HZNQ.COM
welcome to my space
X
Welcome to:hznq.com
Article search:  
NAVIGATION - HOME

Intel Evolves Chipmaking Technology

Published by: admin 2008-08-22

Blogs@Intel · Search::
posted by Gregory Ofili on July 23, 2008 at Technology@Intel 6, channel => 6, cheating => 6, chipmaking => 6, chocolaterain => 6,
http://blogs.intel.com/mt/search?blog_id=10&tag=wireless&limit=20
HOME
Intel has built a new chip with 500 million transistors using the latest advancements in nanotechnology, the company said Monday.

The Santa Clara, Calif.-based company said its fully functional, 70-megabit static random access memory (SRAM) (define) chips, which were built using 65-nanometer (nm) process technology, are scheduled for production starting in 2005. The company's vision is to take its 65nm technology and include it in its dual-core processor designs with more than a billion transistors on a chip.

The company said increasing the number of transistors and shrinking the size of the processors will also let it add other features usually reserved for the surrounding chipsets or software applications, such as virtualization and security capabilities.

In November 2003, Intel announced it used its 65nm process to build 4-megabit SRAMs. Since that time, the company has built fully functional 70-megabit SRAMs on this process with a very small die area of 110 millimeters. Small SRAM cells allow for the integration of larger caches in processors, which increases performance. Each SRAM memory cell has six transistors packed into a very small space. For example, some 10 million of these transistors could fit in one square millimeter, roughly the size of the tip of a ballpoint pen.

Intel's 65nm transistor designs seen by internetnews.com

Business News for IT Managers::
rival, saying Intel was trying to stifle competition in the chipmaking sector. surprising is that the technology involved seems to evolve faster than the time
http://www.internetnews.com/bus-news/print.php/516821
HOME
have a reduced gate length of 35nm and a gate oxide thickness of 1.2nm. Intel said the reduced gate capacitance ultimately lowers a chip's active power. The new process also integrates eight copper interconnect layers and uses a "low-k" dielectric material that increases the signal speed inside the chip and reduces chip power consumption.

Intel has also implemented "sleep transistors" in its 65nm SRAM. Sleep transistors shut off the current flow to large blocks of the SRAM when they are not being utilized, which eliminates a significant source of power consumption on a chip. This feature is especially beneficial for battery-powered devices like laptops.

InternetNews Realtime IT News - Intel, ZTE to Expand Global WiMAX Footprint::
Database Software Continues to Evolve. Techs Legal Battles. Google in Court The chipmaking giant is teaming up with ZTE Corporation to develop and promote
http://www.internetnews.com/wireless/article.php/3458151
HOME
InternetNews Realtime IT News - IBM, Intel Bite into Blade Server R&D::
server segment, allies with chipmaking giant Intel.Firms Cut Their Teeth on Database Software Continues to Evolve. Techs Legal Battles. Google in Court
http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/1464521
HOME
"Intel has been actively working on the power and heat dissipation challenges faced by the semiconductor industry," Sunlin Chou, senior vice president and general manager of Intel's Technology and Manufacturing Group said in a statement. "We have taken a holistic approach by developing solutions that involve systems, chips and technologies, and include innovations on our 65nm technology that go beyond simply extending prior techniques."

Intel's future is certainly the sub-90 nanometer space, which is becoming one of the fastest emerging areas in the sector. Currently, the company is shipping its Pentium 4 "Prescott" processor based on the 90nm process and is introducing its second generation of Intel-strained silicon in its 65nm chips. The technology increases transistor performance by 10 to 15 percent without increasing leakage.

Mark Bohr, Intel senior fellow and director of process architecture and integration, told a group of reporters that the company has now reached the crossover point where it is shipping more chips produced on the 90nm process than on the 130nm process.

"Many companies are pursuing this technology and claim that they have strained silicon, but no one has that PMOS strain and no one has matched or implemented what we have done with PMOS," Bohr said during a phone briefing. "It's safe to say that our competitors have a modified version of one portion of strained silicon but they do not have it in either production or in development."

Beyond 90nm, Intel has set a tentative roadmap to release 65nm processors by 2005, 45nm ones by 2007 and 32nm chips sometime in 2009. The company is not alone when it comes to sub-90nm aspirations. IBM and Texas Instruments have also announced their plans for 65nm processors.

Intel said it will discuss its 65nm logic technology in detail as part of a white paper it will present at the IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting in San Francisco in December.


Pre-Article:Vonage Records Regulatory Victory
Next-Article:A Starter Kit on VoIP

PRINT Add to favorites
#If you have any other info about this subject , Please add it free.#
Your name:
E-mail:
Telphone:

Your comments:


If you have any other info aboutIntel Evolves Chipmaking Technology, Please add it free.
  • SPEEDUS.COM Signs With Channelseek
  • Qwest's Backdoor Enterprise Strategy
  • iMall Deploys Object Design's ObjectStore
  • Bluefly.com and Yahoo! Launch Co-Branded Store
  • Newspapers to Get Audio Conversion
  • Have We Reached Digital Nirvana? Not Yet, Study Finds
  • MP3 Missionaries' Efforts Counter MP3 Woes
  • IT Heavies Push DDR2
  • McAfee Launches SecurityCenter
  • Brilliant Digital Introduces New Genre of Online Music Content
  • Worm Adds Insult to Injury
  • Vendors Prepare For The March of RSA
  • Yahoo! Licenses 3D Shopping Technology
  • Linksys Extends its Wi-Fi Range
  •  
  • Global Crossing Wins $700M Pact
  • Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Signs With Open Market
  • AOL To Air Streisand's Final Show
  • AMD Claims Better Way For Server Upgrades
  • eMerchandise Launches Licensed Memorabilia Site
  • Asia Spent $40 Billion On Hardware Last Year
  • A JotSpot For Excel
  • Scholastic Sets Sites on eToys
  • Dell Taps Altiris For Management Software
  • theglobe.com Signs $1.2 Million E-Commerce Deal
  • Bill Fills Phishing Holes
  • 'iVillage in the City?'
  • AT&T, OrderTrust in Co-Marketing Deal
  •  Homepage | Add to favorites | Contact us | Exchange links | LOGIN | Site map | 
    Copyright© 2008 hznq.com        Site made:CFZ