Intel Delays Its Next Next-Generation 10 Nanometer Chips
by The Daily Eye Team July 21 2015, 7:39 pm Estimated Reading Time: 0 mins, 43 secsThe range of computing products powered by leading-edge 14 nanometer process chips is pretty small. As part of Intel’s Core-M architecture, they can be found in high-end MacBooks and MacBook Pros, while Samsung’s Galaxy S6 line is powered by Exynos system-on-a-chips contstructed with its own 14nm process. More run of the mill high-end equipment is likely to be powered by 22nm process chips (Ivy Bridge i5s and i7s), 32nm process chips (Sandy Bridge i3s and i5s), or even 45nm process chips, which are behind Intel’s chips circa 2008, the 2010 Xbox 360 S, and a variety of different AMD processors. Nonetheless, we’re already talking about the fabrication process after the next fabrication process, which is the 7nm process IBM recently unveiled as a proof of concept technology.