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IBM, AMD to co-develop microprocessor technologies
Lycos Financial - Reuters Financial ^ | 8 Jan 2003, 3:28pm ET | Elinor Mills Abreu

Posted on 01/08/2003 4:46:14 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach

IBM, AMD to co-develop microprocessor technologies
8 Jan 2003, 3:28pm ET
- - - - -
(Updates throughout with background, executive, analyst
comment, changes dateline, previous SUNNYVALE, Calif./EAST
FISHKILL, N.Y.)
    By Elinor Mills Abreu
    SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 8 (Reuters) - International Business
Machines Corp. (NYSE:IBM) and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE:AMD)
on Wednesday said they would jointly develop next-generation
microprocessor technologies in a bid to keep pace with market
leader Intel Corp.(NASDAQ:INTC)
    The details of the agreement, which extends a
technology-sharing arrangement the two companies have had for
the past several years, were not released.

But the alliance will run for three years with the option of an extension, said Bill Siegle, chief scientist and senior vice president of AMD's technology operations.

The companies will work to develop technology to make extremely small transistors -- the on-off switches in microprocessors -- that can be packed into faster and more efficient chips and manufactured more cheaply.

Specifically, AMD and IBM said they would target widths of 65 nanometers and 45 nanometers, roughly a measure of the space between transistors on the chip.

By comparison, AMD 90-nanometer products are slated for release in the first half of next year. Intel is expected to release a version of its Pentium 4 processor built on 90-nanometer technology in the second half of this year.

At the same time, AMD and IBM will work toward building chips on 300 millimeter silicon wafers, a larger size than AMD currently uses and a step that promises cost savings.

Both IBM and Intel already have production plants that use 300 millimeter wafers compared with the 200 millimeter wafers used by AMD's main fabrication plant.

The partnership with IBM is key for AMD, since it allows the company to better compete against Intel, said Nathan Brookwood, an analyst at Insight 64.

'VIRTUAL GORILLA' STRATEGY AMD lacks Intel's cash to spend on research and development, and therefore might not be able to get new products out as quickly without a partner, Brookwood said.

"AMD has referred to this in the past as their 'virtual gorilla' strategy," he added.

"Through partnerships, AMD can match the capabilities and technologies Intel can handle completely on its own," Brookwood said. "AMD has been successful over the past few years in being able to pull these rabbits out of its hat in order to keep up with Intel." AMD's Siegle said the deal will help the company meet its goals of bringing "break-even costs and spending levels down to levels of profitability." Chip companies are currently moving from 130 nanometer technology to 90 nanometer process technologies, with one nanometer at a billionth of a meter. Process technology is effectively the roadmap used to manufacture chips.

Shrinking the size of the transistors allows chipmakers to pack more function into smaller chips. They are simultaneously increasing the size of the wafers chips are built on, enabling them to lower the cost of each microprocessor, which serves as the brains of computers and electronics.

IBM and AMD said they expect first products based on the new 65-nanometer technologies to appear in 2005. They said they will use the technologies in their own chip fabrication facilities and in conjunction with other manufacturing partners.

As part of the development work, Sunnyvale, California-based AMD will send a group of engineers to IBM's Semiconductor Research and Development Center, a new plant in East Fishkill, New York, AMD's Siegle said.

In November, IBM said it would jointly develop chip technology and share manufacturing facilities with Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing (NASDAQ:CHRT) of Singapore.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: ibmamd; microprocessors; techindex

1 posted on 01/08/2003 4:46:14 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: *tech_index; Sparta; Mathlete; grundle; beckett; billorites; One More Time; Dominic Harr; ...
OFFICIAL BUMP(TOPIC)LIST
2 posted on 01/08/2003 4:46:48 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
BTTT!
3 posted on 01/08/2003 5:08:10 PM PST by Libertarianize the GOP
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To: fivetoes
Bump
4 posted on 01/08/2003 5:20:39 PM PST by softengine
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
I can't WAIT !! The sooner the better. I'm building an AMD 2100 right now. Woo Hoo ! Thanks for the heads up, I'll pass this news around.
5 posted on 01/08/2003 5:25:27 PM PST by mark the shark
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Competititon is good. My 2 computers are AMD.
6 posted on 01/08/2003 6:21:24 PM PST by dennisw (http://www.littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/weblog.php)
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To: mark the shark
I am happy with my home built AMD 2000+!
7 posted on 01/08/2003 6:41:52 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
I like my pedestrian AMD XP 1.5...with a gig of memory, and IDE RAID....
8 posted on 01/08/2003 6:59:04 PM PST by stylin_geek
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
I guess the PowerPC collaboration with Motorola is on the way out.
9 posted on 01/08/2003 7:01:03 PM PST by glorgau
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Things must be pretty grim at Motorola's PowerPC Microprocessor Group today.
10 posted on 01/08/2003 7:02:20 PM PST by Stillwillin
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To: glorgau
I think this is the microelectronics division selling fabrication services!
11 posted on 01/08/2003 7:03:44 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
I think this is the microelectronics division selling fabrication services!

