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IEEE Spectrum February 2005 Singh & Thakur |
Chip Making's Singular Future Beleaguered chip makers are counting on single-wafer manufacturing, which makes ICs on one wafer at a time, to cut costs and get chips to market faster. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2009 Bill Arnold |
Shrinking Possibilities Lithography will need multiple strategies to keep up with the evolution of memory and logic |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2003 Traci Purdum |
Bigger, Better, Faster Intel Corp. converts 200-mm wafer factory in Chandler, Ariz. The result: increased productivity. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2008 Chris A. Mack |
Seeing Double Someday, chips might be made with X-rays. Until then, double-patterning lithography will be the only game in town. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2012 Rachel Courtland |
3-D Chips Grow Up In 2012, 3-D chips will help extend Moore's Law - and move beyond it. |
InternetNews July 25, 2005 David Needle |
Intel's Arizona Plans Are FABulous Intel is sinking $3 billion into a new chip manufacturing plant, focused on the company's most cutting edge 45 nanometer process technology for future computing platforms. The new technology lowers the cost of chip production. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2008 Christensen et al. |
The New Economics of Semiconductor Manufacturing The Toyota Production System has been applied to chip making. The electronics industry may never be the same. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2007 Bohr et al. |
The High-k Solution Microprocessors coming out this fall are the result of the first big redesign in CMOS transistors since the late 1960s. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2008 Sarah Adee |
Winner: The Ultimate Dielectric Is...Nothing IBM packs wires in vacuum to speed chips and save power. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2013 Joachim N. Burghartz |
Make Way for Flexible Silicon Chips We need them because thin, pliable organic semiconductors are too slow to serve in tomorrow's chips. Seamless integration of computing into everyday objects isn't quite here yet. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2012 Miguel Miranda |
The Threat of Semiconductor Variability As transistors shrink, the problem of chip variability grows |
BusinessWeek April 18, 2005 Adam Aston |
The Coming Chip Revolution Facing the limits of silicon, scientists are turning to carbon nanotubes. But even with a reliable supply of tubes, scaling up production to supply a vast global industry will take years. |
InternetNews December 2, 2005 David Needle |
Intel to Build $3.5B Chip Plant in Israel Intel plans to build a major chip manufacturing plant in Israel, at a cost of $3.5 billion, to produce leading-edge microprocessors. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2007 Samuel K. Moore |
Intel 45-Nanometer Penryn Processors Arrive Penryn chips are the result of the first fundamental redesign of the CMOS transistor |
PC Magazine April 1, 2009 John C. Dvorak |
Chip Biz Buzzwords It's no surprise that everyone in the Valley is so comfortable with insider and exclusionary code words, many of which make no sense. |
PC World March 12, 2002 James Niccolai |
Intel Shrinks Chip, Hits Milestone Prototypes of high-density chips support nearly eight times as many transistors as today's Pentium 4... |
IEEE Spectrum January 2013 Katherine Bourzac |
Intel Inside...Your Smartphone With Silvermont, the chip giant may finally get a grip on the mobile market |
Fast Company March 2002 George Anders |
How Intel Puts Innovation Inside Everybody worships at the altar of innovation. But it takes a company such as Intel to distill the very essence of innovation and turn it into a set of learnable, repeatable practices... |
IEEE Spectrum November 2011 Ahmed & Schuegraf |
Transistor Wars Rival architectures face off in a bid to keep Moore's Law alive. In May, Intel announced the most dramatic change to the architecture of the transistor since the device was invented. |
InternetNews January 26, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel Puts Chip Making Technique on the Fast Track Chip making giant's $20 million investment in Cymer's extreme ultraviolet lithography could help bring sub-45 nanometer chips to market earlier than first thought. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2011 Apte et al. |
Advanced Chip Packaging Satisfies Smartphone Needs Clever chip packaging means mobile devices can be smaller and smarter |
IEEE Spectrum May 2011 Keane & Kim |
Transistor Aging Measuring the degradation of microprocessors is tricky. Doing it better would unleash more processing power. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2007 Brian Santo |
Plans for Next-Gen Chips Imperiled Dim lights are casting shadows on extreme-ultraviolet lithography's debut date. Wisely, chip makers and their equipment suppliers are exploring alternatives, particularly those processes that will let them extend today's lithographic technology. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2007 Samuel K. Moore |
Masters of Memory Swiss firm Innovative Silicon crams 5 megabytes of RAM into the space of one. Their chip is called called Z-RAM, and if it grabs even a little piece of the on-chip memory market, it will change the ground rules for microprocessor design and will quickly become a company to be reckoned with. |
