News

Intel To Invest $1.5B in N.M. Factory

Intel Corp. plans to spend between $1 billion and $1.5 billion to overhaul its semiconductor production facility in New Mexico to manufacture computer chips with next-generation technology.

The Rio Rancho factory is expected to begin producing 45-nanometer chips -- meaning they will have features as tiny as 45-billionths of a meter -- in the second half of 2008, Intel said Monday. The transistors on such chips are so small that more than 30 million can fit onto the head of a pin.

Shrinking the circuitry of microprocessors, which act as the core calculating engines of computers, is essential to keeping up rapid gains in performance and energy efficiency.

Smaller chips let companies cram more transistors onto each slice of silicon and maintain the pace of Moore's Law, the 1965 prediction by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore that the number of transistors on a chip should double about every two years.

Intel expects the Rio Rancho investment to further its lead over rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc. Both companies are transitioning from the 65-nanometer technology used for their most advanced chips.

Intel said it remains on track to begin production based on 45-nanometer technology in the second half of this year, while AMD has said it plans to introduce its own 45-nanometer products in mid-2008.

In addition to its plans for Rio Rancho, Intel is spending $3 billion on a factory in Arizona and $3.5 billion on a facility in Israel, both of which will handle the new technology.

Intel said last month that chips based on 45-nanometer technology will use new materials that promise to reduce energy loss and solve a major problem vexing the semiconductor industry. The materials replace vital but problematic substances that had begun leaking too much electric current.

In a dueling announcement the same day, International Business Machines Corp. also said it plans to begin using the same materials in server chips in 2008. AMD helped IBM develop the technology, though it was unclear when AMD would begin using the materials in its own products.

Intel's shares rose 9 cents to close at $20.85 on the Nasdaq Stock Market after the investment was announced.

Featured

  • Microsoft Dismantles RedVDS Cybercrime Marketplace Linked to $40M in Phishing Fraud

    In a coordinated action spanning the United States and the United Kingdom, Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit (DCU) and international law enforcement collaborators have taken down RedVDS, a subscription based cybercrime platform tied to an estimated $40 million in fraud losses in the U.S. since March 2025.

  • Sound Wave Illustration

    CrowdStrike's Acquisition of SGNL Aims to Strengthen Identity Security

    CrowdStrike signs definitive agreement to purchase SGNL, an identity security specialist, in a deal valued at about $740 million.

  • Microsoft Acquires Osmos, Automating Data Engineering inside Fabric

    In a strategic move to reduce time-consuming manual data preparation, Microsoft has acquired Seattle-based startup Osmos, specializing in agentic AI for data engineering.

  • Linux Foundation Unites Major Tech Firms to Launch Agentic AI Foundation

    The Linux Foundation today announced the creation of a new collaborative initiative — the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) — bringing together major AI and cloud players such as Microsoft, OpenAI, Anthropic and other major tech companies.