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Technology Stocks : Advanced Micro Devices - Moderated (AMD) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: dougSF30 who wrote (215085)10/26/2006 4:21:46 PM
From: jspeedRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 275872
 
Doug,

My policy is to give what I get and then some. So, I stand behind everything I said. If you want a kinder gentler conversation, all you have to do is be civil.

AMD says 65 nm chips due next month

After that 45 nm, 32 nm and 22 nm

By Tony Dennis in Dresden: Friday 08 September 2006, 14:05

BEING MORE than a tad evasive on the subject, AMD looks set to ship its first 65 nm products next month (October 2006). The company's more fixated about migrating an existing Fab from 200 mm to 300 mm wafers.
According to Toralf Gueldner, director of production at AMD's Dresden fabs, the company has been able to produce 65 nm products since June. This has been followed by 'full flow' this month [September 2006] and will be followed by serious 65 nm shipments in October.

Even more intriguing is the fact that Gueldner expects AMD to be "fully converted" over to 65 nm by mid-2007. He didn't elaborate, however.

Gueldner also revealed that AMD had already created its first 45 nm test chips. In the distant future they will be followed by 32 nm and 22 nm products.

What AMD really wanted to talk about is the gradual conversion of its existing Fab 30 over to 300 mm wafers from 200 mm. AMD will then rename the Fab from 30 to Fab 38. It should then start producing its first 20K 300 mm wafers from Fab 38 in Q1 2008.

The reason why AMD can afford to phase Fab 30 out is thanks to the existence of Fab 36 producing 90 nm SOI (Silicon-On-Insulator) already.

The company has made a number of improvements to yields from its silicon. One reason being that the company supplying its masks now has a factory down the road in Germany. The wafers are still sent to Singapore to be cut and packaged, however.

Another good reason for increased yields is its adoption of Front Opening Shipping Boxes (FOSBs). These keep the wafers almost hermetically sealed for the vast majority of the production process – only exposing them to its cleanroom standard of 100 particles per cubic metre of air on very rare occasions.

AMD claims that in the list of fabs operated by all the members of the Sematech alliance, Dresden comes absolutely top. It wouldn't say where Intel came on the chart.

The final major achievement AMD is proud of is that Dresden has proved to be a major employer of former citizens of East Germany. µ

theinquirer.net



To: dougSF30 who wrote (215085)10/27/2006 1:22:00 AM
From: PetzRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 275872
 
Apparently you didn't notice that slide 24 only promises production from Fab 36 in 1H06, it did not promise 65nm.

amd.com

In fact, slide 21 indicates that there will be a transision to 65nm within Fab 36 -- AMD is optimizing Fab 36 for smooth transition of 65nm technology

Petz