How ASML, TSMC And Intel Dominate The Chip Market | CNBC Marathon

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  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
  • CNBC Marathon got an exclusive look at how the world makes the now all important processing chips at ASML, TSMC and Intel.
    Tour inside ASML’s cleanrooms to see how these $200 million EUV systems print minuscule designs on advanced microchips using exploding molten tin, the flattest surface in the world, and light so narrow it’s absorbed by air.
    Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company makes 24% of all the world's chips, and 92% of the most advanced ones found in today's iPhones, fighter jets and supercomputers. Now TSMC is building America's first 5-nanometer fabrication plant, hoping to reverse a decades-long trend of the U.S. losing chip manufacturing to Asia. CNBC got an exclusive tour of the $12 billion fab that will start production in 2024.
    And for decades, Intel was the leading maker of the world’s most advanced chips. Intel’s history is interwoven with that of Silicon Valley, credited with the invention of RAM and microprocessors, the building blocks of modern computing. Now Intel has fallen behind. But its new CEO, Pat Gelsinger, has a bold plan to catch up to Samsung and TSMC by 2025, by building new chip fabrication plants in the U.S., Europe and Israel totaling more than $44 billion. CNBC got an exclusive tour at the fab expansion outside Portland, Oregon, that’s set to open early next year.
    CNBC Marathon brings together the best of CNBC’s chip coverage and examines how this competitive, lucrative and vital industry is changing.
    Chapters:
    00:00 Introduction
    00:39 Inside ASML, the company that all advanced chipmakers rely on (Published Mar. 2022)
    19:10 Exclusive look inside the secretive Taiwan chip giant TSMC (Published Oct. 2021)
    36:47 Inside Intel’s bold $26 billion U.S. plan to regain chip dominance (Published Nov. 2021)
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    How ASML, TSMC And Intel Dominate The Chip Market | CNBC Marathon

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @SheileyLuna
    @SheileyLuna 18 дней назад +453

    I agree that many people are considering NVDA as the "Stock of the year." However, I'm curious about which stocks could potentially become the next META in terms of growth over the next decade. I've allocated $200k for investment, aiming to retire comfortably.

    • @RebeccaSheer
      @RebeccaSheer 18 дней назад

      I think the next big thing will be A.I. For enduring growth akin to META, it's vital to avoid impulsive decisions driven by short-term fluctuations. Prioritize patience and a long-term perspective most importantly consider financial advisory for informed buying and selling decisions.

    • @JaneGallagher-ur9jp
      @JaneGallagher-ur9jp 18 дней назад

      A lot of folks downplay the role of advlsors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850k

    • @AlejandraIgnacio-vv8tx
      @AlejandraIgnacio-vv8tx 18 дней назад

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    • @JaneGallagher-ur9jp
      @JaneGallagher-ur9jp 18 дней назад

      Viviana Marisa Coelho is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. By looking her up online, you can quickly verify her level of experience. She is well knowledgeable about financial markets

    • @scottjuarez9549
      @scottjuarez9549 18 дней назад

      She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran an online search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing

  • @Coolgiy67
    @Coolgiy67 Год назад +252

    Electrical engineer here, let me tell y’all what a chip actually is. It’s a wafer of silicon that’s been doped with either boron for p-type semiconductor or phosphorus for n-type semiconductor. Putting a P-type and N-type right next to each other creates a PN junction (Metallurgical junction) there’s some very interesting physics that goes on here but to cut it short it only conducts current in 1 direction. This device is known as a diode, 2 diodes together is a transistor. So they will layer these semiconductors in such a way to make npn or pnp transistors and etch them with lithography. A transistor can basically act as a switch or an amplifier and can be voltage controlled or current controlled depending on the type of transistor (either bjt or fet)

    • @J_a_s_o_n
      @J_a_s_o_n Год назад +20

      What?

    • @maxheadrom3088
      @maxheadrom3088 Год назад +48

      @@J_a_s_o_n Exactly! I know what he's talking about and I guarantee: it would take a very long comment to explain it all. I'll try, then, to explain what the hell are those 7nm, 5nm, and super ultra violet light is about.
      To make these chips we need to create transistors on it. We do this by mixing some material to one region and another material to another region. To do that we coat the silicon disk (waffer) with a plastic that get brittle when light hits it. We then wash the waffer and add the material we want. We repeat the process for how many different regions we need.
      The machine used is like a reverse video projector (or, if you're older, a reverse slide projector): it gets a huge image source and projects it on a tine square on the surface of the waffer. To do that we need some special lenses and projectors. There's another problem: we want to get more transistors on the same small square because that saves us waffers and also allows for chips that consume less electricity. The smallest line (thinnest) used started to get so thin it got smaller than the wavelength of visible light - and that means we can't do it with visible light. People started using ultra-violet and x-ray to do that but that is not so easy!
      You know how 5GHz wifi doesn't go as far as 2.4GHz? 5GHz has smaller wavelength than 2.4GHz and that causes 5GHz radio signals from wifi to interact more with walls and doors. The kinds of frequency needed to make a 7nm chip are so high the light interacts even with the glass used to make the mirrors! These machines, for those reasons, are so complicated people don't even want to try and develop their own. Even Japan's governement gave up on their attempt. Japan ruled this market in the past, btw - so they were not starting from zero.
      I hope I managed to explain a few things that are important to understand the video.

    • @crazycutz8072
      @crazycutz8072 Год назад +12

      If People watch This program then might just understand the subjekt and what a chip is.. Just sayin

    • @Quantum_in_Java
      @Quantum_in_Java Год назад

      @@maxheadrom3088 silicon disk coated with plastic ? And on top of that new layers are added , but isn't plastic a non conductor ? so how would the electron move then ?

    • @Quantum_in_Java
      @Quantum_in_Java Год назад

      "so they will layer this semiconductor to make a pnp or npn transistor and etch them with lithography "
      Why do we need lithography after that ??

  • @PhilipMurray251
    @PhilipMurray251 Год назад +370

    The financial markets seem to be suffering more than the real economy from the prospect of further Fed tightening, I seriously need suggestions on how to diversify my $500k portfolio made up of volatile TSLA.

    • @Robertgriffinne
      @Robertgriffinne Год назад +2

      The market is volatile at this time, hence i will suggest you get yourself a financial-advisor that can provide you with entry and exit points on the stocks you focus on.

