this post was submitted on 24 Dec 2023
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Intel CEO claims 18A node will at least match TSMC's N2 performance and beat it to market::undefined

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Even though you have been downvoted to hell, this post resonates with real efforts by the US gov't to get ahead of foreign nations with semiconductor tech for AI. Anyone who is curious to read more, the US has the CHIPS initiative, which boasts a $52 billion ceiling for various efforts. This award amount is intended for a lot of different companies to leverage as they work to meet various requirements of the contract, not just Intel. Intel, however, is working to get a large set-aside of state funding, upwards of $90 million, through the vehicle of CHIPS. So there's that.

Is this military funding, though? No, not DoD. But as a gov't contracting effort to bring the US quickly to the forefront in this field, it could have implications for defense, for sure. No question.

Something super interesting all this reminds me of, DoD-wise, is the Space Force's "softwar" concept, a paper put out by Major Jason P. Lowery -- it's a premise for a future where world militaries compete in raw compute power, such as mining a cryptocurrency, to determine who wins conflicts. A kind of 'abstract' power.

Were this ever to actualize in any way, it would be good for countries to begin developing a semiconductor overmatch. Let alone any other need to ensure compute superiority.