This makes me hope that maybe all those chipmakers will finally move on from that extremely long-lived 28nm node. It has been heavily used since 2011-2012 and even companies like Qualcomm have been using it as recently as last year in the lower-end range of products. Companies like Allwinner, Rockchip, Amlogic have yet to release a single chip on newer nodes.
What this means is that the 28nm node has been the cheapest now for 7 years running. Usually, when new nodes came up, the cost per transistor initially was lower,
while the yields are slowly improving. But after ~1-2 years, the new node was always more cost-effective then older nodes, per-transistor.
This wasn't the case with the 28nm, which stuck around for 7 whole years, and still seems to be the most cost-effective. But surely, now with 7nm available that won't be the case for much longer. Good riddance.
28nm will be around for a long time. There are SoCs up at 130 or 180nm still because for what they need those are the cheapest way to go. 28 is as far as you go with planar transistors and single (or is it double?) patterning. The 20-22 node is not popular because it kinda sucks for both planar and FinFET designs. I think 14-16 will be around for a long time too because of the increased complexity of going lower.
While the end of scaling is a bummer, it will be nice to have the industry settle on a few common nodes that are mature and very well understood.
What this means is that the 28nm node has been the cheapest now for 7 years running. Usually, when new nodes came up, the cost per transistor initially was lower, while the yields are slowly improving. But after ~1-2 years, the new node was always more cost-effective then older nodes, per-transistor.
This wasn't the case with the 28nm, which stuck around for 7 whole years, and still seems to be the most cost-effective. But surely, now with 7nm available that won't be the case for much longer. Good riddance.