Comment by monocasa

2 hours ago

The wafer manufacturing process takes weeks to months after a tape out.

Accelerating this process sounds like a good focus for an SBIR (small business innovation research) RFP.

  • A fab is not a small business!

    Part of the delay is really just commercial. Fabs are optimized for utilization - throughput, not latency. A fab operator will prefer to queue up a load of work with as few gaps as possible, and your shuttle service run has to fit in one of the gaps. If you're NVIDIA and you've already booked the fab, there might not be so much delay. But not zero.

    Nice little backgrounder: https://siliconmasters.co/blogs/our-blog/how-photomasks-for-...

    • Just to buttress and embroider around your point that a fab is not a small business:

      If there was a realistic way even to go from bare wafers to non-trivial custom chips in a small-batch fashion, you can bet there would be a cottage industry around it. I would love to live in a world where I could manufacture custom silicon as easily as I can manufacture a custom PCB or custom mechanical part.

      But as it stands, quick-turn, rapid-proto "micro" fabs are obscenely expensive, to the extent that if you aren't absolutely certain you need the performance gains from custom silicon, justified by years of R&D that confirms the inadequacy of a multi-chip solution, then the idea is killed before any layout engineer is contacted.

      Microfabs are either operated by research institutes, or they're booked solid for years, and basically printing money.