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Intel Foundry and Arm Announce Multigeneration Collaboration on Leading-Edge SoC Design

AleksandarK

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Intel Foundry Services (IFS) and Arm today announced a multigeneration agreement to enable chip designers to build low-power compute system-on-chips (SoCs) on the Intel 18A process. The collaboration will focus on mobile SoC designs first, but allow for potential design expansion into automotive, Internet of Things (IoT), data center, aerospace and government applications. Arm customers designing their next-generation mobile SoCs will benefit from leading-edge Intel 18A process technology, which delivers new breakthrough transistor technologies for improved power and performance, and from IFS's robust manufacturing footprint that includes U.S.- and EU-based capacity.

"There is growing demand for computing power driven by the digitization of everything, but until now fabless customers have had limited options for designing around the most advanced mobile technology," said Pat Gelsinger, CEO of Intel Corporation. "Intel's collaboration with Arm will expand the market opportunity for IFS and open up new options and approaches for any fabless company that wants to access best-in-class CPU IP and the power of an open system foundry with leading-edge process technology."




"Arm's secure, energy-efficient processors are at the heart of hundreds of billions of devices and the planet's digital experiences," said Rene Haas, CEO of Arm. "As the demands for compute and efficiency become increasingly complex, our industry must innovate on many new levels. Arm's collaboration with Intel enables IFS as a critical foundry partner for our customers as we deliver the next generation of world-changing products built on Arm."

As part of its IDM 2.0 strategy, Intel is investing in leading-edge manufacturing capacity around the world, including significant expansions in the U.S. and the EU, to serve sustained long-term demand for chips. This collaboration will enable a more balanced global supply chain for foundry customers working in mobile SoC design on Arm-based CPU cores. By unlocking Arm's leading-edge compute portfolio and world-class IP on Intel process technology, Arm partners will be able to take full advantage of Intel's open system foundry model, which goes beyond traditional wafer fabrication to include packaging, software and chiplets.

IFS and Arm will undertake design technology co-optimization (DTCO), in which chip design and process technologies are optimized together to improve power, performance, area and cost (PPAC) for Arm cores targeting Intel 18A process technology. Intel 18A delivers two breakthrough technologies, PowerVia for optimal power delivery and RibbonFET gate all around (GAA) transistor architecture for optimal performance and power. IFS and Arm will develop a mobile reference design, allowing demonstration of the software and system knowledge for foundry customers. With the industry's evolution from DTCO to system technology co-optimization (STCO), Arm and IFS will work together to optimize the platforms from applications and software through package and silicon, leveraging Intel's unique open system foundry model.

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Well I guess I’ll comment on this. Any serious ARM license is a competitor to Intel. Sending over the complete design schematics of an ARM SoC for fabrication is too much of a risk as Intel will just copy anything useful into their own products.
 
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Well I guess I’ll comment on this. Any serious ARM license is a competitor to Intel. Sending over the complete design schematics of an ARM SoC for fabrication is too much of a risk as Intel will just copy anything useful into their own products.
That's not how it works but ok
 

hs4

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Well I guess I’ll comment on this. Any serious ARM license is a competitor to Intel. Sending over the complete design schematics of an ARM SoC for fabrication is too much of a risk as Intel will just copy anything useful into their own products.
Altera and Movidius, now part of Intel, normally license ARM cores. To begin with, Intel itself owned some of ARM's IP for a time in the 1990s (StrongARM).
 
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That's not how it works but ok
Then please explain to me what information a company like Apple would have to give engineers at Intel Foundry Services in order for Intel to successfully fab an M series SoC. And please be very specific as the devil is in the details.
 
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