In Canada, our chips are made using french fries, topped with cheese curds and brown gravy. They are very advanced and delicious.
@ernielin57357 ай бұрын
TSMC's engineers are paid more than $160,000 in US dollars per year plus bonus in average, please be honest with yourself! Labor cost has never be a factor about semiconductor manufacturing.
@non-fictionaltoughguy1208Ай бұрын
In Taiwan they get paid anywhere from 904 NT to 2 Million NT which come out to 30-60k USD
@JA-pn4ji7 ай бұрын
It is nice to hear the US perspective, but as a neutral, the US is deluded with a number of its beliefs. Firstly, the notion that Chinese commercial success is solely driven by government subsidies or cheap labor. In actual fact what China has is the ability to achieve dominant economies of scale. This is similar to the United States in the 1950s, where its domestic market could support larger economies of scale, and thus larger firms, than European countries. Admittedly, when China is a new entrant into an industry, domestic firms receive encouragement subsidies in labor, capital, land, and machinery, but as soon as that industry reaches a critical mass domestically (let alone internationally) the subsidy tap is turned off. These types of subsidies are also prevalent in the United States and elsewhere in the developed world. The second is the speaker's belief that Apple is the sole reason for TSMC's move into advanced chips. In actual fact, TSMC had two mobile customers for its advanced chips, one was Apple and the other was Huawei. The US government crippled Huawei's access to TSMC else that company would today be a dominant force. On advanced chip manufacturing, I wouldn't call China's approach 'MacGyvering'. China has extended the process method of double-patterning into quadruple patterning. And this is not just some jerry-rigging approach but a process method skill that other countries lack. It enables China the opportunity to develop advanced process engineering expertise that has applicability to other areas of advanced semiconductor manufacturing - in particular, advanced packaging.
@KD-xq5co7 ай бұрын
Govt providing Chips Act money - is that not government subsidizing?
@Typical.Anomaly7 ай бұрын
I'd call it an investment in ourselves.
@remix-yy1hs5 ай бұрын
@@Typical.Anomalyi call you hypocrite. Typical yt hypocrite
@PhilipWong557 ай бұрын
It was more cost-effective for China to purchase reliable Western chips, benefiting both sides. China spends more on chip imports than on oil. The US sanctions forced China to develop its domestic supply chain. When self-sufficient, China can provide the world with more affordable chips. The US and its allies are developing their own supply chain, but it cannot be competitive without access to a large market. The US is sparing no effort in its Tonya Harding competition strategy. The Chinese are very grateful to the US for pushing them towards self-sufficiency. Thanks to the US, China now has its own GPS system and space program. The US chips sanction is converting its biggest chips customer to be its biggest competitor. More sanctions, please.
@johnnywalker28706 ай бұрын
Well said!
@u2ber8886 ай бұрын
China's chip funding versus US's chip act. One's moving forward and the other is impeding it.
@Wwmmgg955544 ай бұрын
China is called the destroyers of advanced countries. China can produce very advanced manufacturing goods with a fraction cost of other developed countries. Consumers benefit from the low cost of products.
@sunlightsoul12224 ай бұрын
We Indians support super power China in manufacturing chip
@tranminhtam7857 ай бұрын
TOO MANY THINK TANKS , NOT ENOUGH ENGINEERS
@AntiWar_dude7 ай бұрын
What if chips act doesn’t work ? 🤣
@kenrie200227 ай бұрын
The guest doesn't know what he is saying just like CNN expert.
@KD-xq5co7 ай бұрын
Fucked up logic of the guest.
@johnnyq42607 ай бұрын
Dream on!
@xfactor60997 ай бұрын
Well at least you have expertise on only fans and in invading countries