AMD schedules first 65nm processor shipments for H2 2006

Munich (Germany) - AMD today said that it is on track to ship its first 65 nm processors in the second half of this year. The company claims that it already has been producing a significant number of 65nm development test chips to lay the foundation for a volume conversion of its manufacturing process by mid-2007.

AMD's first substantial 65 nm announcement was made at a press conference at the Semicon Europa 2006 event, which is currently held in Munich, Germany. Other than rumors in past days have indicated, the company did not actually demonstrate a 65 nm processor, but decided to rather reassure Semicon visitors that its silicon is stable and on schedule.

According to Dirk Meyer, AMD's president and chief operating officer, 65 nm chips have been sampling for quite a while in AMD's Fab 36 in Dresden and have been manufactured parallel to 90 nm CPUs on 300 mm wafers. While details were scarce, the company apparently is running the CPUs through its validation track, collecting and analyzing data to eliminate errors and improve production efficiency.

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