The $10 million he's reportedly receiving in severance pay must soften the blow, but I can't help but assume ex-Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger must surely feel the sting of Intel's current situation and all reporting of its dire straits. The company is, after all, one he guided on a new journey towards increasing reliance on chip fabrication.
It therefore wouldn't surprise me if Gelsinger's recent (via ) regarding fabrication yields, while ostensibly about TSMC yields, were actually in part directed as a response to recent chatter about low Intel 18A yields.
This X post comes just a few days after Korean outlet reported that , and just one day after it was at large—we also reported on it at PC Gamer but were sceptical about the claims because no sources were cited by Chosun Daily.
Whether coincidental or pointed, Gelsinger's clarification is apt. "Yield" is how much of [[link]] a wafer is usable for chips. But, as Gelsinger points out, the very same fabrication process can yield vastly different yields (sorry) depending on the size of the wafers being produced. Generally, the smaller the dies taken from the wafer the better the yield—ie, the lower the "defect density".
What really matters is that defect density number, which we've heard that Gelsinger had . Even if that did lead to a "low" yield for customers making giant dies, other similar process, for example from TSMC's N2 process at a comparative time in its development, would also have such a "low" yield. The point is, from all we know—admittedly mostly based on Gelsinger's own words—18A yields are perfectly fine compared to other new fabrication processes.