Glofo is in chains as well, and it seams the one customer you are talking about only contributed 23% of the total sales in 2013. It just shows that GloFo has more customers than people here were made to believe.
only 23%.
Glofo is in chains as well, and it seams the one customer you are talking about only contributed 23% of the total sales in 2013. It just shows that GloFo has more customers than people here were made to believe.
Luckily Samsung licensed their 14 FINFET and thus GF now has a chance to remain a viable foundry.
Glofo is in chains as well, and it seams the one customer you are talking about only contributed 23% of the total sales in 2013. It just shows that GloFo has more customers than people here were made to believe.
Before IBM made it clear they are planing to sell their fab business, people were saying that Samsung and GloFo cant create their own process because they luck the knowledge and R&D.
Now Samsung creates the 20nm process in collaboration with GloFo(they are after all in the Common Platform alliance) and sudently people react like GloFo just entered the Fab business and they know shit.
Not only that, but because GloFo licensing 20nm from Samsung, suddenly people believe GloFo will start from scratch in 2014 to develop 10nm. I wonder why they joint the Common Platform Alliance in the first place![]()
http://www.commonplatform.com/index.html
You do see the Common Platform badge in the upper right hand corner. Nah, they just put it there because it looks nice with the rest of the colors of the slide
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IDC, is this 14nm licensing the cause of your return to the forum? Or were we just lucky to have you back during this major event?
Just a coincidence. Happen to have two weeks with an unusually open schedule, and at the same time some interesting news finally makes it to the public domain.
Thanks for the insight, IDCQuick question- what do you make of the IBM fab sell off? Who do you think might end up with them? (Latest rumours said that it was between GloFo and Intel, with TSMC out of the race.)
All bets are off as to who will end up with them, but it is safe to rule out those companies that simply don't have any need for them.
That would be TSMC who thus far has out-trumped, out-R&D'ed, and out-maneuvered IBM and its entire fab consortia at every stage of the game.
So, the question really is "who most desperately needs IBM, and is IBM willing to sell them the specific parts of IBM that are most needed by the desperate party in question?"
At the moment that would appear to be GF, but can they get what they need from IBM, or will IBM prevent their crown jewels (IP) from being part of the deal?
Samsung joined the consortia simply to hedge its bets and ensure that it would always have a choice of what it would put into production - be it the homegrown node or the collaboratively developed one involving IBM and the common alliance.
Hah, good spot on the marketing slidesWhat dates were those shown on? Was it long before the announcement?
For 14-nm Class FinFETs; Late 2012Hah, good spot on the marketing slidesWhat dates were those shown on? Was it long before the announcement?
Hah, good spot on the marketing slidesWhat dates were those shown on? Was it long before the announcement?
All that research from 1999 to 2007 on FUSI FDSOI completely wasted. For some odd reason they then decided to adopt CEA-Leti's FDSOI. Which is slightly more expensive than their own FUSI FDSOI property.
Looks like I was right; FinFETs inherently suck at > ~1.2V, but are great for mobile -- now it's confirmed from another foundry, and not just an Intel thing.
There is unwritten history here, of course, as the public domain only sees the tip of the iceberg.
That said, in truth the marketing slides tell absolutely nothing in regards to similarities or dissimilarities between GloFo's 14XM and Samsung's 14nm.
The reality is that 14XM was nothing like Samsung's 14nm, completely different PDK.
Samsung was ready to let GF die on a vine but Apple made them an offer they couldn't refuse.
There is a such an interesting situation with Samsung to tell, but I dare not tell the tale in public because its just the kind of stuff that gets people fired.
Suffice to say there is no conspiracy going on, GF really did their absolute best to work with IBM to develop 14XM, but Samsung's independently developed 14nm (the one developed in Korea, not the common alliance one developed in NY, Samsung has two independent R&D teams for process nodes) was the only thing that has a ray of hope of yielding and delivering the required reliability in time to be commercially relevant to the customers who are currently being courted for TSMC's 16FF+.
I figured that was the case, but if no one ever targets high performance and power, then the result is effectively the same as if it weren't possible to do so in the first place. This is why I'm worried about TFETs and the like, which would only make the issue even more extreme.Just understand that you are right only because that is precisely the "pocket" that the process and electrical engineers have intentionally designed the finfets to fit into for commericial viability for the products being targeted by the design engineers.
The cause and effect here is not fully disclosed. If people wanted Finfet to deliver at silly high voltages (relative to the process node label) with crazy high drive currents and off currents then they could do just that.
These nodes, Intel's and everyone else, are specifically being designed and optimized (for years) at the low-leakage targets necessary for the mobile markets because that is the very market that commands high volume and high ASP.
There is nothing intrinsic to a finfet that relegates it to the mobile low-power realm. But if you want to go there with your finfet then you do so at the trade-off of giving up the high-power realm.
Finfets are not a "have your cake and eat it too" revolution. They are very much a "go where planar can't, if that is what you so desire" evolution.
But make no mistake, any process flow manager could elect to drive their finfet development team towards the development of a finfet that not only rivals, but bests, the high power capability of a planar CMOS xtor.
That has always been an option, but the market TAM for such a process node simply doesn't justify the R&D at this time. Very few people want 300W CPU's. That is the reality of the 21st century.