    • @JamiLandrell
      @JamiLandrell Год назад +3

      very true, about 50% of my portfolio profit was from TSLA, GME and NIO, my financial-advisor was able to get me in early on most of these stocks .I've been able to scale from $350K to $970K

    • @PhilipMurray251
      @PhilipMurray251 Год назад

      @@JamiLandrell wow ,that’s stirring! Do you mind connecting me to your advisor please. I desperately need one to diversified my portfolio.

    • @JamiLandrell
      @JamiLandrell Год назад +6

      @@PhilipMurray251 Having a coach is key to portfolio diversification, My advisor is "Corinne Cecilia Heaney" You can easily look her up, she has years of financial market experience.

    • @Natalieneptune469
      @Natalieneptune469 Год назад +1

      @@JamiLandrell I just looked up Ms Corinne online and researched her accreditation. She seem very proficient, I wrote her and scheduled a call.

  • @gabriellewilson5625
    @gabriellewilson5625 Год назад +836

    • @davidnewbury1721
      @davidnewbury1721 Год назад +5

      You have to get a financial-advisor/broker to aid you diversify your portfolios to include commodities, inflation-indexed bonds and stocks of companies with solid cash flows, as opposed to growth stocks where valuations were based on future potential earnings

    • @sheliaswelttk2535
      @sheliaswelttk2535 Год назад +5

      @@davidnewbury1721

    • @williamskohler8337
      @williamskohler8337 Год назад +4

      @@sheliaswelttk2535 How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.

    • @sheliaswelttk2535
      @sheliaswelttk2535 Год назад +3

      @@williamskohler8337 all credits to Amy Priscilla Raskin, one of the best portfolio manager;s out there. she;s well known, you should look her up

    • @dingyraskal34
      @dingyraskal34 Год назад +2

      @@sheliaswelttk2535

  • @ZaneKyber
    @ZaneKyber Год назад +427

    This is by far the most in depth and detailed video I've seen on this topic ever, CNBC really really really did an amazing video here

    • @nolanwhite1971
      @nolanwhite1971 Год назад +6

      Its good, but check out asionometry.

    • @cosmnc3790
      @cosmnc3790 Год назад +1

      @@nolanwhite1971 link?

    • @dianapennepacker6854
      @dianapennepacker6854 Год назад +2

      It and a video called 5 steps in making chips are great. (It covered the architecture and software aspects).
      I was reading two guys go at it online and these two companies popped up numerous times. It piqued my interest enough to look into it

    • @madsam0320
      @madsam0320 Год назад

      All hype, seems like the same people on asianometry, trying hard to push the shares of those companies.
      EUVs are proving very problematic in reality and these companies are in trouble, look at their stock prices, the market does not lie.

    • @namelesknight7840
      @namelesknight7840 Год назад

      This video did teach me a lot I never really was interested in silicone chips until this video randomly came up extremely well detailed and now I know how they are made and I would have never guessed just how hard it is to make high-quality chips and why the market doesn't have them

  • @DBRising
    @DBRising Год назад +55

    The brilliant people who make the tools to make the components of the widgets we buy are my heroes!

    • @the_real_economics
      @the_real_economics Год назад +4

      So that majority of people can make stupid tiktot content, send stupid messages on messanger etc. ;)

    • @MusicAutomation
      @MusicAutomation Год назад +7

      @@the_real_economics I'm sure when the smartest humans discovered how to harness fire, there were a bunch of others that were like "look how pretty when I burn down village."
      edit: come to think of it there still are those people, sadly.

    • @blu3_enjoy
      @blu3_enjoy Год назад +2

      @@MusicAutomation yeah, you

    • @MusicAutomation
      @MusicAutomation Год назад +2

      @@blu3_enjoy woah sick burn

  • @gagnepaingilly
    @gagnepaingilly Месяц назад +505

    Interesting how much has changed since the video had been recorded. NVDA in the 900s, TSLA, ASML and APPL down even more. I am currently holding north of $300k in a savings account waiting to invest in another huge opportunity.. Where would you invest this as of now?

    • @84gaynor
      @84gaynor Месяц назад +2

      Invest in real estate, ETFs and high-yield savings account.

    • @Lewyn298
      @Lewyn298 Месяц назад +3

      Certain Ai companies are rumoured to be overvalued and might cause a market correction, i think it’s best you reach out to a proper fiduciary for guidance

    • @sommersalt88
      @sommersalt88 Месяц назад +2

      De-risk your portfolios, shore up your core holdings, and take some profits while balancing your portfolio allocations. I’d also suggest you go with a managed portfolio, but even those don’t perform so well, so it’s best you reach out to a proper fiduciary to guide you, that’s what works for my spouse and I. We've made over 80% capital growth minus dividends.

    • @kashkat987
      @kashkat987 Месяц назад +1

      this is all new to me, where do I find a fiduciary, can you recommend any?

    • @sommersalt88
      @sommersalt88 Месяц назад +6

      "Jennifer Leigh Hickman" is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment

  • @Anonymous-qb4vc
    @Anonymous-qb4vc Год назад +22

    This was much needed documentary regarding most important tech and companies that enabled this modern world.

  • @checkforme234
    @checkforme234 Год назад +154

    Recessions are part of the economic cycle, all you can do is make sure you're prepared and plan accordingly. I graduated into a recession (2009). My 1st job after college was aerial acrobat on cruise ships. Today I'm a VP at a global company, own 3 rental properties, invest in stocks and biz, built my own business, and have my net worth increase by $500k in the last 4 years.

    • @kimyoung8414
      @kimyoung8414 Год назад +2

      Let's face it... buying more stocks & index funds during stock market corrections and bear markets is scary. Which makes it really hard to do for most people like me. I have 260k i want to transfer into an s&s isa but its hard to bite the bullet and do it.

    • @erichkraetz2622
      @erichkraetz2622 Год назад +1

      @@kimyoung8414 You need a Financial Advisor my friend so you don't get ripped off in the market. They provide personalized advice to individuals based on their risk appetite, placing them among the best of the best. There are bad ones, but some with good track records can be very good.

