Intel is trying its part to advance the chips but has lost track of market share way back when they created mobile pc chips and failed . They can not compete with nvidia in AI , simple because they only focus on PC Chips which is declining market . Not an easy problem to solve
@ShakespeareJoyce-h8q12 күн бұрын
Williams Dorothy Miller Ruth Garcia Mary
@sandeepchatterjee17 күн бұрын
Simply mindblowing
@MahmutAyabakan20 күн бұрын
Lewis Helen Martin Kevin Thompson George
@dipayandey2838Ай бұрын
He according to me is most definitely the Architect of the Modern Digital Age.
@xealitАй бұрын
I wish Pat all the best. Not only Intel itself is in a tough period, it seems like tough times are coming for everybody. I do wish Intel sorts out its problems. It is really an amazing company. Not sure whether it is possible to keep the fab business. It needs to be re-imagined. I'd say Intel needs to focus more on innovative products, not on chasing cheap and efficient mass production. But they know best what their situation is.
@mervinleimervin7905Ай бұрын
🎯 Key points for quick navigation: 00:17 *🎤 Pat Gelsinger joined Intel in 1979 and has been a key figure in the company's technological advancements, including the 80486 processor.* 04:17 *🌐 Moore's Law continues to advance, albeit with slower doubling times, now closer to every 3 years, supported by new transistor types and advanced packaging techniques.* 08:41 *🌍 Intel is committed to achieving Net Zero carbon emissions by 2040, leading in green energy and environmental sustainability within the semiconductor industry.* 12:11 *🏢 Intel emphasizes the critical link between innovation and manufacturing prowess in semiconductor development, advocating for balanced, resilient global supply chains.* 17:18 *💻 Intel aims to democratize AI hardware, making high-performance AI accessible to a broader range of applications and developers, focusing on open standards like CLE.* 23:49 *🧠 AI models are expanding beyond basic tasks to address issues like model security, distributed retraining, and bias mitigation.* 24:56 *🤝 Intel sees major tech firms like Google and Microsoft both as customers and competitors, fostering a complex relationship of collaboration and competition.* 29:05 *🏢 Intel focuses on reskilling and training its workforce, emphasizing hands-on learning and continuous development amid industry shifts.* 32:28 *🌐 Future Intel workforce needs include AI-savvy employees and those adept at enhancing manufacturing efficiency through automation and innovation.* 35:14 *🚀 Intel plans to bridge the gap between academic research and commercial semiconductor production with initiatives like the NSTC and enhanced university partnerships.* 39:36 *🔬 Intel explores integrating various materials with silicon to advance semiconductor capabilities, aiming to leverage the periodic table for future innovations.* 41:24 *🖥️ Intel aims to lead in quantum computing by leveraging its manufacturing scale to build large-scale, stable quantum systems, projecting significant progress by 2030.* 46:23 *🌱 Pat Gelsinger emphasizes Intel's commitment to developing their technologies further to enhance their Foundry capabilities and ecosystem.* 47:21 *🧬 Gelsinger expresses skepticism about the significant market impact of biological materials in computing, citing silicon's proven scalability and dominance.* 48:05 *🌌 While focusing on silicon-based technologies, Intel is exploring Quantum Computing and neuromorphic Computing, aiming to integrate them atop a silicon infrastructure for scalability.* 49:00 *🌐 Reflecting on past industry collaborations like Sematech, Gelsinger views them as catalysts despite not meeting initial effectiveness goals, informing future structured research models.* 50:29 *🚀 Gelsinger discusses a resurgence in venture investing in semiconductors, attributing it partly to advancements in foundry ecosystems like TSMC and sees potential for further growth with Intel's initiatives.* Made with HARPA AI
@jyy9624Ай бұрын
So many naysayers when this gentleman started his business
@23drcharlesАй бұрын
Dr. Chang should have received his Ph.D from MIT but had to attend Stanford University to obtain his Ph.D. This is an example of how MIT has underestimated the brilliance of some like Morris Chang. The new geo-political reality is that TSMC is at the center of the coming winds of war. The race for chip supremacy will be fought out in Taiwan with the USA and Communist China.
