Intel is
planning to skip the 45nm production process altogether with its forthcoming
Poulson Itanium processors, jumping from 65nm to 32nm, the chipmaker revealed.
The move is not the result of Intel's innovative powers.
Delays in
previous designs have pushed back the entire Itanium roadmap, and the switch
allows the Poulson launch to coincide with the availability of 32nm
technology.
Pouslon will introduce a new micro-architecture, but Intel has not provided a
projected launch date for the chip.
The chip giant's 32nm technology is slated for 2009, and the firm typically
debuts new chip technology in less risky consumer models before they are brought
to enterprise-class processors. This makes 2010 a likely Poulson launch date.
Intel offered even fewer details about Poulson's replacement, unveiling only
its Kittson codename.
The chipmaker has said that it is preparing to ship Montvale, an update to
the current dual core
Montecito,
by the end of this year. A quad-core Itanium is expected by 2008 in the form of
Tukwila.
Intel made sure to include a fair amount of marketing-speak in its
presentation. The company continues to declare Itanium a huge success, and is
just as persistent in refusing to publish unit sales data that could support
these claims.
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