    • @alexyoung3126
      @alexyoung3126 Год назад +3

      @@erichkraetz2622 I agree with you totally Rose, Yes they can be positively impactful to an individual's portfolio. I started with a trust Financial Adviser named "INGRID CECILIA RAAD". She is verifiable and her work ethic complies with the US Investment Act of 1940. Her approach is transparent, allowing full ownership and control of my portfolio with very reasonable fees relative to my portfolio earnings.

    • @stephaniestella213
      @stephaniestella213 Год назад

      @@alexyoung3126 I know I've wanted to start investing for a few months, but just haven't had the courage to start because the market has been down for most of this year. Please how can I reckon with such skills and what are his services like?

    • @alexyoung3126
      @alexyoung3126 Год назад +1

      @@stephaniestella213 She covers things like investing, insurance, making sure retirement is well funded and looking at ways to have a volatility buffer for investment risk, lots of things like that. You can take a look at her full name on the internet. She is renowned. So it shouldn't be difficult to find her official webpage.

  • @schmoyoho8997
    @schmoyoho8997 Год назад +69

    The reporter of these pieces did an incredibly good job.

  • @mountainvalleymedia5836
    @mountainvalleymedia5836 Год назад +87

    I'm Dutch and I had no idea of the size and specialty of ASML, truly impressive!

    • @curlyheaduriah8237
      @curlyheaduriah8237 Год назад +1

      Same man

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Год назад +15

      Do you know Bluetooth and WI-FI is also invented in the Netherlands? Every phone or computer in the world is made possible by Dutch technology.

    • @user-DongJ
      @user-DongJ Год назад +7

      All hail Dutch specialists! Long live Dutch inventors! May they & their descendants live in Peace & Prosperity for Ten Thousand years! 🙏

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Год назад +10

      @@chinesejesuschrist Are you just here to say stupid stuff or did you actually watch the video. TSMC in Taiwan is a manufacturer of chips. ASML is the only developer of chips. Without ASML machines at TSMC they would be nothing. If today ASML took their machines back it would reduce TSMC to making old chips. The same chips Intel makes.
      You could take away TSMC, but not ASML. There's only one ASML. You could replace TSMC in two years with enough capital. Exactly why the governments are building FABS all across Europe, China and the US.

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Год назад +7

      @@chinesejesuschrist The 5nm chipmachines TSMC uses are from ASLM. Without those EUV lithography chip machines TSMC can't make 5nm chips. They can't even make 7nm chips without ASLM. Maybe you should do your homework and maybe watch this video again to refresh your mind.

  • @polycadence8482
    @polycadence8482 Год назад +11

    Report missed the glaring threat from USA on Samsung/TSMC that unless they build new fabs in USA, USA would ban advanced semi equipment machines to them, not just lithography machines from ASML but also etching machines from Applied Material, Lam Research and metrology machines from KLA Tencor. In other words, USA bullied Samsung/TSMC to build fabs in USA.

    • @converterasia5567
      @converterasia5567 4 месяца назад

      It will be funny if the factories built in the USA do not work properly, as the USA hopes.
      Будет смешно если заводы построенные в США не заработают должным образом, как надеется США.

  • @drwho9437
    @drwho9437 Год назад +141

    There are a lot of mistakes in these videos. Here are some.
    NASA rovers do not use "5 nm" chips. Space is very heritage focused and thus most ICs that fly in space are at least 20 nm parts, most are 250 nm or more. Processing power for space tends to lag about a decade behind commercial.
    There are no "5" or "3" or "7" nm features on these chips. The Intel naming scheme is more honest. These "nodes" are really about logic density increases. One "7 nm" part isn't the same as the others. Intel "10 nm" is closer first generation 7 nm TSMC/Samsung processes in terms of actual density.
    The "chip shortage" during the pandemic was across many sectors. Consumer products like XBOXes and GPUs for bitcoin mining used the more advanced nodes from TSMC. However automotive chip for things other than infotainment, and vision systems are generally 65 nm+ (when these nm number were actual gate lengths). With Micron's target reduction in memory the cyclical nature of the DRAM/FLASH business is showing the consumer market is no longer supply constrained. That actually means leading edge capacity is available. What is not available are things like digital isolators produced by companies like Texas Instruments, Analog Devices/Maxium.
    What is funny about the obsession of the financial reporting about chips is the crazy monolithic focus on digital processing. You need to build a radio for a phone. You need sensors, microphones, cameras. Without the interaction surface to the world which is analog you can do nothing interesting. That interface can be a keyboard or it can be a camera, but it is still not a "leading edge" chip.
    Don't have a leading edge CPU or GPU, your application runs a bit slower. Don't have a digital isolator you cannot make a car at all or a medical device. These things are the chip shortage that matters and the companies are over ordering having moved from just in time supply chains to inventory ones.
    Shortages for things like Neon from the war in Ukraine are important too. ASML didn't needed advanced chips to make their lithography tool they needed microcontroller and 20 nm FPGAs.
    Can Intel catch up in manufacturing? Yes. With the right people hired this can be done. The bigger problem for Intel is actually one of strategy they have really done poorly making choices of what to do outside of computer processors. With lots of half hearted efforts that are folded up and tossed. A pivot to primarily being a foundry that happens to have a successful processor business solves them needing to figure out the consumer and just needs to figure out physical science. They are actually good at that historically so they can get there. In the end the nodes are slowing and will stall out soon enough. Global Foundries didn't quit for no reason. What Intel is trying to do is get scale enough to complete with TSMC in volume. They are also trying to be more than a digital company by buying Tower I think...

    • @VelocityZap
      @VelocityZap Год назад +11

      This should be upvoted more..

    • @zodwraith5745
      @zodwraith5745 Год назад +4

      Rolled down to say much of this but you saved me the work.

    • @megaprimegamer1184
      @megaprimegamer1184 Год назад +2

      Won’t say I understood everything since I’m a materials guy than an electrical guy but yeah working in the industry, this was a good read. Thanks!

    • @ilonamalenkovich8393
      @ilonamalenkovich8393 Год назад +3

      Also when she spoke about water reuse at Intel, she mentioned Arizona but then spoke about the Ronler Acres sight, which we know is Oregon. Right message, wrong attribution.

    • @wilsonmanch6773
      @wilsonmanch6773 Год назад

      exactly brian.

