The new CEO of Intel, Pat Gelsinger, has today outlined his vision for Intel over the coming years. During an online presentation entitled ‘Intel Unleashed: Engineering The Future’, Pat Gelsinger outlined five key topics upon which Intel will work towards and what it means for the company at large. At the center of this is a reaffirmed commitment for Intel to retain its own fabs, but also double down on its ability to drive the latest technologies at scale by building new manufacturing facilities inside the US.

Highlights of Intel’s Announcements Today

  • Two new fabs in Arizona, $20b investment
  • New Intel Foundry Services, offering Intel manufacturing to customers
  • Next generation 7nm chiplets for ‘Meteor Lake’ will finish design in Q2 2021
  • New research collaboration with IBM in foundational semiconductor design
  • New Intel Innovation event in Oct 2021, Spirit of IDF

We're Keeping the Fabs: Please Stop Asking

Since the start of the year, previous Intel CEO Bob Swan and new Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger have both done the equivalent of shouting from the rooftops when it comes to Intel’s market advantages. At the top of that list is Intel’s vertical integration between manufacturing and chip design, enabling Intel to control the process from top to bottom more closely than any of its chip competitors. This unique proposition labels Intel as an IDM (integrated device manufacturer) or having an IDM model (integrated device manufacturing model), and the only company that can even come close to Intel in this regard is Samsung. Intel’s plus over its competitor here is that it can apply its own designs to a scale that Intel is often attributed to.

In recent months there have been comments from analysts and investors about the potential for Intel to spin out its manufacturing plants and facilities into a separate business, similar to how AMD detached its manufacturing facilities into a new company called GlobalFoundries. The benefits of this move would allow Intel to segregate the losses between the two sides of the business, and showcase the core Intel product teams in a better light by comparison to the manufacturing arm. This sort of path has significant pitfalls, most importantly that Intel’s manufacturing main customer is Intel. GlobalFoundries had this problem initially, but Intel’s foundry arm is on a much larger scale.

So to that end, Pat Gelsinger today is hoping to put those rumors to rest, more than he stated on Intel’s 2020 financial call. Not only is Intel going to retain its manufacturing facilities, but it is going to embrace a new era of manufacturing, which is going to be called IDM 2.0.

IDM 2.0: Build, Expand, and Productize

This direction from Intel is built upon, first and foremost, the enthusiasm of Pat Gelsinger rejoining the company. Since even before he took over the role of CEO, former Intel engineering experts were coming out of retirement to work on exciting new products with Pat at the helm.

IDM 2.0 will have several pieces to the puzzle.

Build (7nm)

Today Intel will be announcing a $20 billion (USD) investment in two new manufacturing facilities (fabs) in Arizona, set to come online for production in 2024. Gelsinger will point out today that Intel is ready to break ground, increasing the number of factories on Intel’s Ocotillo campus (Chandler, AZ) from four to six.

These new fabs will be on leading edge process node technologies, with Intel extending cooperation with the State of Arizona, as well as the current administration’s target of improving semiconductor manufacturing inside the country. All parties involved seem raring to go, and Intel will be seeking to outfit its production facilities with the equipment necessary to enable leading edge manufacturing, including using Extreme Ultra Violet (EUV) technology.


Intel's Ocotillo campus, Fab 42, Chandler AZ

It is noteworthy that the machines that enable EUV manufacturing are only supplied by a single company, ASML, and demand for these machines is at a record high, with a waiting list of over a year. Intel believes that its technology, with its increasing use of EUV to simplify manufacturing and enabling higher performance and higher yielding products, will be fully aligned and there will be enough EUV to go around by the time these new fabs are up and running.

The two new fabs are expected to bring 3000+ high wage jobs direct with Intel, 3000+ construction jobs for construction during the project, and up to 15000 long-term ecosystem support jobs for the area. Planning for construction activities are expected to start immediately. That being said, TSMC has also indicated plans to build a factory in Arizona as well, likely in the Phoenix area, with Samsung also considering a site there (or Austin, TX). There have been questions as to the sustainability of supporting that many semiconductor manufacturing plants in a single city. Intel states that it already recycles 9 million gallons (US gal.) of water each day, and the company purchases green power for its facilities, as well as on-site alternative energy projects.

As part of this side of the announcement, Pat Gelsinger will be stating today that the 7nm manufacturing node from Intel is now running on schedule, with a solid footing. The first product enabled with 7nm will be Ponte Vecchio, the upcoming high-performance compute accelerator for the Aurora supercomputer, however end-users might be more interested in Meteor Lake, a client CPU compute tile for a volume 2023 product. Intel will announce today that the compute tile / chiplet will finish tape-in (design IP verification) by Q2 2021, and will leverage Intel’s advanced packaging techniques. After design manufacturing, tape-out (whole chip design verification) usually takes 4-6+ months, and then the designs are sent to the fabs for initial production and test runs. Given that Intel is talking about Meteor Lake as a chiplet design, starting with this compute tile, then no doubt an IO related chipset will be announced at a later time. Intel has a number of packaging technologies it could deploy here, such as EMIB or Foveros, depending on the cost intercept of the intended market.

