Intel Foundry is known to be courting Apple, Amazon, and Elon Musk’s Terafab project for 18A capacity , and any formal partnership announcements at the show would cement the node’s credibility beyond Intel’s own products.
The strategic advantage of reaching high-volume manufacturing on a single node is that Intel can field chips across handheld, laptop, desktop, and data center simultaneously. That is exactly what Tan is bringing to Taipei:
Together, these products give Intel something it hasn’t had in a decade: a complete computing portfolio built on a single in-house manufacturing story, without depending on external foundries for the core silicon .
COMPUTEX 2026 is themed “AI Together,” but the real story is the simultaneous arrival of the three most powerful CEOs in AI silicon, all with overlapping supply-chain agendas.
DIGITIMES and other industry sources describe the visits as mission-driven: all three CEOs are racing to secure AI infrastructure capacity—wafer starts, advanced packaging, and HBM memory—for the next three to five years, as demand for AI accelerators outstrips supply .
In this environment, Tan’s trip serves dual purposes. First, it reinforces Intel’s own deep supplier relationships with OSATs like ASE and ODMs like Quanta, which are critical for assembling and validating the 18A product line . Second, it uses the keynote as a platform to persuade the broader ecosystem that Intel’s fabs are a credible, high-volume alternative to TSMC’s capacity-constrained 2nm and 3nm nodes.
Whether that pitch succeeds depends on Tan’s ability to show that 18A yields are healthy, that Clearwater Forest is on schedule, and that external foundry customers are willing to place meaningful orders. The keynote will provide the clearest signal yet.
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