  • @taiwanfocus4385
    @taiwanfocus4385 Год назад +51

    One successful business strategy of TSMC is that it only makes chips, and not designing them. So it is not a competitor of its customers, unlike Samsung.

    • @tk9839
      @tk9839 Год назад +3

      But competition is needed to keep prices reasonable and innovation moving forward, obviously...

    • @RikyyThePootisSlayer
      @RikyyThePootisSlayer Год назад

      @@tk9839 yes but also no. None of them would work without eachother. They are symbiotic, and competition would probably happen only at lower levels, like say amd vs nvidia, audi vs mercedes, lg vs sony etc.
      Right now prices are high not because of lack of competition, but lack of companies enabling tech makers to make their products. People are asking too much from the only guys who know how to make this stuff.

    • @carlosoliveira7727
      @carlosoliveira7727 3 месяца назад

      TSMC doesn't design more advanced chips not by choice , it is the hardest part of it , do you think it was possible TSMC to compete with Nvidia , AMD , T Instruments ,Intel , Samsung , Philips , Siemens and others in their especific area of technology ? The answer is no .

    • @taiwanfocus4385
      @taiwanfocus4385 3 месяца назад

      ​@@carlosoliveira7727 This decision was made prior to 1990. How was Samsung's "advanced chip design" back then if any?

  • @wannabepioneer
    @wannabepioneer Год назад +2

    @10:01 "this is continious tin - it never, ever, ever stops". Machine stars buzzing

  • @rajendramisir3530
    @rajendramisir3530 Год назад +18

    Excellent production, Katie. Very interesting and informative. Good interviews and compilations.

  • @mot6822
    @mot6822 Год назад +45

    This is an excellent documentary . Very informative . Great work CNBC.

  • @karenkatherine4956
    @karenkatherine4956 Год назад +141

    The wisest thing that should be on everyone mind currently should be to invest in different streams of income that doesn't depend on the govt. Especially with the current economic crisis around the word. This is still a good time to invest in Gold, silver and digital currencies(BTC, SHIBA..).

    • @richardnicholas9654
      @richardnicholas9654 Год назад

      People believe their currency has the worth it does because they have no other option. Even in a hyperinflationary environment, individuals must continue to use their hyperinflationary currency since they likely have minimum access to other currencies or gold/silver coins.

    • @castroguo4424
      @castroguo4424 Год назад

      I was a novice that made 3.5 BTC in my first attempt to trade all thanks to him, he’s everything y'all need right now

    • @noaholiver2946
      @noaholiver2946 Год назад

      Crypto currency and NFTS will outsmart the banking system in the nearest future serving as a global fiat. Already making over 85% profit from my current investment with the help of Josef Dennis's signal

    • @karenkatherine4956
      @karenkatherine4956 Год назад

      I was so big on gold and Silver but a few months ago I discovered Bitcoin and Ethereum. Listening to lots of stuff from Josef Dennis. has been really helpful in my journey.

    • @kenedyright232
      @kenedyright232 Год назад

      My colleague is increasing his portfolio with Josef Dennis's strategy so i believe and trust it, i can't wait to get my paycheck and buy bitcoin and then start.

  • @user-sr5qi5fi9d
    @user-sr5qi5fi9d 3 месяца назад +1

    I am blown away at the progress made in Microlithography since advances we started at Perkin Elmer Corp's Microlithography Division in 1970. In those days we were happy with printing lines and spaces measured in THOUSANTHS OF AN INCH! When I retired from ASML 20 years ago, they have made big strides even since then. That is why I am a happy shareholder of ASML stocks. I am impressed with management and how Martin van den Brink in particular is open to all the variant in going forward in this comlex field.

  • @filip9587
    @filip9587 Год назад +135

    Always love learning about the production and designing of semiconductors, especially considering how they're pushing the bounds of quantum physics with every new node.

    • @lobertdelacruz7436
      @lobertdelacruz7436 9 месяцев назад

      q

    • @metaljacket64
      @metaljacket64 5 месяцев назад

      A Filipino inventor name Dado Banatao is one of pioneer inventorvin Silicon Valley..he sold his invention to Intel...

    • @veryCreativeName0001-zv1ir
      @veryCreativeName0001-zv1ir 4 месяца назад

      they are not pushing the bounds of quantum physics , they being limited by quantum tunneling.

  • @sehzadelee
    @sehzadelee Год назад +183

    this is incredible documentary , well done CNBC

  • @dgillies5420
    @dgillies5420 Год назад +6

    EUV = Extreme UltraViolet (a very high-frequency wavelength of light = smaller details).
    The EUV machine is basically a photo-printer using ultraviolet light.
    And instead of printing 1 (b/w) layer or 3-layers (red, blue, green) of image, they print up to ~100 layers.
    7:00 They use traditional ideas from silk screen printing to print really, really tiny pictures onto silicon.
    Often they print onto a layer of metal or silicon, then in a developer step the non-printed areas are etched away, often by simple acids which avoid the EUV-exposed areas (the EUV strengthens a material you want to keep). Then a new layer of metal or silicon is added and the process repeats. Sometimes instead of just printing & removing metal, they print, remove metal, then send hot "doping materials" through the printed picture to change properties of the silicon wafer below, making it a "better semiconductor", then they etch away the rest of the metal, and repeat. Starting in the 1960's, companies were literally using photographic enlargers to print integrated-circuit chips, in 5-10 steps, and making chips & printing photographs was not terribly different.

    • @lukasdamaceno1246
      @lukasdamaceno1246 10 месяцев назад

      Por isso a Canon, a Nikon, e a fujisto foram algumas pioneiras no processo, nós é mesmo?

  • @sureshnishtala2887
    @sureshnishtala2887 Год назад +4

    very Insightful points and explanations....thank you so much CNBC for indepth analysis...
    made my notes too for all the 3 companies....

  • @SIW808
    @SIW808 Год назад +139

    I still dream of working for ASML one day. This is one of the few companies that I truly admire because of the work that they do.

    • @samuelm8705
      @samuelm8705 Год назад +30

      Yeah ASML is a nice company , I'm working there as Engineer for quite some time , my advice ! just apply for the job you like

    • @bunnatang2081
      @bunnatang2081 Год назад +23

      then after 2 months work : "I hate this job"

    • @nomoretalk2967
      @nomoretalk2967 Год назад

      @@samuelm8705 I don't know why but I have a persistent feeling that you are a big liar. and after seeing you are subscribing to RPM, I'm now sur you're indeed a big fat liar. btw what's the point of such lie(s) ?