I do believe that man just won a cigar! Thanks for playing!

12 posted on 01/08/2003 10:18:38 PM PST by Billy_bob_bob ("He who will not reason is a bigot;He who cannot is a fool;He who dares not is a slave." W. Drummond)
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To: All
More details:

EE Times AMD deal with IBM appears to end earlier alliances
By David Lammers, EE Times
Jan 8, 2003 (11:28 AM)
URL: http://www.eetimes.com/story/OEG20030108S0038

AUSTIN, Texas — Advanced Micro Devices Inc. has switched partners again, announcing Wednesday (Jan. 8) that it will work with IBM Microelectronics to co-develop process technology at the 65-nanometer and 45-nm nodes.

The deal apparently marks an end to AMD's arrangement with United Microelectronics Corp., a Taiwan-based foundry with which AMD was to develop process technology and build a 300-mm fabrication facility in Singapore. Asked about that earlier partnership, an AMD spokesman said the two sides "are amicably winding up their joint development relationship."

AMD is reevaluating its options for manufacturing on 300-mm wafers, the spokesman said, noting that AMD's plan, announced last January, to jointly build a 300-mm fab in Singapore with UMC was only a memorandum of understanding.

The depressed market for PC processors has impacted all of AMD's plans, but the company still plans to bring up its 65-nm process on 300-mm wafers by the second half of 2005, the spokesman said.

"UMC has been a great foundry partner, and our foundry relationship with them continues for other areas. But at this time we are exploring our options for 300-mm manufacturing," he said.

On Thursday, a spokesman at UMC said no final decision had been made about the potential AMD-UMC joint venture. He also said the foundry would continue its 65-nm and 45-nm node development with Infineon Technologies AG. The two companies have been working together for years on process technology and are partners in a Singapore-based 300mm wafer fab, called UMCi, which will fire up during the first half.

AMD will relocate a substantial number of engineers to IBM's silicon development facility in Fishkill, N.Y., and joint development work will start later this month.

Before 2002, Motorola Inc. was AMD's collaborator on logic process development, including work on copper interconnects and silicon-on-insulator (SOI) technology.

While Wednesday's announcement by AMD and IBM mentions SOI as part of the joint development agreement, the subject of strained silicon was absent from the company's press release.

Strained deals

Last year, AMD struck a relationship with AmberWave Systems (Salem, N.H.), a startup which licenses strained silicon technology.

IBM plans to combine SOI and strained silicon technologies at the 65-nm node, making it likely that AMD will work with IBM, rather than AmberWave, on strained silicon technology. IBM and AmberWave are rivals in the strained silicon arena.

The AMD spokesman said he was aware that AMD had worked with AmberWave "at one point," but was unsure if the relationship continues in the wake of the AMD-IBM deal.

The deal with AMD is the second time IBM has muscled its way into UMC's turf. IBM is making Xilinx Inc.'s most advanced FPGAs at 90-nm design rules, encroaching on the Xilinx-UMC foundry relationship, which continues.

The announcement also raises the question of whether IBM and another of its joint development partners, Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing, will work with AMD on 300-mm manufacturing. In late November, IBM and Chartered announced a deal to collaborate on 90-nm and finer process technologies, and to share 300-mm manufacturing capacity as well.



13 posted on 01/10/2003 2:07:44 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: All
And:

EE Times AMD exec describes go-for-broke partnership with IBM
By David Lammers, EE Times
Jan 9, 2003 (2:54 PM)
URL: http://www.eetimes.com/story/OEG20030109S0048

Advanced Micro Devices Inc.'s chief scientist and senior vice president of technology operations, Bill Siegle, detailed his company's plans to co-develop future-generation process technology with IBM Microelectronics, in a telephone interview with EE Times editor-at-large David Lammers.

Bill Siegle: Let me give you a short overview first. This is a multi-year deal which includes 65- and 45-nanometer technologies, accomplished on 300-mm wafers. And it is with IBM, a partner whose own products, servers and other products, mirror very closely the demanding performance requirements that we have at AMD. And the joint development work will be accomplished at one place, one facility, at substantial economies. This is part of our effort to reduce costs and get our break-even point down, and build a relationship with a partner that can help us maintain an aggressive performance road map.

EE Times: How much is AMD paying IBM?

