Don't take this wrong, but who cares?
The guy I quoted who brought up carbon interconnects?
so, 5nm from 16nm. That's what, 2 steps? 16-12-8-5? So, like, 10 years of further silicon development?
That makes AMD's "slower on process tech" a positive, not a negative.
And?
I think you'll find that my posting in this thread has consisted of:
Providing links that Intel was indeed selling 14nm chips, as a poster had specifically asked for proof.
Disagreeing with a poster that AMD's next big chip will be on a 20nm node since just about every piece of evidence points to the processes not being suitable for large, fast, and power hungry IC's, and alerting someone to the fact that you need not estimate performance of GloFo's 28nm SHP process because it is being used in a mature shipping range of APUs
Disagreeing with Jorge over the relative merits of two architectures that haven't seen the light of day, but which Jorge supposedly has enough information to form a solid analysis...and debunked some FUD about how well AMD's server division is doing ( Just because there are Opteron systems in use it doesn't translate to continued meaningful sales, just as being able to buy 429 rebuild kits and spares means that FoMoCo still sells Torino's and Ranchero's)
A back-of-the-napkin comparison of Intel's 14nmFF and GloFo's 28nm SHP process.
I don't think I referenced AMD's "slower on process tech" in any of the posts and doesn't really affect them aside from financial aspects of their WSA's- if anything, posters turned this into an AMD vs Intel flamefest from the off, when the real story should have been Globalfoundries vs Intel vs Samsung vs the pure play foundries. I'm sorry if attempting to offset some OTT guerrilla marketing with some factual counterbalance is somehow worthy of censure.
FWIW, I also wouldn't put 10 years of silicon development into the "who cares" category. The past ten years have seen us move from 90nm Prescott P4's and Athlon 64's in addition to 130nm X800's and 110nm GeForce 6800's. Ten years represents a lot of history and a lot of future potential in the semicon industry. There is also an excellent chance that the business landscape and the players involved will not remain as it is today.
The interesting part of this news is that if this pans out to be true, AMD's silicon process will be completely different from NVidia's, which can either decimate AMD's current GPU market share, or tank NVidia's share prices to pre 2005-levels.
How do you arrive at that doomsday scenario? GloFo's 28nm SHP was not only tailored to AMD's requirements, but has been successfully applied to GPU related products for the past year so I doubt it represents any kind of gamble. Also not too sure how this is supposed to crater Nvidia's share price - even if Fiji and Bermuda are the second coming of Christ. How would it be any different to 2009-10 when AMD fielded an all new landmark Evergreen series and Nvidia was still dicking around with a two-generation-old G92?
A new range of 28nm GPUs isn't suddenly going to overturn Nvidia's 80% workstation market share, its 85% HPC GPGPU share, or its mobile GPU share (for which AMD's large die GPU seems somewhat unsuited for in any case) - and with $3.2bn in cash on hand and an ongoing share buy-back scheme in place it seems unlikely that the share price will crater because of some desktop GPU business from AMD*. Even if Nvidia had
nothing for 2015 - no GM 200, no GM 206, they'd still spin Pascal and Volta, and they'd still have the pro market ecosystems - no different to the situation in September 2009, except now they have high profile OpenPOWER contracts and some SoC automotive stuff going on.
If 28nm SHP were the beginning of some long term advantage I could understand the viewpoint, but we both know that the node is a stopgap until TSMC's 16nmFF+ and Samsung/GloFo's 14nm-XM arrive. So, unless you see 14nm being demonstrably better than 16nm
and Nvidia being completely locked into TSMC rather than shopping around to Samsung, GloFo, or UMC, it seems that the playing field will again be in flux in late 2015.
* Quite possible that Nvidia's share price drops to 2004-05 levels ($5-7), but IMO that would require a something with the ability to hit harder than AMD - say, the lawsuit/countersuit business with Samsung/Qualcomm and loss of emerging SoC markets.