Intel denies that they are not going to launch desktop processors in 10nm
To end the rumors, Intel releases a statement stating that they have not canceled the 10nm desktop processors.
Yesterday, Intel's LGA4667 socket was unveiled for the 7nm Xeon Scalable that will arrive in 2021. This has brought with it a great deal of back and forth. In the afternoon it began to be rumored that Intel was shelving 10nm lithography for desktop processors. Information that has been denied by the company that has caused a new rumor.
Well into the afternoon the rumor was jumping that Intel would not launch 10nm processors. It was said that it would stretch 14nm in two generations and that by the end of 2021, at the earliest, it would launch processors in 7nm. Information that has been denied by Intel, indicating that if they launched 10nm processors for desktop
Intel will launch 10nm desktop processors
In a statement Intel has made it clear that: "We continue to make great strides in 10nm, and our current 10nm product roadmap includes the desktop platform."
As we can see, the company does not give any launch date or attach a roadmap. Internally, they have guidelines that are not in the public domain and have not yet been released. Not being clearer has sparked a new wave of rumors.
Some have used a leaked Roadmap to make a Roadmap that may or may not be true and is being reused. In that it would be indicated that in 2021, Intel would launch the Rocket Lake-S in 14nm with a maximum of 10 cores. Information that is simply a rumor that has remained there and of which nothing else has been known.
The only certainty that we know is that Intel, as they have said, if it works in 10nm processors for desktop. Everything else is hearsay and Roadmaps may or may not be real, but hey, it wouldn't be the first Roadmap to be leaked and it's not correct.
Source: TH


