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AMD talks Ab Fab with UMC

Real men own fabs, AMD boss Jerry Sanders famously once said. Real men are also prepared to share them, for AMD has signed a JV with UMC, the Taiwanese contract semiconductor maker, to build a new chipmaking factory in Singapore.

The AMD/UMC fab (or fabrication plant) will knock out 300-mm wafers for high volume production of PC processors 'and other logic products'. UMC will also make PC processors for AMD in a separate foundry agreement.

This will augment production at AMD's Fab 30 in Dresden, where Athlon chips are made. And it will enable AMD to move more quickly to the manufacture chips with a smaller die size. UMC-made AMD CPUs will kick off on the 130 nanometer (more commonly calibrated as 0.13micron) production line. The duo aim to move to 65 nanometer production in 2005.

It requires billions of dollars to build a fab to make today's CPUs, but the payback is cheaper to produce chips. According to AMD, 300-mm wafer fabs can achieve "substantially more than 30 per cent cost savings" compared with 200-mm foundrys.

The trouble is, except if you're Intel, finding the billions of dollars in the first place. So in today's straitened times, this is a very good deal all round for both UMC and AMD.

News source: The Register - AMD talks Ab Fab with UMC

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