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- May 13, 2008
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that's nice and all, if samsung gets their yields right, which they didn't for nvidia on the 6nm node
that and AMD is making plenty on their ryzen chips, they don't need to move to a different manufacturer to be able to lower prices, they don't have to why charge less if you don't have to...
You mean 8nm, the shrink of the mobile technology originally intended for flash chips? Which they paid almost nothing for and sold those gigantic (partially-defective) chips for massive profits?
That's hardly a fair comparison...in-fact it makes no sense. It only shows you how shrewd of a company nVIDIA is when it comes to bargaining.
1. AMD's chips would not need to massive. This isn't Finfet, it's GAAFET (which Samsung has been producing and TSMC will only just start to produce). Lots of stuff that's different, and not comparable at all.
2. This isn't about now, it's about the future. TSMC's costs are going up; this is fact, and allocation on cutting-edge nodes is at a premium that may not satisfy AMD and/or cut them out.
Samsung's price was likely already competitive, but now may be even more-so. It may have to be, especially given there haven't been many (any?) massive orders on new nodes for quite some time (SD8G1?).
Why would a company take a worse DEAL? It's honestly not about the technology; they can build/design around that.
If it was about the best technology nVIDIA would have never used Samsung ever. It's about allocation and profit margin.