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Amiga News and Community Announcements => Amiga News and Community Announcements => Amiga Hardware News => Topic started by: Eric_Z on June 24, 2003, 01:33:47 PM

Title: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in 2004
Post by: Eric_Z on June 24, 2003, 01:33:47 PM
Motorola has started transferring silicon-on-insulator (SOI) capability to the 90-nanometer manufacturing process technology being developed by the alliance of Motorola, Philips, STMicroelectronics and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd. at Crolles, France.

From http://www.siliconstrategies.com/story/OEG20030623S0089


A PowerPC processor made for performance in 90-nm SOI CMOS, and for economic efficiency on 300-mm diameter wafers, should be in manufacture at Crolles in 2004, according to Claudine Simson, the recently appointed chief technology officer of the Semiconductor Products Sector of Motorola.

Work is underway at Motorola's Dan Noble Center in Austin, Texas, where the company is developing the 90-nanometer CMOS-on-SOI manufacturing process technology on the 200-mm diameter wafers that Motorola runs there in MOS-13 wafer fab. As that is perfected Motorola engineers are to transfer the high performance technology to 300-mm wafers being run at Crolles, Simson said.

Motorola engineers are in Crolles and SOI test chips for the 90-nm manufacturing process technology are expected to run on 300-mm wafers at Crolles, “this summer” Simson said in an interview with SBN (see June 23 story).

Of the technology transfer she said: “It's starting now. Test chips will run in Crolles in the summer and a PowerPC will run next year.” Simson said Motorola usually sees a 25 to 35 percent performance improvement for a given circuit over its equivalent in plain CMOS at the same minimum geometry.

In a keynote address to the Embedded Processor Forum last week Simson said Motorola is backing SOI to evolve from being a high-performance option to CMOS today to become the foundation of all leading-edge digital circuit manufacture over the next decade and several process technology generations (see June 19 story).
Title: Re: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in
Post by: mikeymike on June 24, 2003, 02:56:06 PM
One minute they're planning to sell their chip making operation, the next minute they're making new developments by leaps and bounds... hmm, what's that I smell? :-)
Title: Re: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in
Post by: Kronos on June 24, 2003, 03:01:42 PM
Your dirty feet ?  :-P  :-P

But seriously, Moto have been lacking behind for years now, and after they got pretty
much dropped by Apple, I don't see that to change.
Title: Re: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in
Post by: KennyR on June 24, 2003, 03:07:49 PM
MC are more interested in their mobile phones than their PPCs - more lucrative.
Title: Re: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in
Post by: mikeymike on June 24, 2003, 03:15:01 PM
Unless the competition seriously turns up the heat, then they'll probably cut and run from that market too :-)
Title: Re: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in
Post by: Dagon on June 24, 2003, 04:19:14 PM
So we should expect to see cheaper AmigaOnes and Pegasos in a while with the drop of price that G4 will have ;-)

An Amiga with a G4@1Ghz would be perfect for me :-)
Title: Re: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in
Post by: iamaboringperson on June 24, 2003, 10:20:24 PM
now ppc is really getting a kick in the ass
Title: Re: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in
Post by: mikeymike on June 25, 2003, 11:45:30 AM
That remains to be seen, IMO.

If IBM can get another new processor out that's 500MHz faster in less than six months, then things might get truly interesting.
Title: Re: Motorola to make performance PPC CPU on 90-nm process in
Post by: takemehomegrandma on June 25, 2003, 11:58:31 AM
@ mikeymike

But what's the point with faster processors, if the CPU has to sit in it's ass and wait for the NB to shovel data through a narrow buses? IMO, there is too much emphasis on MHz and CPU performance, and too little on general system design. Perhaps we have all been so used to the x86 way of thinking, that we are simply stuck in it now?

The new Mac is a breath of fresh air in this sense!