Skip to main content

Intel’s long, painful struggle with 10nm production may finally be over

In a recent earning call, Intel CEO Bob Swan assured investors that the company’s much-waylaid production capacity for their 10nm fabrication is now sufficient to fully meet customer demand. Specifically, Swan indicated that their plants in Oregon and Israel are now producing 10nm Ice Lake chips at the levels needed to fill orders for both consumer- and data center-grade CPUs. Additionally, Intel’s Arizona facility should also be fully operational for 10nm production early next year.

Anyone following Intel since at least as far back as this year’s Computex trade show knows that the industry giant has encountered more than a few issues in keeping up with AMD in terms of die shrinking. While Intel is only just now reliably putting out 10nm chips, AMD has already moved on to 7nm die sizes, although it too is hitting its share of production snags.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

In the immediate wake of Computex 2019, it seemed as though Intel was losing ground to its emboldened competitor. However, as more developments came to light, the picture gradually looked less and less bleak. For one thing, although its latest batch of chips are a tad bulkier than AMD’s, Intel proved its first wave of Ice Lake CPUs could measure up in performance.

When pitted head-to-head, Intel’s Ice Lake i7-1065G7 running in an HP Spectre edged out AMD’s beefy Ryzen 9 3900X in single-core processing. And just when the prospects of 10nm desktop processors from Intel looked grim, with no word on the company for months following the initial announcement, Intel reassured consumers that a subsequent desktop wave is in the works.

But Intel is doing more than just meeting AMD’s die size challenge head on. It is working tirelessly to outflank AMD by offering a broader strategy to improve the consumer computing experience. This makes a lot of sense considering that chip makers are having a harder time squeezing additional performance out of the CPU itself, and are instead turning to address smoother networking and dedicated processing units for specialized tasks like machine learning.

To start with, Intel is doubling down on mobile performance with its forthcoming Lakefield series, which favors a hybrid embrace of large powerhouse cores paired with small lower-horsepower ones.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Actually, one could say Intel is tripling down on mobile when considering its Project Athena. This initiative aims to power the next generation of 2-in-1 devices with hardware that more seamlessly pivots between mobile-optimized tasks.

All of these ambitious pushes leave plenty for consumers to look out for in the months (and hopefully not years) ahead.

Jonathan Terrasi
Jonathan has studiously followed trends in technology, particularly in information security and digital privacy, since 2014…
Intel’s 14nm node is finally dead, and we can all breathe a sigh of relief
Intel CEO talking about Meteor Lake

With the launch of Intel's 11th-generation Rocket Lake processors, the company's long and painful run on 14nm has finally come to an end.

Intel has already announced that Rocket Lake will be the last desktop processor to use the 14nm node, to finally be succeeded by the 10nm Alder Lake chips later this year. Its Xeon data center platform has also moved to 10nm, meaning 14nm is officially on its last legs.

Read more
Intel’s first 10nm desktop chips could be twice as fast as predecessor
Promotional image of an Intel Core processor.

After having previewed its 10nm Alder Lake chipset at CES -- the processor  is expected to debut later this year on desktops and laptops -- we are now learning more about Intel's next-gen desktop silicon. According to a series of leaked slides, Intel's Alder Lake processors will support faster DDR5 memory and the new PCIe Gen 5.0 interface.

PCIe 5.0 support would allow Intel to leapfrog rival AMD. While AMD was first to PCIe 4.0, the company isn't expected to support PCIe 5.0 until 2022. PCIe 5.0 delivers some added benefits over PCIe 4.0, like double the bandwidth throughput for faster data transfers.

Read more
Intel 10th-gen Ice Lake CPUs: Everything we know so far
intel ice lake wont rid spectre insecure chip

Intel has been shooting for a 10nm architecture for years, and it finally achieved that with Ice Lake CPUs. The years of anticipation and hype surrounding Intel's delayed push to a smaller process node built an exciting aura around Ice Lake in 2019. In 2021, after the launch has come and gone, it's clear Ice Lake represented a stepping stone for Intel, even if the platform didn't deliver in all the ways we expected.

From pricing to performance and connectivity changes, we've rounded up everything you need to know about 10th-gen Ice Lake CPUs. Although they're faster than the generation that proceeded, Intel has already started pushing its 11th-gen Tiger Lake platform, which features improvements of its own.
Pricing and availability

Read more