@Jdvc-yd5tx2 ай бұрын
I like his scarf. 😎
@damonkatos42712 ай бұрын
Texas Instruments let one of the greats get away.
@rriqueno2 ай бұрын
The world as we know it at this moment wouldn’t be posible without TSMC. Thanks Morris.
@hellonihaocomoestas2 ай бұрын
they had a 92 year old man stand and speak for an hour. They didn't think this through
@BolusTube2 ай бұрын
Intel the will be the leading global foundry of the next decade.
@zhenminliu2 ай бұрын
At 92, he is much more lucid and articulate than the 80 year- old Biden
@jadecarson50812 ай бұрын
Intel and AMD will definitely have their share of the market. TSMC is at max capacity and investing in other semiconductor companies will be an absolute power move, I keep increasing my shares manageably. Different chips are good at different things and Nvidia has been very specialised, which leaves other aspects of Al open.
@mondimlotshwa39582 ай бұрын
This is the type of in-depth detail on the semiconductor market that investors need, also the right moment to focus on the rewarding AI manifesto.
@jadecarson50812 ай бұрын
certainly, i had bought NVDA shares at $300, $475 cheap b4 the 10 for 1 split and with huge interest I keep adding, i’m currently doings the same for PLTR and AMD constructively. Best possible way to get ahead, is participating behind top experienced performers.
@donnahensley24592 ай бұрын
How much of their stock do you own? Seems like a lot of your investment is riding on this
@davegustavo47262 ай бұрын
You are buying a company to own it and not a piece of paper, The market is a zero-sum game (2 sides), Know what you are buying not just out of trend interest.
@DoughRollers-tb5li2 ай бұрын
Amazingly, people are starting to get the uniqueness of Palantir.
@leehtp47072 ай бұрын
Chinese SPY ?
@MarkLeeip4mark3 ай бұрын
Play it at 1.25 speed. :)
@martinpetrov74753 ай бұрын
Good luck, my fella
@tatersncorn3 ай бұрын
I'm excited. I'm currently a merchant mariner but I'm going back to school to get an electrical engineering degree. It would be a pleasure and an honor to work for Intel. Although very unlikely, I'd love to be a part of what they do and assist in that.
@danieljakic93203 ай бұрын
Fantastic, so inspirational
@jerrinmathewgeorgeieee78663 ай бұрын
Is it possible to get the presentation used in this talk?
@moomoo51983 ай бұрын
I put a tons of money to invest in Intel during Covid and this guy completely missed multiple rides consoles, fabs, mining, now AI they had so many chances to pull back into the game and they chose to rest and vest. They got beaten by NVDA and also letting AMD to leap over them. Such a shame
@moomoo51983 ай бұрын
As an ex investor of Intel, he wasted my money and time. Very disappointed with him and entire Intel guys
@damianfitzpatrick34653 ай бұрын
It is so interesting to me as a machinist that you can hire 15 machinists in china for my salary. They are much more skilled with equally good machines, i just can't get my head around why they aren't paid a similar salary, they must be so dedicated to their job, eye roll. I hope this slave labor model becomes a thing of the past. The entire model is propped up by exports to richer countrys. We will know we made it when everyone in the supply chain could hope to buy the end products that they are making. Everything else is fake.
@LunarGlow923 ай бұрын
Did you close your eyes to factories he was showing that were completely automated without "Slave Labor"? Do you think maybe that has anything to do with prices coming down? Do you think maybe that china has 2/3s of all of the manufacturing robots in the ENTIRE world has anything to do with it ? One machinist in china can pay for 15 times more goods in china than you because EVERYTHING is MADE IN CHINA. People like you who just want to masturbate your ego and ignore all of our shortcomings; are the reasons why we can no longer advance at anything. If you were in china the country would give you 6 billion dollars to go start your own factory if you wanted to, but instead we send it to countries to bomb poor people. China also exports much more to the developing world than it does to the rich countries. I know it does not feel good, I know it hurts our feelings that china is better than us, I know it doesn't make us feel special and important but that is the truth that we need to wake up to. Its crazy, we literally cannot have an honest conversation about shortcomings or even consider anything that china is doing because it hurts our feelings. I mean do people in this country just want criticize other countries to feel good, how are we ever expected to improve our country?