Edit: Gelsinger confirmed that Meteor Lake will have Foveros technology.

Expand (TSMC)

Alongside building new manufacturing facilities, Intel today will reaffirm its roadmap to use a mixture of internal and external process node manufacturing depending on the product capabilities. Intel already makes heavy use of external partners, such as TSMC, and already spends enough to account for 6-7% of TSMC's annual revenue. But today’s announcement will double down on ensuring that Intel is ready to use the right process at the right time for the right products.

This includes developing its leading edge products on external foundry offerings. As Intel moves more into a chiplet ecosystem (Intel is calling it ‘tiles’), the company is prepared to manufacture its high-performance computing chiplets on external foundries. This means in both client and the datacenter, and likely means we will be seeing the latest x86 cores enabled beyond Intel. Exact announcements will follow.

Gelsinger’s presentation today will discuss that using external partners like TSMC, Samsung, GlobalFoundriers, and UMC, will allow the company to optimize roadmaps for cost, performance, schedule, and supply. This does somewhat go against the grain of the IDM 2.0 messaging, where Intel can control its own supply chain and expand production as required, however Intel expects it can find a happy medium.

Productize (IFS)

The two new manufacturing plants / fabs also filter under this Expand section, however this area is more focused on how Intel will keep those fabs fully occupied. Other semiconductor manufacturers in the market, such as TSMC, Samsung, GlobalFoundries, SMIC etc, they all have what are called foundry services which allow customers to build silicon using their manufacturing technology. With today’s announcement, the company is ready to enable its external Intel Foundry Services (IFS) to new customers. IFS will be a standalone company, with unique access to Intel's current and future offerings.

Intel has made silicon for others before, so this isn’t new. However, that project came at a time where Intel’s 10nm faltered, and the company lost a number of high-profile contracts with partners as a result. One of the issues is that Intel at the time used so many customized software tools in its silicon design process that it limited its customers’ access to these tools to build processors. This made the whole process very complicated.

The new Intel Foundry Services look will be a lot different. Intel today will have partnership announcements with Cadence and Synopsys to enable industry standard design tools (EDA tools) and workflows such that customers can use industry standard process development kits (PDKs) to build their silicon designs. This is part of the job that some of Intel’s hires have recently been enabling, such as Renduchintala, Keller, and Koduri. Intel is committing to embracing the entire EDA ecosystem to ease new customers into the use of Intel’s foundry tools.

There will be somewhat of a black cloud over Intel on how its external foundry offerings have failed in the past, however Gelsinger and the company are hoping that commitments to industry standards will help on that path to rebuilding trust and reputation.

As part of Intel’s Foundry Services, the company is announcing that it will work with customers to build SoCs with x86, Arm, and RISC-V cores, as well as leveraging Intel’s IP portfolio of core design and packaging technologies. What will be key here is the extent of exactly how Intel will offer its x86 designs – it could offer them in a licensing style similar to Arm, allowing customers to go build their own SoCs, or it could be only in a custom design services model, where you tell Intel what you want and they design/manufacture it for you. More details about how this will work is expected to come through the year.

The drive into Foundry Services is an obvious choice for Intel. Demand for semiconductor manufacturing is at an all-time high, and discussions about keeping manufacturing inside the US has been a key talking point for over a year. Intel has stated that it has keen enthusiastic support from the industry for IFS, but it will also disclose later in the year how it will expand its manufacturing capabilities in other parts of the world, such as Europe.

Collaboration with IBM, New Intel Events for Engineers

Alongside the core IDM 2.0 path, Intel also has announcements relating to the future of its R&D roadmap, as well as its outreach to engineers and commercial partners.

The collaboration with IBM on process node development and development of next-generation logic is the wildcard of today’s announcements. The two companies are set to work together on foundational technologies to move the needle on both semiconductor performance and semiconductor efficiency. The collaboration will scale through to the ecosystem, with a significant nod towards key US government initiatives.

Intel’s announcement today on this is light on details. The teams from both Oregon and New York would seem to initially start separate with collaboration-at-a-distance, although the nature of the wording of the announcement would seem to suggest that the two will come together with a semi-unified team at a later date. Intel is keeping details on the topics for research at a very high-level, but both companies have a range of expertise on fundamental silicon design as well as complex manufacturing. This might also be a nod to IBM getting access to Intel’s leading edge technologies for its POWER and z product offerings.

Also on the cards is Intel’s new series of events for engineers and commercial partners. Broadly marketed as Intel’s *on series, Gelsinger aims to rekindle the spirit behind Intel’s previous popular events such as Intel’s Developer Forum (IDF) with a new range of Intel Vision (commercial) and Intel Innovation (engineering) outreach.

