Joe DeFuria said:
And IBM is not accustomed to the business model that TSMC has, and what TSMC's customers typically need. You're right, it's not fair.
Joe, last time I checked IBM's founderies were bending-over-backwards to entice customers over. Not to mention your obscure reference to "Buisness model(s)" that allow you to just comment and not provide any semblence of empirical fact. Care to explain the differences to me? I genuinly have yet to hear about them (besides basic library, design differences that exist between all founderies, hell even individual lines) and am interested.
Who said I turned more options into a negative? There must be a reason for you making things up? At worst, I'm saying IBM (in the short term) doesn't appear to me to be able to nVidia's disadvantage of being a back seat to DX10 development.
And why is this option exclusive to nVidia by the way? Is ATI not permitted to become an IBM (or Micron, or anyone else), that they feel offers the best tech?
Wow, you're really into this leap-of-faith thing huh? Lets tackle these one at a time:
(a) Your entire post projected your negative view of nVidia's future. I count 3 negative comements concerning nVidia's future
- "Things don't look too good IMO, for nVidia..."
- "IBM is having issues with low-k...(isn't better low-k at IBM the suppossed reason for nVidia switching the high end parts to IBM?)"
- "I don't see nVidia having a good shot at redeeming itself"
(b) Your comments about "Low-K" dielectrics was also wrong and ignorant. Yes IBM, like much of the industry, had problems implimenting SiLK. Yet, there are other dielectric compounds in existence. East Fishkill, which will produce nVidia's ICs, has been verified for CVD based production with actual products to ship within a month IIRC. And IBM has patented a dual phase CVD based process that's is said to lower the K value significantly. So, even at worst - they're still ahead of the founderies when it comes to R&D. Check your sources next time.
Also, you totally overlooked the positive intrinsic factor that having IBM as a foundry bring. sSOI alone is pretty neat IMHO; 1.7-3X decrease in power requirements, ~30% preformance increase. That's delta is basically akin to being a process node generation ahead of the competition.
(c) I never said it was 'exclusive' or anything of that sort, nor did I ever imply it. Infact, ATI probably will shore up this end of the development pipeline soon. But, untill then they're behind. And Micron still doesn't approach an IBM or Intel in terms of R&D and bleeding-edge implimentation of lithography processes and technologies last I checked.
Yes, we know, Vince..."lithography is everything!"
Yes, yes it is in the preformance computing sector where computational resources via concurrency of design dominates. And what's going to be really humorous is if ATI moves (as they should) and secures additional foundry resources for production and technology reasons.
But hey bud, what else would I expect out of the guy who said – what was that line, ‘I can't imagine why someone wouldn't like ATI.’ Keep downplaying lithographies importance until ATI publicly moves on it, then you can come join my side and I'll supply the drinks.