Intel goes after TSMC’s foundry market share by branching into Arm chips and focusing on U.S. manufacturing


What you need to know

  • In an interview with Tom’s Hardware, Intel Foundry Services Head Stu Pann discussed Intel’s plan to fight for market share in the foundry market. 
  • Intel Foundry Services is working with Faraday to develop a 64-core 18A processor using the Arm Neoverse design. 
  • Stu Pann says they want to offer foundry services in more geographical locations than competitors, especially within the U.S.

Arm is all the rage right now; with our recent report that upcoming Surface devices will have an Arm variant, as well as the Xbox leak from last year that the next generation of Xbox might be Arm-based, it seems the entire world is shifting towards Arm. 

With Intel being open to building Arm chips, Microsoft looking to integrate Arm with its in-house hardware projects, and the upcoming Snapdragon X Elite possibly making waves in the PC SOC market, Arm is set for a huge awakening in 2024.  

Intel’s vision for foundry 

Intel foundry services plants are now building Arm chips.  (Image credit: Intel)

During the IFS direct connect, Intel described how they want to be vital to the foundry market. They want to be the #2 Foundry by 2030 and become a resilient Foundry that can withstand supply chain disruptions due to geopolitical issues and wars going on around the world. Intel even stated that semiconductors are the new oil of geopolitics and hinted that the world will fight over silicon in the future as they have fought over oil for the last 50 years.  





Source link

Previous articleInvest $100 in Immutable (IMX): $1000 by Bitcoin Halving?
Next articleMcLaren 750S First Drive Review: Scorching through the Valley of Fire