Vayra86 Here we go again...



10nm+... ++++



But, disclaimers galore. I suppose this is the shareholders' reality.

IceShroom Intel's confusing Lakes. Current one is called Lakefield, has Tremont and Sunny Cove core which dont have AVX and FMA3. Alder likely will have same setup.

On ARM side in big.Little design both the Big and Small core have same Instruction set, but with different throughput.

See here : en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/microarchitectures/lakefield

Dazzm8 No Rocket Lake S this year then by the looks?

Flanker I love how it says 10nm became available in 2019. It's not false, just... ugh

Dave65 And same time AMD rolls out it's 5nm line.

Wtf is the problem with +++? All major manufacturers improve nodes over time.For what exactly do you need AVX in a mobile chip?Lakefield uses the same idea as you said above, "both the Big and Small core (Sunny and Tremont) have same Instruction set, but with different throughput"Probably Rocket will be this year and Alder next year more likely.Just what? 10nm was available with Ice Lake in 2019. That it wasn't a success is a different thing, but it brings improvements in power and density compared to 14nm.Yields and frequency scaling wasn't great, but maybe it will be better with the next iteration in Tiger Lake.Amd rolls 5nm line when TSMC rolls 5nm. 5nm oficially starts with Apple products this September, because Apple is helping TSMC both financially and technically to ramp a new process as fast as possible and for them to be the first to get silicon. AMD will have another generation in the shape of Zen 3 on 7nm, launching at the end of this year, and given the transition to a new node is not trivial, AMD will probably launch Zen 4 with 5nm at the end of 2021, with mass availability in 2022.