The Motley Fool November 4, 2010 Anders Bylund |
Say Hello to Intel, the Foundry Service! Its clientele is extremely exclusive. |
The Motley Fool March 15, 2006 Dan Bloom |
Probing Into FormFactor FormFactor's advanced probe cards help semiconductor manufacturers cut costs. The stock market has certainly noticed FormFactor's performance and potential. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2006 Brian R. Santo |
Acronym Addiction When you live on the cutting edge of technology, there are, literally, no words to describe it. Instead we have acronyms. Lots and lots of acronyms. ABT... BEOL... CSP... etc. |
Technology Research News August 10, 2005 Eric Smalley |
Ice transforms chipmaking Spraying water vapor onto cold silicon could be a simple way to make computer chips. The key is etching nanoscale lines into the resulting ice to make microscopic computer circuits. The process is environmentally friendly to boot. |
PC World September 12, 2002 James Niccolai |
Tomorrow's CPU: Wireless Link Inside Intel finds new ways to shrink, speed chips, plus build in radio functions. |
The Motley Fool July 12, 2006 Dan Bloom |
Ultratech Yields Bright Future The company is serious about helping chip makers achieve higher efficiency. The technology definitely looks interesting, but investors may want to wait. |
PC Magazine August 30, 2006 John C. Dvorak |
Inside Track v25n16 There needs to be something besides high-end games that can suck up all the power of Intel's dual-core chips. This desperation will only get worse when Intel rolls out the four-core chip. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2008 Sally Adee |
The Hunt for the Kill Switch Are chip makers building electronic trapdoors in key military hardware? The Pentagon is making its biggest effort yet to find out |
Industrial Physicist Rubin & Poate |
Ion implantation in silicon technology Ion implanters are essential to modern integrated-circuit (IC) manufacturing. Doping or otherwise modifying silicon and other semiconductor wafers relies on the technology. |
PC Magazine March 14, 2007 Dylan Tweney |
What's Inside Your Laptop? We reveal the components inside a typical notebook PC and explain where they come from. |
The Motley Fool February 21, 2011 Christian Zibreg |
Intel to Build $5 Billion Chip Factory in Arizona "Fab 42" will be able to manufacture bigger, more powerful chips. |
Fast Company November 2009 Ellen McGirt |
Intel's Everywhere: 75% of the Company's Business is Overseas More than 75% of the Intel's business comes from overseas - a trend that global stimulus spending is likely to increase. |
PC World July 25, 2006 Ben Ames |
Tech Trend: Intel Plugs Electron Leak 'Tri-gate' method of insulation could improve processor speed and power consumption. |
InternetNews September 19, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
Business Getting Harder For Chip Makers Report finds there is less room for error than ever and even the richest players are stressed. |
The Motley Fool June 13, 2006 Dan Bloom |
Texas Instruments Gets Tinier The company finds a watery way to create smaller, faster, cheaper chips. |
The Motley Fool August 17, 2010 Michael Kanellos |
Why Solar Is, and Isn't, Like the Chip Industry Will there be an Intel of solar? Or a lot of Packard-Bells? |
Military & Aerospace Electronics March 2009 Keith Gurnett & Tom Adams |
Up next: through-silicon vias The excitement over TSVs has been caused by the enhancement in process speed that can be gained by shortening distances. |
Fast Company March 2003 Keith H. Hammonds |
Motorola Bets on Its Chips A radical new business model overturns all the old rules. Now, will it work? |
The Motley Fool February 21, 2006 Tim Beyers |
IBM Finding Nemo Big Blue has created a technology called Nemo that will allow it do more with less when it comes to manufacturing chips. This might well be a huge win for the chipmakers. Investors, take note. |
PC Magazine November 28, 2007 Domingo & Cheng |
CPU Road Map 2008: Maxing Out Moore's Law 2007's big stories were Intel's move from dual-core to multicore processors and AMD's move to 65 nm. We look ahead to see what's next for the dueling chip manufacturers. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2007 Sarah Adee |
Chips Tracked in Fab by Wi-Fi Freescale Semiconductor furthers the removal of humans from the chip-making process. |
The Motley Fool January 27, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
Intel: Smaller Is Better A new 45-nanometer chip could give Intel a big technical advantage. The news won't immediately stem Intel's market-share losses or ignite a rally in its stock price, but it will certainly keep the heat on AMD. |
InternetNews March 5, 2004 Michael Singer |
Chipmakers Pushing the Envelope to 45nm Samsung is the latest to join IBM's development group in a bid to outshrink Intel for next-generation processors. |
Chemistry World February 5, 2007 Lionel Milgrom |
Hafnium Oxide Helps Make Chips Smaller and Faster Intel and IBM have announced that they will use dramatically different materials to build smaller, faster transistors for their next generation of chips. |
InternetNews May 19, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
Intel Invests $2B in 65-Nano The company builds out its Fab 24 in Ireland to keep its cutting edge in the sub-90 nanometer race. |
Salon.com November 13, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Silicon hogs A new study tars microchip manufacturing as wasteful and inefficient. Whatever happened to high tech's squeaky-clean image? |