    • @papa-dt1cv
      @papa-dt1cv Год назад +4

      Automated 99% soon

    • @KPAU07
      @KPAU07 Год назад +5

      It will be obsoleted in a few years. Why bother.

  • @csxking839
    @csxking839 Год назад +5

    Random correction, GPU's are used in *all* computers in some capacity. Anything that has a display has some form of GPU, it could be Intel Integrated Graphics or AMD with Vega graphics, or Nvidia. GPU stands for Graphical Processing Unit. They are actually less common in a server environment then they are in a consumer environment.

  • @saswatbharat1107
    @saswatbharat1107 5 месяцев назад

    In the year 2004, each and every body in the world were facing difficulties to develop ITO patterns on glass substrate and on flexible substrates. But we did ITO lithography in such a manner inside yellow room in the presence of UV light that we did not find any defects in ITO patterning. But we took few months and after rigorous testing by Optical Microscope, TENCOR profilometer and Kelvin probe and X Ray Diffraction by AFM we realised the defects and also rectified . This work is Nobel Prize winning work.

  • @cageynerd
    @cageynerd 9 месяцев назад +2

    EINDHOVEN!!! OMG, that's near where my family is from. So proud of this company.

  • @parthanmanoj4973
    @parthanmanoj4973 6 месяцев назад +7

    This is an amazing video which explains a lot about the Semiconductor industry and how the major players are currently playing all their cards to stay afloat in this extremely sensitive and dynamic market. Good depth, Great Acumen and in short, a well-explained documentary that explains 20 yr worth of progress in the semiconductors.
    Great Job.

  • @h50herman
    @h50herman Год назад +6

    The nice thing is that TSMC was grounded by Philips semiconductors (now NXP) with de government of Taiwan. Philps sold afterwards its part ( a little stupid, I believe), and also ASML was a little Philips, that were both spin offs of Philips.

  • @__Mako
    @__Mako Год назад +1

    Insanely detailed, kudos to the everyone work on this video

  • @8BitNaptime
    @8BitNaptime Год назад +1

    The first 32 bit *Intel* microprocessor @42:17, the Motorola 68000 was released in 1979, sure with an external 16 bit bus, but the full 32 bit 68020 came out in 1984.

  • @joncraig8791
    @joncraig8791 Год назад +98

    I began building up my Portfolio when I started following up my investment properly,

    • @joncraig8791
      @joncraig8791 Год назад

      RMkarl

    • @Windarti30
      @Windarti30 Год назад

      I'm fascinated with investing, I’m delighted to engage in this opportunity, I just found the professional’s web page and have already written him

    • @AnnaFed015
      @AnnaFed015 Год назад

      His strategy has been helping a lot of traders/hodlers out there, with his program I was able to recover my losses from the crash so swiftly

    • @stanleyzac1648
      @stanleyzac1648 Год назад

      I found him on CNBC interview where he was featured and I reached out to him afterward. He has since provided entry and exit point on the securities I focus on.

  • @chuckkiephan6880
    @chuckkiephan6880 Год назад +13

    I can't even imagine how people can build the machine.

  • @fattchye
    @fattchye Год назад +4

    You may not need a 7nm wavelength light to make a 7nm gate...you can use a convrntional 20nm light to make the left edge of the gate and then a conventional 20nm light to make the right edge of the same gate...its a matter of more lithographic steps to make a full 7nm gate...

  • @csanton3946
    @csanton3946 Год назад +66

    Intel's moves in opening up their facility to manufacture chips designed by their competitors in the chip design space is a move for them to stay relevant in this transition to smart phone dominant chios market and also serve as a backup busines in case they totally lose in the design segment

    • @mas-udal-hassan9277
      @mas-udal-hassan9277 5 месяцев назад

      Low quality food. Full of gmos

    • @mas-udal-hassan9277
      @mas-udal-hassan9277 5 месяцев назад

      Lol 😆 🤣 Muhammad محمد is the most popular name of baby 👶 boys in England

    • @OlBlow-qv6oz
      @OlBlow-qv6oz 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@mas-udal-hassan9277Yet you are speaking English the global language 😂

  • @ayubmasud3423
    @ayubmasud3423 Год назад +30

    Blessed with a 50 minute doc

    • @tytrvd
      @tytrvd Год назад +1

      A very important one at that

    • @ivodsofij2877
      @ivodsofij2877 Год назад +7

      You mean 3 videos that they already had put into 1 video.
      Good content though

  • @md.mohaiminulislam9618
    @md.mohaiminulislam9618 Год назад +32

    chips are literally magic like and we take it for granted because of how available they are

    • @Coolgiy67
      @Coolgiy67 Год назад +4

      Not magic, physics. Look up a yt video on “pn junction” this is the physics of how all this works

    • @zet0korp
      @zet0korp Год назад +2

      @@Coolgiy67 Well, physics effects to the one who does not delve into its realm look like magic. And even when you do... there is something magical about harnessing the power of nature in such ways.

    • @Coolgiy67
      @Coolgiy67 Год назад

      @@zet0korp I’m delved into it and it’s not magic. If I were to think it’s magic then how am I and other engineers going to come up with new technology.

    • @loversandlosers
      @loversandlosers Год назад +1

      @@Coolgiy67 its incredibly complex to the point of appearing like magic... engineers aren't known for their intuitive people skills, i wonder why hmm

    • @hackman88
      @hackman88 Год назад +1

      “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic” -- Arthur C. Clarke.
      Making computer chips is in a way also the alchemists' goal -- to transform inexpensive abundant base material such as lead to valuable gold. Computer chips are made from mostly sand and are more valuable than gold by weight.

  • @hamayoonshah1990
    @hamayoonshah1990 7 месяцев назад +1

    The author of chip war is so young that I can’t believe he has written such a masterpeice

  • @kailengray2822
    @kailengray2822 Год назад

    hat off to the video editor and graphic designer making this video. so so amazing and in dept

  • @iwir3d
    @iwir3d Год назад +32

    Fritolay is dominating the chip market!

