Intel leaps to 32-nanometer chip technology

In a statement that stunned the entire chip village, Intel plans to skip the 45-nanometer phase to jump straight from a 65-nanometer technology to . 32 nanometers with the upcoming Poulson Itanium processor line.

However, according to the chip giant's disclosure, this jump is not due to Intel inventing a new breakthrough manufacturing technology. In fact, it is only because the plan to produce Itanium chips has been delayed for a long time, and coincidentally, it coincides with the "ripe" 32nanometer technology.

According to Intel, Poulson Itanium will unveil a new, but detailed and detailed micro-chip structure that the company insists on keeping secret.

Also in the secret zone is the time when this chip is shipped. According to Intel's previous statement, 32-nanometer technology will only be available in 2009.

Picture 1 of Intel leaps to 32-nanometer chip technology Source: Bokee Another clue is that Intel has a habit of introducing new chip technologies with user versions, cheaper and less risky than the enterprise version.

From these two bases, we can temporarily predict that Poulson will land on the market in 2010.

Information about Itanium successive chip lines is even more scarce. The only thing people know is that it will be codenamed Kittson.

Earlier this year, Intel announced "ready" to ship Montvale, an updated version of Montecito dual-core chip, later this year. A quad-core Itanium chip will follow soon after in the first quarter of 2008 as Tukwila.

Trong Cam