Russia will only ship 15,000 PCs and 8,000 servers based on its own CPUs in 2022.
Russia's CPU Substitution Plan Hits a Snag : Read more
Russia's CPU Substitution Plan Hits a Snag : Read more
You can keep it, there are all modern CPUs in stock in Russia . Topic was about own manufacture.90nm? Now your making me feel sorry for them. I am pretty sure I have a 486 sitting in a box I can send them to help out and I think it was made with better than 90nm process.
The various Intel 80486 was made in 1 µm to 600 nm processes!90nm? Now your making me feel sorry for them. I am pretty sure I have a 486 sitting in a box I can send them to help out and I think it was made with better than 90nm process.
90nm? Now your making me feel sorry for them. I am pretty sure I have a 486 sitting in a box I can send them to help out and I think it was made with better than 90nm process.
The various Intel 80486 was made in 1 µm to 600 nm processes!
The first 90nm chips came out 2002...
90 nm was the process used for early Athlon 64 and Pentium D processors. It is ancient, but not 486-era ancient. To give you an idea, the Celeron 300A was made with a 180 nm process. The most powerful official 486 (AMD 486 DX4-120, back when AMD and GlobalFoundries were a single entity) was made using 440 nm (or 0.44 µm).90nm? Now your making me feel sorry for them. I am pretty sure I have a 486 sitting in a box I can send them to help out and I think it was made with better than 90nm process.
I had a Prescott.the first wave of processors to use 90nm came out in 2004, specifically Intel Prescott (3rd gen Pentium 4), AMD Winchester (3rd gen Athlon 64) and IBM 970FX (2nd gen G5) in no specific order.
Not their own-designed CPUs. Everybody knows where those designs came from.they can easilly buy though a proxy in a friendly or poor country like Hungary, middle east, africa. it just take more time and money.
Unless that CPU is a DX20, SX16, SX20, or SL20 you wouldn't be able to ship it to Russia as the clock speed is too high. This law was written in the early-mid 1990s so a 66MHz CPU was normal. The law did what it was supposed to do as well in keeping "high tech" computers out of the hands out our enemies. However, they haven't updated the law since it was written and it makes everything even worse for Russia.90nm? Now your making me feel sorry for them. I am pretty sure I have a 486 sitting in a box I can send them to help out and I think it was made with better than 90nm process.
Actually you can't because it runs higher than 25 MHz ...... This doesn't affect just regular CPUs but all the very microcontrollers needed to make advanced weaponry .... You gotta have some kind of fairly fast "brain" to make those planes and missiles work and once their stock is gone Russia defense is screwed ......90nm? Now your making me feel sorry for them. I am pretty sure I have a 486 sitting in a box I can send them to help out and I think it was made with better than 90nm process.
Oh, that's pure evil. I approve.Worse, they're still on Windows ME
Edit: Nefarious plan, we offer them a windows upgrade....to Vista!
I can send them some Pentium 4sYou can keep it, there are all modern CPUs in stock in Russia . Topic was about own manufacture.
Intel 486 800nm btw
Hungary has better gdp per capital than Russia xDthey can easilly buy though a proxy in a friendly or poor country like Hungary, middle east, africa. it just take more time and money.
Heck in theory kalashs's commerce is forbidden too, but this rifle is everywhere in 3rd world countries. I bet CPUs are easier to smuggle than assault riffles
You can keep it, there are all modern CPUs in stock in Russia . Topic was about own manufacture.
Intel 486 800nm btw
EMP hardened equipment is actually far better on larger process nodes as well. Same with radiation hardening.