If I said scrap it, that's not what I meant. They have what they have and it's booked, including the fab that hasn't come online yet. That's not all that he said though:
"According to the new report, by June, he began sharing with colleagues that the 18A manufacturing process — a technology designed to showcase Intel's manufacturing prowess — was losing appeal to outside customers, which is why he believed it made sense for the company to shift away from offering 18A and its performance-enhanced 18A-P version to foundry customers." - this article
If 18A is already losing appeal, why wouldn't 14A do the same at the same point in time (when it starts ramping)? Intel is finally going to magically hit this one out of the ballpark? It just feels like more kicking the can down the road. I mean, use 18A to springboard to 14A? After using 20A to springboard to 18A? Yeah, I guess it probably is an effective catch-up strategy, but it also comes with the additional costs and risk. IMO, IFS needs to show confidence in a product that they really put a lot of effort into and promoted. Obviously things do need to start shifting to a 14A focus, but that would be internal more than external.
This article mentioned a write-off and Reuters did as well:
"Potential write-off for "18A" process could cost hundreds of millions of dollars"
It's not my words, lol.