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by KK7NIL
639 days ago
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Intel was never heavily involved in that, so idk why you think we'd be able to deduce that meaning from your previous comment. Also, the military semiconductor supply chain is already protected and has serious export restrictions, you just don't hear about it often. Don't forget that today's leading edge nodes are tomorrow's trailing edge, so you really can't escape the issue. |
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There's been a continual drive towards better semiconductor processes. That's really important for things like GPU compute. I think we're past diminishing returns for a lot of other things. There's probably a ~14nm arm chip in the keyboard I'm typing on that's only there because it was the cheapest option. Does the ECU in a car benefit from being sub 7nm? Maybe, probably not by much.