AMD has announced that its first 2 nm CPUs are now in production. It's a server chip, inevitably, but it bodes well for upcoming PC processors. Meanwhile, Intel has mentioned possible future 10A and 7A nodes for the first time. Maybe Moore's Law ain't dead, after all.
"AMD today announced that its next-generation AMD EPYC processor, codenamed Venice, is ramping production in Taiwan on TSMC’s advanced 2 nm process technology, with future plans to ramp production at TSMC’s Arizona fabrication facility," AMD said in a statement.
Venice is based on AMD's next-gen Zen 6 CPU architecture, which will be shared with AMD's next-gen desktop CPU family, codenamed Olympic Ridge and possibly branded Ryzen 10000 Series.


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