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YEAR END - Tracking AMD's road to recovery 28 December, 2007 07:21:30
AMD's product roadmap lays out several key milestones the company needs to meet to regain its footing in the CPU market.As this year comes to a close, AMD executives won't be sorry to put 2007 behind them. Battered by rising debt, shrinking market share and mounting financial losses, AMD is counting on a comeback in 2008. But can the struggling chip maker make good on its promises to customers and investors that better times lie ahead? - +
ARN's A-Z guide to networking 19 December, 2007 14:50:54
As business needs change, so do the requirements for the business backbone. ARN looks at networking trends and technologies and reports on predictions for 2008 and beyond.
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Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is on track to soon receive its first shipment of 64-bit microprocessors manufactured by Singapore's Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing according to a company spokesman.
"Things are looking very, very good," said Rob Keyosheyan, a company spokesman.
Keyosheyan declined to say exactly when AMD would receive the first shipment of processors from Chartered, but said that is on track to happen during the second half of this year. The first AMD chips that come out of Chartered's factories will be made using a 90-nanometer manufacturing process, not a 65-nanometer process as some reports have claimed, he said.
Over time, AMD and Chartered eventually plan to shift production to a 65-nanometer process, he said.
These numbers, measured in millionths of a meter, refer to the size of the smallest feature that can be created on a silicon chip. Smaller is better, as this generally brings a reduction in power consumption, a boost in performance, and a reduction in unit manufacturing costs.
Chartered has been preparing to produce 64-bit processors for AMD since late 2004, when the two companies signed a manufacturing agreement. At that time, the two partners said the first chips would be produced in 2006.
AMD has its own manufacturing plants, including the recently completed Fab 36 plant in Dresden, Germany. The company is using Chartered as a contractor to supply "flex capacity." In theory, this allows AMD's own factories to operate at maximum capacity, while Chartered's output can be modified to handle fluctuations in demand caused by factors like seasonality.
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