This could be interesting to see how much they try to loss-lead to get market share in the low-end
This could be interesting to see how much they try to loss-lead to get market share in the low-end
Must be the most moronic decision ever.
and it's not like 20/20 hindsight either, because every hardware enthusiast knew at the time Intel was having troubles and was worried TSMC (and Samsung at the time) were going to be the only fabs producing leading edge lithographies.
https://www.eetimes.com/samsung-globalfoundries-prep-14nm-pr...
"Samsung expects to be in production late this year with a 14 nm FinFET process it has developed. GlobalFoundries has licensed the process and will have it in production early next year."
GlobalFoundries licensed 14nm from Samsung. How do you know GlobalFoundries is capable of 7nm?
The burden of proof is on you to support your claim that they could have executed a 7nm process profitably, as opposed to them looking at the data and coming to a rational conclusion that they couldn't.