TSMC delivers first batch of Baikal BE-M1000 CPUs based on ARM Cortex-A57 cores
Baikal Electronics confirms they received the first batch of 5000 BE-M1000 CPUs from their foundry, TSMC. These are second-generation processors based on ARM architecture.
[...] Baikal BE-M1000 is based on eight ARM Cortex A57 cores all clocked up to 1.5 GHz at TDP at 30-35W. The CPU has 4MB of L2 cache and 8MB of L3 cache. It comes with an integrated ARM Mali-T682 GPU clocked at 700 to 750 MHz.
The processor offers a performance level of Intel Core i3-7300T, which should be good enough for standard office use.
The Intel Core i3-7300T was a dual-core Kaby Lake CPU launched in 2017, with a similar TDP (35 Watts).
Previously: Desktop and All-in-One Arm Linux Computers Launched with Baikal-M Processor
Related: Russia to Build RISC-V Processors for Laptops: 8-core, 2 GHz, 12nm, 2025
(Score: 2) by takyon on Monday October 18 2021, @02:30AM
I think stealing the latest ARM designs is also an option on the table. The bigger problem is that China and Russia need to have their own advanced fabs, and possibly their own EUV or beyond-EUV equipment.
If you look at the related story, you can see that there's a plan for 8-core RISC-V chips from some different companies, but they won't materialize until at least 2025.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]