The AnandTech Decoder Ring for Intel 10nm

The reason why I’m writing about this topic is because it is all a bit of a mess. Intel is a company so large, with many different business units each with its own engineers and internal marketing personnel/product managers, that a single change made by the HQ team takes time to filter down to the other PR teams, but also filter back through the engineers, some of which make press-facing appearances. That’s before any discussions as to whether the change is seen as positive or negative by those affected.

I reached out to Intel to get their official decoder ring for the 10++ to new SuperFin naming. The official response I received was in itself confusing, and the marketing person I speak to wasn’t decoding from the first 2018 naming change, but from the original pre-2017 naming scheme. Between my contacts and I we spoke over the phone so I could hear what they wanted to tell me and so I could tell them what I felt were the reasons for the changes. Some of the explanations I made (such as Intel not wanting to acknowledge Ice Lake 10nm is different to Cannon Lake 10nm, or that Ice Lake 10nm is called that way to hide the fact that Cannon Lake 10nm didn’t work) were understandably left with a no comment.

However, I now have an official decoder ring for you, to act as a reference for both users and Intel’s own engineers alike.  

AnandTech's Decoder Ring for Intel's 10nm
Product 2020+ First
Update
Original
 
Cannon Lake - - 10nm
Ice Lake
Ice Lake-SP
Lakefield (compute)
Snow Ridge
Elkhart Lake
10nm 10nm 10+
Tiger Lake
SG1
DG1
10nm
Superfin
10+ 10++
Alder Lake
First Xe-HP GPU
Sapphire Rapids
10nm
Enhanced
SuperFin
10++ 10+++

For clarity, 10nm Superfin is often abbreviated to 10SF, and 10nm Enhanced Superfin to 10ESF.

Moving forward, Intel’s communications team is committed to explaining everything in terms of 10nm, 10SF, and 10ESF. I have been told that the process of moving all internal documents away from the pre-2017 naming to the 2020 naming is already underway.

We reached out for Intel for a comment for this article:

It is widely acknowledged within the industry that there is inconsistency and confusion in [our] nanometer nomenclature.  Going forward, we will refer the next generation 10nm products as 10nm SuperFin technology-based products.

My take is that whoever had the bright idea to knock Ice Lake down from 10+ to 10 (and then Tiger from 10++ to 10+ etc.), in order to protect the company from addressing issues with the Cannon Lake product, drastically failed at predicting the fallout that this name change would bring. Sometimes a company should accept they didn't score as well as they did, admit the hit, and move on, rather than try and cover it up. So much more time and effort has been lost in terms of communications between the press and Intel, or the press and engineers, or even between the engineers and Intel's own communications team. Even the basic understanding of dealing with that change has been difficult, to the detriment of the press trying to report on Intel’s technology, and likely even on the financial side as investors try to understand what’s going on.

But, truth be told, I’m glad that Intel moved away from the ++++ nomenclature. It allows the company to now easily name future manufacturing node technologies that aren’t just for pure logic performance, which may be vital if Intel ever wants to become a foundry player again.

10nm Changes Direction, Twice
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  • jjjag - Tuesday, September 29, 2020 - link

    Wow the amount of missing the point in the comments has reached epic proportions. AMD will never win. They are a failed company and a failure as a business. They have been around for 50 years and have never amounted to anything more than a side note. They continue to hold on to a failed business model (stealing x86 tech from Intel) with a death grip. As we speak, right now, Apple, Google, Nvidia, and many other companies are developing better, faster, more power efficient mobile CPUs with ARM cores and standard IPs on TSMC 3 and 2nm processes. ARM as a disruption is over. ARM is already wearing the yellow jersey on the road, and we just have a few days left in the race. AMD will be the first to fall, and Intel will be next. Both companies need to make serious strategic changes if they want to exist in 10 years.
  • Everett F Sargent - Tuesday, September 29, 2020 - link

    Wow the amount of missing the point in the comments has reached epic proportions. Linux will never win.

    I don't think anyone is missing the point. Intel is entrenched throughout, have been for decades now.

    The only point is to mock Intel's PR naming schemes revisions given their so-called stumbling on the road to 10 mn.

    As to ARM we will have to wait and see. RISC anyone? This goes back to at least the 1980's ///
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduced_instruction_...
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARM_architecture
  • Catalina588 - Wednesday, September 30, 2020 - link

    Thank you, thank you, thank you @Ian for the decoding.

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