- Joined
- Aug 8, 2024
Look at BGA array for CPU's - like 7 series portable ryzens or intel chips.Hey, how small could they make the pins or lands in a PGA/LGA chip, if you assume that chips would only be swapped out with specialty equipment with people with more training then the average PC builder?
Somewhere in the range of BGA for memory.
If you want "records" in compactness you have to look at mobile devices, very tight pitch and very difficult to make
The real situation is - chiplets are actually soldered to interposer - if you'd remove the chiplet you'd find very tiny solder balls.
Mainboard has 0 requirements like that, pitches are larger so there's less waste and easier to manufacture.
It's easier and cheaper to just buy a different cpu and sell old one. When prices are 0, everything is easy to replaceLike, if a cpu is now being divided into chiplets, is there a way to make them somewhat replaceable by the end user as a trained tech with the right tools could add or remove chiplets with different features, kind of like adding more calculation chips to a really old computer, but all the chiplets are on a daughter board that connects to the motherboard like a traditional cpu?
You may be thinking of 486 computers, where you could add a math co-processor and extra cache
This all got integrated in next version, with mmx instructions and is what became Pentium 1 (or 5x86)