  • @chenhsu3581
    @chenhsu3581 Год назад +8

    There is another reason why TSMC only focuses on manufacturing: they are not competing with their customers. You don’t want your chip manufacturer also selling the cellphones, GPUs or computers that you’re going to make.

    • @Valour-qh9ie
      @Valour-qh9ie Год назад

      I don't understand . Can you elaborate?

    • @user-ey4uu1jm9w
      @user-ey4uu1jm9w 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@Valour-qh9ie它恪守供应链内自己应该扮演的角色,只赚一小部分利润,如果把半导体产业链看成一家公司那么台积电就是这家公司的首席技术工程师他的技术能力永远不会干扰到管理层的决策,但是如果他也想成为公司管理层必然就会争夺管理权

    • @imam23
      @imam23 29 дней назад

      Agree we all know that euv is for chips alone, how about variaties of machines in manufacuring display, optical, and diff sensors. Such a lot of money.

  • @sagebrother
    @sagebrother Год назад +1

    Thanks for creating these fascinating videos and sharing them on RUclips.

  • @Foersom_
    @Foersom_ Год назад +2

    @CNBC; 9:59 "PSI" 29:23 "cubic yards, gallons" 36:05 "acre" please include metric unit measurements in your video.

  • @diegobarrientos6271
    @diegobarrientos6271 Год назад +35

    This is a very informative video, I was looking for a detailed video of this topic, great work CNBC

    • @ae9630
      @ae9630 Год назад

      Lu Hmmmmm k
      M m mmm

    • @hakes187
      @hakes187 Год назад

      It is very interesting

  • @randomwalk88
    @randomwalk88 Год назад +17

    Nice overview. But there is no mention of the rest of players which are very instrumental to the entire eco system. For examples, SUMCO (bare wafers), AMAT, LAM, TEL, KLA, Packaging, Test Equipment, ...

  • @3066961
    @3066961 8 месяцев назад

    big shout-out to the crew, wonderful video!!!

  • @arnoldsujankatru9667
    @arnoldsujankatru9667 Год назад +68

    This is not just a chip printer this is a masterpiece

    • @lewistheberzerker
      @lewistheberzerker Год назад +12

      You have no idea.....
      I work in a cleanroom in Eindhoven that works almost exclusively for ASML.....
      It's bonkers extremely bonkers....

    • @nicknguyen691
      @nicknguyen691 Год назад

      😔

    • @lktruong
      @lktruong Год назад +4

      I work in tech. Most of these media reports including this one are full of exaggeration. It sounds and looks nice, but reality is very different.

    • @YggKriss
      @YggKriss Год назад +3

      @@lktruong This man doesn't work in tech xD

  • @bravosierra2447
    @bravosierra2447 Год назад +3

    Asianometry channel has a lot of interesting content on this subject. Especially the relationship between Zeiss, ASML & TSMC

    • @mongini1
      @mongini1 Год назад

      Zeiss lays the foundation on our modern tech - period.

  • @jamjardj1974
    @jamjardj1974 Год назад +1

    Fantastically informative, thankyou.

  • @ksawerykaminski2606
    @ksawerykaminski2606 Год назад +13

    The world mainly thanks for ASML's technology, and Taiwanese highly experienced hard workers of TSMC!

  • @miles5600
    @miles5600 Год назад +41

    ASML isn’t a “chip” manufacturing company.
    ASML is the only company in the world that sells EUV machines and that’s what tsmc, intel, apple and amd use.

    • @agentsmith1595
      @agentsmith1595 Год назад +30

      Apple and AMD are chip designers, not manufactures.

    • @miles5600
      @miles5600 Год назад +5

      @@agentsmith1595 i know, but in the end they all depend on ASML, and because intel has their own factories also means they have to deal with way more stuff to upgrade their chips density.

    • @toyotagaz
      @toyotagaz Год назад +10

      And this is the problem
      ASML has a monopoly
      We need more companies and countries building high tech lithography machines

    • @slimjimjimslim5923
      @slimjimjimslim5923 Год назад +4

      @@toyotagaz don’t forget other fab equipment company like Lam Research

    • @miles5600
      @miles5600 Год назад +4

      @@toyotagaz I don’t see a problem with that, no other company has figured out how to build them like ASML and that keeps the company special. I don’t see ASML being a problem since they make breakthrough chips possible by innovation.

  • @olabodeadeleye4771
    @olabodeadeleye4771 Год назад

    My brain continues to be tickled several hours after watching this documentary on chip making.

  • @Blocc187
    @Blocc187 10 месяцев назад +3

    Africa needs its own ASML. 🙌🏿🙌🏿💪🏿💪🏿🇿🇦🇳🇬🌍

  • @krumpy8259
    @krumpy8259 Год назад +25

    It was fun and enlightening to watch this, thank you for this nice production

  • @netgiant2592
    @netgiant2592 Год назад +54

    TSMC already has operational factories just outside of Oregon under its American subsidiary Wafertech for the past 25 years. However their growth and expansion has been stalled over the years due to the high cost of production and lack of a qualified job market for high end chip manufacturing. They’ve tried importing talent from Taiwan in the past with very little success. The cost of US made chip is typically around 50% higher than an identical chip made in Taiwan or China. Would love to see what adjustments they will make this time around to keep costs down in order to be competitive in the market. Although govt subsidies could help but I doubt it is a viable long term solution.

    • @jamram9924
      @jamram9924 Год назад +8

      There is supposed to be another TSMC factory in the Phoenix, AZ area.

    • @bricklawson9745
      @bricklawson9745 Год назад +2

      interesting

    • @johndoh5182
      @johndoh5182 Год назад +4

      This is starting to change. Intel can make chips cheaper than outsourcing to TSMC, which is why they can now price their CPUs about the same as AMD, but Intel has a higher profit margin. Now, Intel is still on a 7nm node (not 10), or it's actually called "Intel 7" and they rebranded their naming because the transistor density is comparable to TSMC.
      There were a couple points made in this video that were wrong. Intel does outsource to TSMC and in fact they've done so for years. They're using TSMC to make the chips for Intel's new line of graphics cards. Intel doesn't outsource for their die for CPUs. They also use TSMC as a subcontractor, but there's no price advantage.

