Results tagged “highk”
Intel News Ahead of IDF: New Chips; Manufacturing Efforts
posted by Bill Kircos on September 13, 2009 at Technology@Intel
Ahead of what will be a packed Intel Developer Forum, Sept. 22-24 in San Francisco, here's some news around a newly planned family of future "embedded" processors for non-PC equipment and gear code-named Jasper Forest -- and details around our...
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tagged: 32-nanometer, High-K, IDF09, innovation, Intel Developer Forum, Jasper Forest, manufacturing
Contest: Guess Intel Transistor Shipments, Win a Great Prize!
posted by Esther Andrews on December 01, 2008 at Technology@Intel
THIS CONTEST IS NOW OVER. Congratulations to the winner who received a $500 Amazon gift card just in time to finish up his holiday shopping - Fenwick Jeffrey of New Brunswick, Canada - with his entry of 20,275,500,698,321,756, which came...
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tagged: 45nm, high-k, Intel, metal gate, technology, transistor
A High-Five For High-K Reinvented Transistors
posted by Pat Gelsinger on November 10, 2008 at Technology@Intel
Today marks a major milestone: the one-year anniversary of shipping the world’s first ever Intel processors manufactured on our 45 nanometer process—based on an entirely new ‘high-k metal gate’ transistor formula. And what a year it has been for this...
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tagged: 45nm, atom, Core 2 Duo, Core i7, high-k, Intel, MID, Moore's Law, nehalem, processor, xeon
45-Nanometer-Hafnium-based-High- k-dielectric-Metal-Gate… Huh??
posted by Kari Aakre on November 19, 2007 at Technology@Intel
“Hafnium high-k, what?” you ask? What does it all mean? Yes, I know. To many of us this all sounds like a bunch of technical mumbo jumbo and makes us all feel like we’re back in high school chemistry class....
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tagged: 45nm, hafnium, high-k, processor, transistor
Not all silicon processes are created equal.
posted by Nick Knupffer on June 20, 2007 at Technology@Intel
There is a lot of talk right now about 45nm – the newest and most exciting step along the Moore’s Law story. (Yes, it IS exciting…) Essentially it means that transistors can be made smaller, and the smallest feature size...
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tagged: 45nm, Gordon Moore, high-k, metal gate, Moore's Law, silicon, transistor

