Comment on TSMC says first 1.6nm chips coming in 2026

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Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip ⁨2⁩ ⁨months⁩ ago

it doesnt mean what it traditionally mean since findett due yo the idea that finfett involves a folding process where its not necessarily a transistor in a traditional sense.

its the main reason what intel was conplaining about when it decided to rename its processes to be in lone with tsmc/samsung. Intel’s 10nm process is actually a more dense pack of transitors than both TSMC’s 7nm and Samsung’s 8nm. so you have to make a stance, either TSMC/Samsung is over representing the definition, or Intel is underrepresenting it. because of it, either of the two actions need to happen:

TSMC/Samsung need to increase the number of their process because its illogical that a competitor has a more dense node with a higher number.

or

Intel renames their process with a lower number to better match its density when compared to TSMC/Samsung. Because Intel as a company only has the power to do this, this is what they did, and were underfire for it.

regardless, the nm stated in the nm does not represent what it used to traditionally mean, as whatever stance you have, some company is lying about their numbers.

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