TSMC said A16 production would start in the second half of 2026, which means Apple.
I know.
TSMC N2 designs are taping-out now and will start production in the second half of 2025.
Yes TSMC has said as much. I don't think that changes my statement though. TSMC starting production doesn't mean products on store shelves, nor does it mean production wafers leaving the fab, it means exactly what it says on the tin (starting the silicon that will actually make it's way onto store shelves). TSMC said that N5 started volume production in early 2020, N3 started production at the very end of 2022, and that N3E started production in late 2023. Why would we suddenly assume that now on N2/A16 that production in late 2025 and 2026 means products on store shelves in late Q3 2025/2026 respectively?
These are complex SoCs not chiplets.
How would you personally define that?
Does something with DDR and other interfaces count as a complex chip?
Does the die size need to be above some threshold?
Does there need to be a more than one type of xPU on the same die (eg CPU+GPU)?
I don't think any sane person would disagree with you that Meteor lake's cpu tile is less complex than A17 pro. But it is also true that Apple SOCs lack things such as modems, MIM caps, metal depop, etc. Meanwhile if you crack open a MTK or QCOM N7 chip you will find on die modems rather than just a separate chipset on the board and excess metal is depopulated. Pop open an AMD or NVIDIA GPU or an AMD CCD/mobile SOC and you will find metal depop, the HPC tuned Xtors, and TSMC's densest MIM cap.
When will Intel 18A based products be available to consumers?
Intel claims the lead product clearwater forrest will launch in 2025. They also claim that Panther lake SOCs will launch in 2025.
This is my point exactly. If everything is on time, 18A products will launch end of Q2 2025. server products are always slow ramp. So it would be Panther lake. We would have Laptops based on Panther lake in July 2025. Intel external foundry product would be the year after per Intel strategy.
I don't think intel has ever launched a laptop chip in July. ICL was Sept, TGL was Sept, ADL/RPL desktop was in Oct/Nov with laptops coming in January. I don't think intel has said when LNL will come. If prior tendencies hold then I guess laptop only chip designs launch around Sept, and desktop chips launch in fall.
TSMC was given a challenge and pulled everything in.
Besides speculating that maybe A16 would never have existed or that it wouldn't be coming as soon as it is if it wasn't for intel's early BSPDN play, what pray-tell has been pulled in? TSMC has from the beginning said that N2 will be in production in late 2025. TSMC claims to be at or ahead of schedule on all metrics (which is good). But that doesn't mean things can be pulled in because at the end of the day they are subject to Apple's schedule.