Arthur Hanson
Well-known member
Gelsinger has told Barrons that Intel will go to a one-year cadence on its processor chips. Is this going to be an economic and efficient way to utilize resources or just a marketing ploy? It sounds good, but are the improvements going to be great enough for customers to justify the increased costs of new processors every year for too small an improvement to justify the costs of new models? Will Intel layout an entire new migration plan for their customers and support partners needed to justify these changes? Will TSM and Samsung have anything to say about this? Will this benefit Intel's current customers and win new ones? It seems to me this is a high-risk, high-cost, business move. Any thoughts and observations appreciated.
www.barrons.com
It's a paysite, but Gelsinger relayed this directly to them
Intel Presents a $20 Billion Bill for a Turnaround. Investors Don’t Like It.
The semiconductor giant’s CEO presents a plan to build two new chip factories, create a division to manufacture for others, and seek partners on its own new chips. The cost isn’t small.
It's a paysite, but Gelsinger relayed this directly to them