AMD has
demonstrated its first chips built to 45nm-scale, which will bring it on a par
with the miniaturisation on the latest Intel chips.
The
quad-core
processors were made at the company's Dresden plant using a process
co-developed with IBM. They should enable AMD to erode some of the technological
edge Intel has enjoyed over the past few years.
But
Intel
is scheduled to start moving to 32nm scale next year and AMD's first 45nm will
not appear until later this year.
The demonstrations at the giant
Cebit
show in Hanover, Germany, were of a server chip codenamed Shanghai and a desktop
chip codenamed Deneb.
Highly miniaturised chips are cheaper to make as more can fit onto the
standard 300mm wafer used to manufacture them. They also tend to draw less power
for a given performance.
AMD also announced a new
graphics
processor design, the 780 Series, design to go on motherboards. The company
says that when paired with its Phenom 9000 series quad-core or Athlon 64 X2
dual-core processor, the 780 Series "delivers significant enhancements in gaming
and high-definition experiences for mainstream PC customers."
Motherboards
using the AMD 780 should be available within the next few weeks. They will be
suitable for use with the new ATI hybrid technology which allows a discreet
graphics card to pair up with on-board graphics processing to boost performance.
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