Samsung is working on its next-generation in-house Exynos 2600 SoC based on 2nm process; meanwhile, it has now shared the improvements of the chip and revealed and also reported to secured other chip clients for its advanced manufacturing technology.
Samsung is struggling hard to maintain its leading position in the foundry business with its upcoming 2nm-based Exynos 2600 chipset. It’s highly anticipated that the company will use this chipset initially for the Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26 Plus models next year.
A few days back, it was revealed that Samsung had started Exynos 2600 SoC mass production. The company has now shared the first results from mass production; fortunately, it performs better than its predecessor. According to a new report, Samsung also revealed that it secured other chip clients for its advanced manufacturing technology, i.e., 2nm Gate-All-Around (GAA).
Reportedly, Samsung revealed that the upcoming 2nm GAA process delivers measurable improvements compared to its second-generation 3nm technology, as the new node offers a 5% increase in performance while boosting 8% power efficiency.
Another report says that the Korean tech giant has secured new 2nm chip production orders from Chinese cryptocurrency mining firms MicroBT and Canaan. If the report is to be believed, both of these firms’ combined supply volume could be around 2,000 wafers per month, which is about 10% of the foundry units’ total 2nm production capacity.
However, Samsung has yet to release any official statement regarding this report; it remains to be seen what will happen next.
