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TSMC ramps 28nm ARM Cortex-A9 chip to 3.1GHz, gives your desktop jitters

0 Comments/ in Uncategorized / by Jon Fingas
May 3, 2012

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We know TSMC‘s energy-miser 28-nanometer manufacturing process has a lot of headroom, but the company just ratcheted expectations up by a few notches. Lab workers at Taiwan’s semiconductor giant have successfully run a dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 processor at 3.1GHz under normal conditions. That’s a 55 percent higher clock speed than the 2GHz maximum that TSMC normally offers, folks, and about twice as fast as a 40nm chip under the same workload. Don’t expect that kind of clock speed from your next smartphone or tablet, though: expect processors of this caliber to find “high-performance uses,” which takes us that much closer to NVIDIA’s Project Denver as well as other ARM-based desktops, notebooks and servers that should give x86 chips a run for their money.

TSMC ramps 28nm ARM Cortex-A9 chip to 3.1GHz, gives your desktop jitters originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 May 2012 09:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tags: ARM, ARM Cortex A9, ARM Cortex-A9 MPCore, ARM processor, ArmCortex-a9, ArmCortex-a9Mpcore, ArmCortexA9, ArmProcessor, chip, chips, clock speed, ClockSpeed, cortex, cortex-a9, CortexA9, nvidia, processor, Processors, project denver, ProjectDenver, taiwan semiconductor, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, TaiwanSemiconductor, TaiwanSemiconductorManufacturingCompany, TSMC
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