They still admit they won't have 10nm desktop chips till 2021 (at least) with 7nm predicted to ship in 2022. https://www.techpowerup.com/260141/intel-clarifies-on-10nm-d... Which of course means that 10nm will never ship on the desktop. And you bet most mobile chips they will ship next year will be "Comet Lake" on 14nm and not "Ice Lake" or "Tiger Lake" 10nm. The 10nm process is completely botched they just can't admit that.
As best I can tell Intel kinda painted themselves into a corner with their 14nm+++ process. It produces really high quality parts (no surprise) but that also means that there is now an expectation of super high clocks on the intel side. That's not realistic however and I highly doubt their 10nm can currently match their 14nm+++ process on clocks (yet). It looks like Intel is thus focusing 10nm on areas where clocks more representative of a new node won't be an issue: server and mobile.
I'll be honest and say I'm very curious to see how intel tries to escape this trap they've set for themselves. Unless we see rapid gains in the 10nm process quality up into the 4.5+ GHz range I wouldn't expect to see 10nm desktop parts anytime soon.
Haha, obviously the largest CPU market is date centers which pretty much only care about performance/watt. The gaming market is really only useful for PR and launching new architectures.
A fine point. I guess I'm not clear which audience we're discussing here?
Data centers presumably don't care at all about those super high clocks, so I don't think any downgrade in that area would be a problem for them, as long as overall metrics are good.
Both server and mobile have plenty 14nm parts going forward. No, the truth is much simpler: the 10nm process is botched and produces very little but they can't just straight up admit it's not working. They need to limp with it until the 7nm which is developed independently and actually has promise to be working.
This gets very dark when you line up the timeline for TSMC’s next processes and the idea that Apple would like to use their own (TSMC-based) chips in their computers. Intel is currently in a danger zone. If QC were to swap processes with it then the Arm v Intel Cold War could get hot fast.