at a standardized voltage (1.0V).
These numbers do get reported at the appropriate conferences (
IEDM for example).
This graph is a perfect example.
But you have to consider that TFC's 45nm process are essentially solely optimized for high-performance MPU IC's whereas TSMC's processes are tiered into low-power, medium-power, and high-power applications.
You see examples elsewhere in the industry of IDM's doing this, Intel is publicly acknowledging similar tiers to their node structure with their
P1266 and P1266.8 breakout at 45nm. At TI we maintained three sub-nodes as well, just as the foundries do.
So while TFC's 45nm xtors are good for exactly what they were engineered to do (make K10.5) they might be really not good for making GPU's for Nvidia/ATI or cellphone chips for Qualcomm and TI.
Since TFC is a foundry we can expect them to diversify their xtor process technology portfolio and expand their services back into bulk-Si as well as offering multiple performance/power-consumption flavors of the node. They really have no choice in the matter if they want to attract customers, but having experience with generating leading edge high-performance MPU process technology definitely gives them a leg-up at time-zero as the high-performance process tech is the hardest to create (hence the timeline lag between Intel and AMD, and likewise between AMD and TSMC).
This video forum seems like a nice enough place already before I started rambling in it. I can't contribute much to the "zomg I get 400fps with my newest quad-xfire rig" threads but these technology discussions play well into my real world experiences so I do hope to be value-add to the forum in that regard.