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Discussion on Article:
Intel on Track to Start Making 14nm “Broadwell” Chips in 2013.

Started by: danwat1234 | Date 01/19/13 03:22:14 AM
Comments: 3 | Last Comment:  01/19/13 05:56:55 PM

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So is 14nm actually smaller than 16nm or is just marketing kind of like 2x nm SSDs?
1 0 [Posted by: danwat1234  | Date: 01/19/13 03:22:14 AM]
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It is marketing, some engineers measured intel's current "22nm" process, and it is "only" "26nm". Lots of marketing involved... as usual nowadays.

For 14nm I expect the same. They won't change any process parameters, just the name is changed.
2 0 [Posted by: Bingle  | Date: 01/19/13 05:23:39 AM]
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2. 
Wait 13w is really 7w in Intel speak... What a bunch of clowns Intel has for maanagement. AnandTech caught them in their lies.

http://semiaccurate.com/2...efully-decieptful-at-ces/

If Intel's 14nm node, (aka as 18nm node), is as poor as their 22nm node (actually 26nm), Intel will be lucky to net anything other than some power reduction.
1 1 [Posted by: beenthere  | Date: 01/19/13 05:56:55 PM]
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