Transistors On A Chip
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Intel Panther Lake Chipset Architecture Revealed, to Be First PC Platform Built on 18A Process
- Friday October 10, 2025
- Written by Akash Dutta, Edited by Rohan Pal
Intel has unveiled more details about its upcoming Panther Lake chip, officially called Intel Core Ultra series 3. Built using the 18A process at its Arizona facility, it will feature a multi-chiplet SoC design, RibbonFET transistors, and Foveros packaging. The processor promises 50% faster performance, improved efficiency, and 180 TOPS AI capabili...
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www.gadgets360.com
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MediaTek Dimensity 9500 Launch Date Announced; Company Designs Its First Chip Using TSMC’s 2nm Process
- Tuesday September 16, 2025
- Written by Sucharita Ganguly, Edited by David Delima
MediaTek, a leading chipmaker, has finished designing and testing its flagship chip on TSMC’s cutting-edge 2nm process, making it one of the first companies to adopt this advanced technology. Mass production is slated for the end of next year. The company also revealed that its next-generation Dimensity flagship SoC, likely the Dimensity 9500, is...
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www.gadgets360.com
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Intel Said to Be Struggling With Key Manufacturing Process for Next PC Chip
- Tuesday August 5, 2025
- Reuters
Early tests disappointed customers last year, but Intel has said its 18A is on track to make its "Panther Lake" laptop semiconductors at high volume starting in 2025, which include next-generation transistors and a more efficient way to deliver power to the chip.
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www.gadgets360.com
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CSIRO Uses Quantum AI to Revolutionize Semiconductor Design
- Saturday July 5, 2025
- Written by Gadgets 360 Staff
In a global first, researchers at Australia’s CSIRO used quantum machine learning to enhance semiconductor design, outperforming classical AI models. By modeling Ohmic resistance in GaN transistors, the team built a hybrid quantum–classical model using just 5 qubits. This Quantum Kernel-Aligned Regressor revealed subtle fabrication patterns tha...
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www.gadgets360.com
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China’s 2D Transistor Could Transform Processors with Higher Speeds and Efficiency
- Monday March 31, 2025
- Written by Gadgets 360 Staff
A silicon-free transistor developed in China may revolutionise chip technology. According to reports, the 2D transistor, designed with bismuth oxyselenide, could enhance processor speeds by 40% while lowering power use by 10%. The gate-all-around field-effect transistor (GAAFET) architecture is said to offer better efficiency and flexibility compar...
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www.gadgets360.com
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iPhone 17 Air to Be Apple's Thinnest-Ever Phone; A19 Chips to Be Built Using TSMC’s New Technology: Report
- Tuesday November 19, 2024
- Written by Nithya P Nair, Edited by David Delima
Apple is believed to discontinue the iPhone Plus model next year and replace it with an iPhone 17 Slim version. A well-known analyst now states that the purported iPhone 17 Slim will be thinner than the iPhone 6. Additionally, the analysts claimed that Apple's next-generation A19 chips for the iPhone 17 lineup will be manufactured using TSMC's thir...
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www.gadgets360.com
-
Nvidia's New Research Shows How AI Can Be Used to Improve Chip Design
- Tuesday March 28, 2023
- Reuters
Nvidia on Monday showed new research that explains how AI can be used to improve chip design. The research took an existing effort developed by the University of Texas researchers using what is called reinforcement learning and added a second layer of artificial intelligence on top of it to get even better results.