The first of these events will be an Intel Innovation Event, coming in October later this year in San Francisco. If we are travelling to events again, no doubt we will be there to report on the highlights of Intel’s strategy at that point of time.

Pat Gelsinger’s Intel Legacy: Part One

Over the many interviews that Gelsinger has given over the years, his love of Intel is a persistent thread. Having finished his degree at the early age of 18, he was hired straight out of college and spent over 30 years at the company, reaching the title of Chief Technology Officer. Gelsinger then spent 12 years at EMC (now Dell EMC) and VMWare, and has come back as CEO. The hiring of an engineer at the top of the company has, in Intel’s own words, reinvigorated the enthusiasm of its engineering base.

It’s no secret that while Intel has been rewarded with record revenues these past five years, the state of play of Intel’s manufacturing roadmaps have stalled. Intel’s future has been in flux, affecting employees and followers of the company alike, leading to many column inches about how the company moves forward. The announcement of Pat Gelsinger to the role of CEO, plus his remarks during Intel’s FY2020 call, seems to have lit a fire inside Intel. Today’s announcements are the first stage in Pat Gelsinger building his CEO legacy at the company.

Intel’s path with the announcements today is very much towards a more flexible Intel. In the past where the company was rigid with its designs, rigid with its manufacturing, it is clear that Gelsinger wants to be more open and accepting of industry standard manufacturing whilst at the same time re-offering its facilities to external customers. The mantra of Intel staying on Intel manufacturing also seems to dissolve slightly, with Gelsinger not afraid to mention the name of other foundry offerings that Intel is prepared to use.

Our discussions with employees at Intel who know Pat Gelsinger have repeatedly said that he likes to ‘geek out’ over the details of new technology, and will happily sit for hours talking about both the direction of the industry as well as how Intel is positioned alongside its competition. Pat, if you’re reading this, we’re ready to geek out whenever you are.

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  • SarahKerrigan - Tuesday, March 23, 2021 - link

    I'm curious what precisely the IBM alliance will end up including. The article mentions potentially giving IBM access to Intel processes, but I can't imagine IBM is in a great hurry to have its processors manufactured by a direct competitor.
  • lilo777 - Tuesday, March 23, 2021 - link

    IBM is not a competitor to Intel. They are not producing processors for external customers (not for a long time now).
  • Billy Tallis - Tuesday, March 23, 2021 - link

    IBM sold their fabs to GloFo, so in that sense IBM isn't producing processors and they're not offering foundry services. But they're definitely still in the game of designing processors such as the POWER series, which are sold in some non-IBM machines and do compete against Intel's processors.
  • SarahKerrigan - Tuesday, March 23, 2021 - link

    You're missing the point; IBM is (mostly - not entirely, as Inspur and RCS can attest) out of the merchant processor business, but Power systems (and to a significantly smaller extent, z systems) absolutely do compete with Xeon systems.
  • lilo777 - Tuesday, March 23, 2021 - link

    Merchant processor business is the only thing that matters in this context. IBM retains the right to use TSMC or whatever foundry they want if they feel that Intel is treating them unfairly. But there is no reason for Intel to do so. For the most part IBM is a software company now. Companies buying their servers do it for reasons other than processor merits (as long as they are not completely junk)
  • dotjaz - Sunday, March 28, 2021 - link

    That's dumb. You do realise they'll need nearly two years to move production away, right? During that 2 years you expect IBM to do what? Sell air?

    POWER10 was delayed by over a year because GloFo backed out of 7nm so they had to switch to Samsung, that was in 2018 and POWER10 was still in logic designing phase, no actual physical design even started. You think IBM would use Intel Foundry for their lifeblood? You are insane.
  • Eliadbu - Thursday, April 22, 2021 - link

    who said they have to use Intel process? sure you need to plan your chip for the manufacturing requirements of the process but CPUs designs are portable and if Intel foundries do not make the cut either deadline, yield, performance etc etc they can go to TSMC or Samsung and get their services, albeit they need to sign a deal with enough time margin. Remember the time Apple produced the same process at the same time at Samsung and TSMC - it wasn't ideal but it served their needs at that time to not be depended on one foundry. I think IBM knows it cannot rely just on Samsung and TSMC for various reason and this deal if successful can have big advantages.
  • eastcoast_pete - Wednesday, March 24, 2021 - link

    It might also be that the US government is a major customer for IBM's systems, and several of those contracts require that the chips are made by a trusted foundry. If Intel really gets their 7 nm EUV up-and-running and fabs chips for IBM right here in the US, IBM could move to a better node and still sell to DoD or the FBI.
  • duploxxx - Wednesday, March 24, 2021 - link

    exactly the one and only reason....
  • StoneFish - Friday, March 26, 2021 - link

    IBM has a huge and important government business

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