News Intel Foundry Services gets an 1.8nm Arm Neoverse chip order — Faraday to develop 64-core Intel 18A processor with Arm Neoverse design for SoC eva...

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bit_user

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The new system-on-chip based on 64 Arm Neoverse cores will address a wide range of applications, including scalable hyperscale data centers, infrastructure edge, and advanced 5G networks, according to Faraday.
Given that the stated applications include edge and 5G, it's likely they're using Neoverse E-series cores. I think these haven't gotten much publicity, of late. They would presumably be derivative of Cortex-A510 or one of its successors.
 
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Giroro

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Intel's 18A isn't 1.8nm.
They made it very clear when they cynically changed the names of all their products to make them sound smaller that the names mean absolutely nothing.
Please stop letting Intel trick you into confusing their product names with sizes. It was such an obvious trap that we should never let people forget.
 
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rtoaht

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Jun 5, 2020
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Intel's 18A isn't 1.8nm.
They made it very clear when they cynically changed the names of all their products to make them sound smaller that the names mean absolutely nothing.
Please stop letting Intel trick you into confusing their product names with sizes. It was such an obvious trap that we should never let people forget.
TSMC N3 isn't 3nm.
Please stop letting TSMC trick you into confusing their product names with sizes. It was such an obvious trap that we should never let people forget.
 
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