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www.gadgets360.com
-
IBM's New Tech Squeezes 30 Billion Transistors Into Fingernail-Sized 5nm Chip
- Monday June 5, 2017
- Shubham Verma
Unlike the 7nm chip covering 20 billion transistors on a chip, the 5nm will let 30 billion transistors to be fitted on a microprocessor or chip
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www.gadgets360.com
-
IBM working on carbon nanotubes to replace silicon in computer chips
- Tuesday October 30, 2012
- Written by Vidhyanshu
A carbon 'chip' with more than ten thousand working transistors and made of nano-sized tubes could replace silicon in computer chips to create smaller, faster circuits.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Intel Panther Lake Chipset Architecture Revealed, to Be First PC Platform Built on 18A Process
- Friday October 10, 2025
- Written by Akash Dutta, Edited by Rohan Pal
Intel has unveiled more details about its upcoming Panther Lake chip, officially called Intel Core Ultra series 3. Built using the 18A process at its Arizona facility, it will feature a multi-chiplet SoC design, RibbonFET transistors, and Foveros packaging. The processor promises 50% faster performance, improved efficiency, and 180 TOPS AI capabili...
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
MediaTek Dimensity 9500 Launch Date Announced; Company Designs Its First Chip Using TSMC’s 2nm Process
- Tuesday September 16, 2025
- Written by Sucharita Ganguly, Edited by David Delima
MediaTek, a leading chipmaker, has finished designing and testing its flagship chip on TSMC’s cutting-edge 2nm process, making it one of the first companies to adopt this advanced technology. Mass production is slated for the end of next year. The company also revealed that its next-generation Dimensity flagship SoC, likely the Dimensity 9500, is...
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Intel Said to Be Struggling With Key Manufacturing Process for Next PC Chip
- Tuesday August 5, 2025
- Reuters
Early tests disappointed customers last year, but Intel has said its 18A is on track to make its "Panther Lake" laptop semiconductors at high volume starting in 2025, which include next-generation transistors and a more efficient way to deliver power to the chip.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
CSIRO Uses Quantum AI to Revolutionize Semiconductor Design
- Saturday July 5, 2025
- Written by Gadgets 360 Staff
In a global first, researchers at Australia’s CSIRO used quantum machine learning to enhance semiconductor design, outperforming classical AI models. By modeling Ohmic resistance in GaN transistors, the team built a hybrid quantum–classical model using just 5 qubits. This Quantum Kernel-Aligned Regressor revealed subtle fabrication patterns tha...
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
China’s 2D Transistor Could Transform Processors with Higher Speeds and Efficiency
- Monday March 31, 2025
- Written by Gadgets 360 Staff
A silicon-free transistor developed in China may revolutionise chip technology. According to reports, the 2D transistor, designed with bismuth oxyselenide, could enhance processor speeds by 40% while lowering power use by 10%. The gate-all-around field-effect transistor (GAAFET) architecture is said to offer better efficiency and flexibility compar...
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
iPhone 17 Air to Be Apple's Thinnest-Ever Phone; A19 Chips to Be Built Using TSMC’s New Technology: Report
- Tuesday November 19, 2024
- Written by Nithya P Nair, Edited by David Delima
Apple is believed to discontinue the iPhone Plus model next year and replace it with an iPhone 17 Slim version. A well-known analyst now states that the purported iPhone 17 Slim will be thinner than the iPhone 6. Additionally, the analysts claimed that Apple's next-generation A19 chips for the iPhone 17 lineup will be manufactured using TSMC's thir...
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Nvidia's New Research Shows How AI Can Be Used to Improve Chip Design
- Tuesday March 28, 2023
- Reuters
Nvidia on Monday showed new research that explains how AI can be used to improve chip design. The research took an existing effort developed by the University of Texas researchers using what is called reinforcement learning and added a second layer of artificial intelligence on top of it to get even better results.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
IBM's New Tech Squeezes 30 Billion Transistors Into Fingernail-Sized 5nm Chip
- Monday June 5, 2017
- Shubham Verma
Unlike the 7nm chip covering 20 billion transistors on a chip, the 5nm will let 30 billion transistors to be fitted on a microprocessor or chip
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
IBM working on carbon nanotubes to replace silicon in computer chips
- Tuesday October 30, 2012
- Written by Vidhyanshu
A carbon 'chip' with more than ten thousand working transistors and made of nano-sized tubes could replace silicon in computer chips to create smaller, faster circuits.
-
www.gadgets360.com