Siegle: We don't discuss specific financial terms. If we sum up all the spending over the multi-year time frame, it is a sizeable amount of money. But it is expensive no matter how you go at it. This is a way to get to 300-mm that is a hell of a lot cheaper than any other arrangement we could have contemplated. Both companies have an interest in strained silicon on SOI [silicon-on-insulator], so it is more efficient than doing our own thing.

EET: What about your deal with AmberWave Systems on strained silicon?

Siegle: The work we have done with AmberWave is an initial phase on bulk [not on SOI], and that has come to a natural completion phase. We are talking to them about how we might go forward, but that discussion will have to fit in with the IBM relationship. We are in a natural transition point.

EET: Is strained silicon on SOI the leading candidate for AMD and IBM at the 65-nm node?

Siegle: If look at where we are, in the first month of '03, with 65-nm production late in '05, we are still in the phase of evaluating technology options. The IBM program is in a similar state. Both of us would like to reach the conclusion that strained silicon on SOI can be implemented. It is not a definitive decision, it is one of the options that are in the hopper. The advantages of strained silicon and the advantages of SOI are somewhat independent, and if we put them together we have got a real world-beater.

We have to be careful not to reduce the strain during processing. That is one of the reasons it is just one of candidates. We are not far enough down the learning curve to make that decision.

EET: The SOI wafers are still fairly expensive?

Siegle: Yes, the SOI wafers are expensive, and strain adds another kicker. That is part of our consideration: can it be ready not only technically but in terms of cost?

EET: What do you plan for the low-k road map? IBM and AMD use different materials now.

Siegle: Yes, IBM uses SiLK, a spin-on, and we use a CVD material. We have been on a different path, but in our preliminary meetings with IBM we have had some healthy initial exchanges on low-k. There are, so to speak, many paths to Rome, to a reduced dielectric. We have put a low-k CVD dielectric in at Dresden for 130-nm going to 90-nm, and IBM believes they have their arms around the issues with SiLK.

We may end up doing a hybrid of CVD and spin-on. It's another open chapter relative to 65-nm, and we will be jointly figuring out the smartest thing to do.

EET: Besides low-k, what does AMD bring to the party?

Siegle: IBM and AMD both have a shortage of good engineers to work these issues, so they are more than anxious for the 40-to-50 engineers we envision putting in at East Fishkill [N.Y., where the joint development work will be based].

Also, we have driven progressive implementation of manufacturing improvements, a continuous improvement in the manufacturing capability, that represents more rapid change than you would find in an IBM fab. It's a methodology that makes performance improvements very frequently, with small improvements. Most people don't do that. Most introduce larger changes every six to nine months. We have evolved a method to do that more frequently, making smaller changes.

EET: Do you mean thinning the gate oxide, or shrinking the design rules?

Siegle: It's that, and a whole laundry list of knobs.

EET: It seems a logical or natural thing to work with IBM at their new 300-mm fab. Are you talking about that?

Siegle: It does, as you said, seem almost a logical thing, and we are looking at that. We are in the process of examining what the appropriate 300-mm strategy will be for us. Almost certainly it will be a partnering strategy, based on the economics of what it takes to fill a fab. There frankly are several attractive options that we are considering. One is an extension of the IBM relationship. But that decision is not one that we are going to make hurriedly. We are going to spend several more months scrubbing out those possible paths.

EET: When does 300-mm become compelling in terms of costs?

Siegle: It becomes compelling when you can't buy leading-edge tools anymore for 200-mm wafers. With the industry slump that is not going to happen at the 65-nm node. And secondly, it is compelling when for a square inch of silicon, the cost of the finished wafer out of a new 300-mm fab compares favorably with the cost of a 200-mm wafer coming out of a partially depreciated 200-mm fab. Probably sometime between the 65-nm and 45-nm nodes, 300-mm becomes compelling.

EET: Can we conclude that AMD and UMC [United Microelectronics Corp.] won't build a joint fab in Singapore?

Siegle: In principle, Singapore is one of the options, but it would have to be considered a lower-likelihood option. That would have to be rationalized with UMC's own need for capacity. They have an operating 300-mm fab in Taiwan that is nowhere near full at this point in time. That's a contributing factor — demand and loading at each of the companies become part of the equation.

EET: Why did AMD end its process development agreement with UMC?

Siegle: We mutually agreed we ought to disengage the joint development process that we had started to put together. A lot of things have changed just over a year's time. The economy has put both of us under considerable pressures.

To meet our technical requirements they would have to invest more heavily than the vast majority of their business would normally require. The conclusion we reached is that it was in both companies' best interest to find another way for us to get this leading-edge microprocessor work done.

This loops back to the point that the IBM product requires the same go-for-broke technology that we do.



14 posted on 01/10/2003 2:09:06 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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