    • @larryc1616
      @larryc1616 Год назад +1

      Yes TSMC have been building new 20B fabs in Arizona for years right in Intel's backyard who is building new 10B fabs.

    • @pphan7475
      @pphan7475 3 месяца назад

      China is not cheap anymore - office and labour

  • @abdulhydar3123
    @abdulhydar3123 Год назад +1

    Lol if seeing this cause I worked in the ASMEL as a field service tech in the building, installing a low-frequency inertial vibration cancellation machine on floor fields.

  • @staninjapan07
    @staninjapan07 Год назад +1

    Detailed and understandable, thank you so much.

  • @tyoong719
    @tyoong719 Год назад +20

    It's misleading to believe EUV is part of the reason that causes chip shortages.

    • @Saxxin1
      @Saxxin1 Год назад +10

      What do you expect from a propaganda network?

  • @almdrs
    @almdrs Год назад +15

    US to Taiwan: "I'm your friend, give me you chip factory".

    • @arlobiega3882
      @arlobiega3882 Год назад +1

      China : Hold Ma Tsingtao Beer, TAIWAN🐼

    • @Keyman135
      @Keyman135 Год назад +2

      Taiwan NO.1, China NO.99

  • @josephwaye7870
    @josephwaye7870 Год назад +1

    謝謝李老師深入淺出的講解!

  • @dennisbwalya4128
    @dennisbwalya4128 Год назад +2

    Awesome technology ideas for the future of the new high tech world. We need to train our citizens in managing, advancing, and protecting our chip manufacturing technology 😊

  • @Joey-ct8bm
    @Joey-ct8bm Год назад +25

    The technology out of the Netherlands is pretty mindblowing. Do you know Bluetooth and WI-FI is also invented in the Netherlands? Every phone or computer in the world is made possible by Dutch technology.

    • @williamearl1662
      @williamearl1662 Год назад +4

      WiFi was invented by the CSIRO science organisation in Australia in the 1990s.

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Год назад +10

      @@williamearl1662 WaveLAN was originally designed by NCR Systems Engineering, later renamed into WCND (Wireless Communication and Networking Division) at Nieuwegein, in the province Utrecht in the Netherlands, a subsidiary of NCR Corporation, in 1986-7, and introduced to the market in 1990 as a wireless alternative to Ethernet and Token Ring.
      You say Australia invented it in 1990, but it was already on the market. Nice copy mate!
      Cees Links also gave WI-FI it's name.

    • @insanoinsano3878
      @insanoinsano3878 Год назад

      I think USA should rethink HAXIXE importation from netherlqnds too, maybe that is the reason for so many good Hi-tec ideas there, just saying..

    • @LoveJoyPeaceAndHopeForAll
      @LoveJoyPeaceAndHopeForAll Год назад +1

      Did you know the first corporate was from the Dutch at all?

    • @user-vu9ow9dz7q
      @user-vu9ow9dz7q Год назад +3

      ASML須要TSMC 因為Tsmc是領導技術 引導Asml去開發製造機器

  • @Chinazi-collapsed
    @Chinazi-collapsed Год назад +14

    Taiwan 🇹🇼 is an amazing country!

    • @h50herman
      @h50herman Год назад

      TSMC was grounded by Philips and the Taiwan government.

  • @gamingforever7336
    @gamingforever7336 Год назад

    This si the Journalism thats needed!! Thank you!

  • @greenmagnus306
    @greenmagnus306 Год назад

    Very nice video on this Chip topic, thank you very much for sharing this CNBC

  • @maximme
    @maximme Год назад +10

    YOU must be dreaming
    if you think merely buying the machines,
    you will be a top tier player.....

    • @zethloveless7238
      @zethloveless7238 Год назад +1

      Actually it would. China currently cant get the new ASML machines which would really help them become a top
      Tier player. The
      Machine is literally the thing holding them back to only as low 7nm chipsets.

    • @censoredyoutube4902
      @censoredyoutube4902 Год назад +3

      @@zethloveless7238 Nope! Chip processing is way more complicated than just what one machine can do. It's not working as simple as you described. It involves a whole lot more sophisticated supply chain. For example, Japan is the one country dominating chemical supplies essential for chip processing. S. Korea was in a serious rift with Japan not long ago because Japan banned those critical chemicals from exporting to S. Korea. Also perhaps not many people know that why Samsung still can't surpass the dominance of TSMC on high-end chip manufacture even Samsung already started mass production of 3nm earlier than TSMC this year. Only insiders know that Samsung's 3nm production has high defective rates, said to be around only 30% of the produced chips usable. Samsung can't beat TSMC in terms of non-defective rates. That's why companies such as Apple, Nvidia , and even Intel outsourced the large chunks of business to TSMC which take up more than 90% of global market share in advanced chips.

    • @maximme
      @maximme Год назад

      @@censoredyoutube4902 EXACTLY RIGHT.
      Intel has a lot of indian engineers
      and
      ALL of ASML equipment.
      Today they have surrendered top tier production to TSMC.
      TSMC has a LOT of china researchers working for them.....

    • @censoredyoutube4902
      @censoredyoutube4902 Год назад

      @@maximme I'm not sure about Chinese researchers working for TSMC though. TSMC is headquartered in Taiwan and very protective of their IP. So I don't think they will work with China on R&D. Lol

    • @maximme
      @maximme Год назад

      @@censoredyoutube4902 China researchers are all over the world.
      They are in Havard, Yale and MIT.
      if you look at STEM graduates each year, the overwhelming majority are from China.

  • @johngordon1175
    @johngordon1175 Год назад +15

    Amd did not reverse engineer the processor they built the processor for themselves,their software was their own not copied, however there was certain features of x86 processors that needed to be addressed before one could use an amd proccessor exactly the same as intel processors but at one time it was suggested that they build their own operating system as the hardware could run faster than intel, but intel had financial and educational backing that AMD & CYRIX didn’t have at that time.

    • @ScoobieDoo-zy1rh
      @ScoobieDoo-zy1rh Год назад

      Wrong , the name x86 I heard was copied from some Indian or German company . It was supposed to be x88. But that was taken by a Chinese company already . 😆

    • @Anonymous-qb4vc
      @Anonymous-qb4vc Год назад +1

      They did, their's early processors were reversed engineered copy of Intel's, they even got sued but later shared their IPs.

