AMD gonna be paying Intel to make AMD chips one day, watch
May after intel can get their own shit together first. Intel is even uses TSMC. I doubt this happens in my liftime.
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AMD gonna be paying Intel to make AMD chips one day, watch
And then we have the issue of increased cost of silicon pricing because not made in third world nation? because rules, regulations, and all that rot too?The answer is more fabs on US soil. Just wait a decade or so.
And then we have the issue of increased cost of silicon pricing because not made in third world nation? because rules, regulations, and all that rot too?
Thats not the point?Calm down, Intel has a huge glut of good cheap CPUs and AMD has already cut their CPU prices by a lot. It's a great time for CPUs. As far as GPUs - the 4k tier is expensive, yes but 1080p / 1440 is viable and more affordable than ever.
Reading comprehension is hard.Thats not the point?
Slow news cycle, it was this or another article on why you should or shouldn’t boycott the HP game.Can't believe this is even a thing. Obviously they undershipped, how is this news? Journalism and the community these days..
Ian got it spot on.
I would rather expect the contrary - if Intel foundry business cannot get their act together at some point their fabs may be be spun off. I don't know how many more misses they can swing before corporate beancounters decide it is enough.May after intel can get their own shit together first. Intel is even uses TSMC. I doubt this happens in my liftime.
We here at AMD would like to announce that our great and worthy opponent Intel, will now be manufacturing a chiplet for our Ryzen processors, which makes your thumbdrives and SSD's work! lolI would rather expect the contrary - if Intel foundry business cannot get their act together at some point their may be be spun off. I don't know how many more misses they can swing before corporate beancounters decide it is enough.
And then AMD could use Intel fabs for I/O chiplets or cache or whatever doesn't scale with smaller process nodes.
I actually think it’s going to be the other way around. I’m thinking by 2030 Intel Foundry Services are going to be worth more than the rest of Intel. There are an absolute crap ton of fabs out there running nodes way larger than 16nm that are much more expensive than Intel can do it for. Intel is going after them now, with shrinking desktop demand and increasing yields Intel has more manufacturing capacity than it can fill so foundries go under utilized and they are aiming to fix that. By not only opening up their older nodes but also their new ones to 3’rd parties they are stepping into what is now a far larger market than x86 currently is.I would rather expect the contrary - if Intel foundry business cannot get their act together at some point their may be be spun off. I don't know how many more misses they can swing before corporate beancounters decide it is enough.
And then AMD could use Intel fabs for I/O chiplets or cache or whatever doesn't scale with smaller process nodes.
theyre all still $1230+ up here in canuckistan...ouch that localization for UK people as that is over $950 US
Due to some ill conceived “environmental” laws in Canada our government has made it nearly impossible to practically import electronics or anything from China.1230 CAN = 905 USD. Not that bad.
There might be a bigger issue with this than Canada (or any nation-state) is willing to admit to, thus the "environmental" cover works better than talking about cost.Due to some ill conceived “environmental” laws in Canada our government has made it nearly impossible to practically import electronics or anything from China.
They passed regulations that boats with a displacement greater than X was not allowed to traverse the inlets leading to the ports in Vancouver and Montreal. This effectively shut down the LNG projects that had environmentalists up in arms but also shut down the larger freighters from China. Needless to say the government’s instructions to shipping companies of “just send smaller boats” was as well received as you can expect so now those boats go to California and New York. Then get loaded into trucks and driven up adding the funderful US tariffs, then taxes and import fees ontop of those tariffs not to mention the extra costs in trucking them from New York to warehouses in Montreal or California to the Vancouver outskirts.
Our government at work people.
There might be a bigger issue with this than Canada (or any nation-state) is willing to admit to, thus the "environmental" cover works better than talking about cost.
Due to some ill conceived “environmental” laws in Canada our government has made it nearly impossible to practically import electronics or anything from China.
They passed regulations that boats with a displacement greater than X was not allowed to traverse the inlets leading to the ports in Vancouver and Montreal. This effectively shut down the LNG projects that had environmentalists up in arms but also shut down the larger freighters from China. Needless to say the government’s instructions to shipping companies of “just send smaller boats” was as well received as you can expect so now those boats go to California and New York. Then get loaded into trucks and driven up adding the funderful US tariffs, then taxes and import fees ontop of those tariffs not to mention the extra costs in trucking them from New York to warehouses in Montreal or California to the Vancouver outskirts.
Our government at work people.
Le squirtesé on handsevouCanada is just a terrible place for consumers in general, and all of our problems are self-induced. I’ll never forget reading that essay from a few professors at U of Ottawa complaining that we were bringing in bottles of hand sanitizer at the beginning of a global pandemic that didn’t have bilingual labelling, because apparently that’s the biggest concern at a time when everyone is desperate to get material that’s globally short during an international medical emergency. The result is we end up either overpaying for everything, or we don’t get access to every product we otherwise could.
No the Environmental issue was a bunch of proposed LNG shipping facilities who would require the tankers to go through spawning grounds and the likes. If one of those had a serious issue in one of those spots it would be devastating for decades with no resources set in place to properly clean and repair the damage. Those claims were legit, it was a bad plan, I’m all for the LNG plants but their shipping and contingency plans were half baked and under funded.
If anyone gave a crap about the environment then why is AMD selling new chips that still have Zen2 and Zen3, as well as RDNA2 and Vega graphics? Pretty clear that Zen4 and RDNA3 is more efficient, so why even waste manufacturing CO2 on those older designs? It's the same stupidity of shutting down the oil pipelines for the environment, but instead we move oil around with trucks in hopes that driving up gas prices will deter people from driving cars.Due to some ill conceived “environmental” laws in Canada our government has made it nearly impossible to practically import electronics or anything from China.
They passed regulations that boats with a displacement greater than X was not allowed to traverse the inlets leading to the ports in Vancouver and Montreal. This effectively shut down the LNG projects that had environmentalists up in arms but also shut down the larger freighters from China. Needless to say the government’s instructions to shipping companies of “just send smaller boats” was as well received as you can expect so now those boats go to California and New York. Then get loaded into trucks and driven up adding the funderful US tariffs, then taxes and import fees ontop of those tariffs not to mention the extra costs in trucking them from New York to warehouses in Montreal or California to the Vancouver outskirts.
Our government at work people.