@basically-233 ай бұрын
Your people are always one medical emergency away from bankruptcy. 1 in 3 of you are currently skipping meals because of food price inflation. Your public transportation is non-existent and your people are dependent on driving for basic necessities while delinquencies on car loans and mortgages are at historic highs. Your system is worse for everyone who isn't already rich, and your middle class is collapsing while China's middle class is going to double in the next 10 years. You are overpaid for lazy work by your own admission while your life is measurably worse in every way that matters. China exports more to the global south than it does to you. You are not that important.
@norarhoads15663 ай бұрын
Applause We are a hardware startup (MIT Alum). We did not know MIT did hardware manufacturing Fantastic array of info. Thanks.
@ddbbel56543 ай бұрын
such a respectable industrial leader Morris Chang🤩👍👍👍
@Janovial3 ай бұрын
KFC
@gary74483 ай бұрын
電池壽命最長最快充温度最低如何辦到。處理器温度如何才能為零度。。。
@gary74483 ай бұрын
處理器温度如何才能為零度。。。
@FRKS19993 ай бұрын
I love Morris and I am waiting for him to open chain stores for fried chicken and "chips" of course that's what he is good at.
@magnacarta7403 ай бұрын
He is important to the West only
@顧仁願-q2w4 ай бұрын
My takeaway of this speech is: Americans are lazy, and Taiwanese are hard workers.
@VamsiKrishnaOliveti4 ай бұрын
Today he is a billionair, going by Moores law he is going to be trillionair by another 19 years.
@javed8764 ай бұрын
Love his humor and his stamina.
@michaelmajid51424 ай бұрын
Man look at his face he’s battered like he’s been to hell and back
@nathandfox4 ай бұрын
TL;DR: only extremely hardworking society can pull it off. The Arizona plant is likely to fail.
@VegasVaron4 ай бұрын
TSM’s failure or success in the US is up in the air, but what is certain is China will eventually take over Taiwan where 99.9% of TSM’s manufacturing plants are located.
@alma76214 ай бұрын
Almost all the chips makers are Chinese from Taiwan. TSMC/AMD/Nivida.
@alma76214 ай бұрын
Most of these great people are so humble. AMD/Nivida…also.
We welcome Mr. Morris Chang to India, the growing country. We have younger generation with dedication to work.
@iiigraghu4 ай бұрын
Excellent Presentation 💐
@fern85804 ай бұрын
They all wallowed in "chips" with closed systems, proprietary systems, while an "IF THEN ELSE" chip, accessible to everyone, would have allowed a decentralized industry, accessible to the local electrician. Outside the USA, this man would have been arrested for theft of know-how and transmission of information abroad (any information sent to Taiwan, Singapore, etc. ends in China) Yes I'm bitter? yes I'm jealous? This gentleman is truly above all of us!
@Satheesh1004 ай бұрын
Thank you Sir..Thank you MIT
@redmustangredmustang5 ай бұрын
A lot of these guys like Morris took their knowledge that they learned at American companies or universities they studied and took it back home and look what happened.
@leeo81495 ай бұрын
MIT should’ve just interviewed him instead of having him stand and do this presentation at 92. Come on MIT!
@aureliusfeynman48520 күн бұрын
I do not know for certain, but I wouldn't assume M. Chang did not strongly insist on doing his presentation as he sees fit. It's almost unthinkable that they wouldn't offer any accomodations, I'm leaning towards the explanation of a driven and proud 90 years old Taiwanese man that built a colossal company, who insisted on doing this talk in person and standing 😂
@YT-tf4jj5 ай бұрын
One of the important takeaways is not many countries can replace Taiwan as semiconductor powerhouse. Asking people not to jump to other jobs with better pay is a joke in many countries . Morris Chang with his great foresight and understanding of Taiwanese culture, he makes semiconductor technology possible. Without him and dedication of Taiwanese people, we might not have the IT technology what we are having now. People are seriously underestimating how important this person is to the internet, telecommunications and smartphones
@Tony_bobo5 ай бұрын
Ironically, the foundation of the success story of semiconductor industry is the free market, free trade and globalization. World's politicians are doing exactly the opposite things to weaken those merits...