    • @Anonymous-qb4vc
      @Anonymous-qb4vc Год назад +1

      @@ScoobieDoo-zy1rh nonsense

    • @ScoobieDoo-zy1rh
      @ScoobieDoo-zy1rh Год назад

      @@Anonymous-qb4vc truth

    • @Anonymous-qb4vc
      @Anonymous-qb4vc Год назад

      @@ScoobieDoo-zy1rh why do u mean source

  • @ganeshram580
    @ganeshram580 Год назад

    Thank you CNBC, super informative :)

  • @Im_Really_Jesus_4real
    @Im_Really_Jesus_4real Год назад

    This is actually insane. Outstanding

  • @whydnot
    @whydnot Год назад +3

    TSMC: We make the world’s most advanced chip.
    Frito Lay: Hold my beer.

  • @busybeez194
    @busybeez194 Год назад +10

    Building fab in Arizona is problematic... They require a lot of water... The lawlessness in Arizona regarding water rights is going to dry up the ground water very soon

    • @mathewvanostin7118
      @mathewvanostin7118 Год назад

      Lol states arent countries. They simpy take the water from Minessota or Montana its not that big of a deal 😂
      They even import from canada which isnt that bad. The cost isnt that much different then tacking it from a arizona water source

  • @sonhoangthanh9418
    @sonhoangthanh9418 Год назад +1

    Very well researched and executed documentary, good job

  • @mdshifathossen5546
    @mdshifathossen5546 5 месяцев назад

    What a great episode it is. Full of modern technological dynasty

  • @xXJOEVXx
    @xXJOEVXx Год назад +26

    I'm in the industry, it's insane the amount of engineering, I love it !

    • @xerogue
      @xerogue Год назад +3

      Who are you betting to win?

    • @rebelembassy7527
      @rebelembassy7527 Год назад

      @@xerogue SMIC

    • @slypear
      @slypear Год назад

      Ditto. 🥳

    • @hackman88
      @hackman88 Год назад +1

      I'm not in the industry and I agree with the insane amount of engineering and physics.

  • @olgaycelik2631
    @olgaycelik2631 Год назад +46

    Even the chip machine manufacturing company has been dealing with chip shortage 😂

    • @xxlookalive239x3
      @xxlookalive239x3 Год назад +1

      *machine

    • @onlythewise1
      @onlythewise1 Год назад

      lol

    • @thefool3727
      @thefool3727 Год назад +5

      tsmc : asml and am, if y’all don’t give me equipments, i can’t make chips
      asml and am : hey tsmc , if you don’t give me chips, i can’t make the equipment for ya

    • @olgaycelik2631
      @olgaycelik2631 Год назад

      @@xxlookalive239x3 this is a great feedback. Thank you the world is relieved now.

    • @xxlookalive239x3
      @xxlookalive239x3 Год назад +2

      @@olgaycelik2631 lol made you edit your comment

  • @markmancuso5377
    @markmancuso5377 9 месяцев назад

    Love innovation of this nature. Faith in American and worldwide innovation. Keep it going.

  • @sh0gun98
    @sh0gun98 Год назад +2

    13:50 I would be interested to see if Intel's new RibbonFET node will actually succeed in improving cost and thermal efficiency.

  • @massv953
    @massv953 Год назад +11

    "TSMC is not a household name" errr since when? TSMC has been at the center of this conversation for YEARS

    • @Nedumgottil
      @Nedumgottil Год назад +6

      The average American doesn’t know of TSMC, compared to companies like Intel, Nvida, and Samsung.
      I believe that is what they ment.

    • @massv953
      @massv953 Год назад

      @@Nedumgottil Odd, Its hard to not know them in the ARM world. Americans not know what their cellphones use?

    • @larryc1616
      @larryc1616 Год назад

      Dumb uneducated people don't know - you know them as lay people

  • @Mindfeels
    @Mindfeels Год назад +9

    Excellent reporting! Very informative.
    ❤❤❤

  • @user-qp2fs3kp9z
    @user-qp2fs3kp9z 10 месяцев назад

    Operated a 242nm Tokyo Electron Nikon tool as well as the 365 NM ASML TWINSCAN
    Loved both my Babiezz

  • @e.l.6092
    @e.l.6092 9 месяцев назад

    Happy to see NBC provide great content.

  • @fdimichele
    @fdimichele Год назад +14

    I would suggest the vertical integration is most important due to supply chain situation and geopolitical challenges. So, yes that is why it makes sense for Intel to spend the money. However, the supply chain and workforce challenges are probably underestimated and the timeline to produce 5 nm or better chips will likely take a year or two longer than expected by Intel.

    • @0farmerjohn0
      @0farmerjohn0 Год назад

      The board of directors and investors don't want to spend money. They want only to earn money. Big corporations are already driving suppliers to the ground by paying close to nothing.

    • @deniseproxima2601
      @deniseproxima2601 Год назад +1

      Africa can make the most. South America and Africa can be imported. They will make their own Tec.

    • @amistrophy
      @amistrophy 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@deniseproxima2601maybe in 30 years

  • @LiveLifeLucratively
    @LiveLifeLucratively Год назад +19

    I love hearing about it, Everything about this is so fascinating.

  • @Zowrou
    @Zowrou 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you so muich!!!! Thank you so so so so much for this information. It was need the most!!! Thank you CNBC for this most valuable information.

  • @rgacusan2002
    @rgacusan2002 Год назад

    wow. what a content. very in-depth and informative

  • @kathleenjames3546
    @kathleenjames3546 Год назад +14

    Thank you for sharing your thoughtful content…for
    putting it out there with the passion that many of us need and strive for. I'm starting to listen to you
    almost every morning. Your voice and words are
    calming, clarifying, uplifting and motivating. It feels real and genuine. I am grateful to have your channel as a source for having a better relationship with myself and the world around me

    • @marryannwhite2759
      @marryannwhite2759 Год назад

      Easy way to build wealth for the next all generation is to consistently invest in trade , and watch them grow ?

    • @marybrandon6943
      @marybrandon6943 Год назад

      quite interesting to know over 97% of the billionaires we know are all secret investor in crypto, that were they grow their billion dollar portfolio ?

    • @stevegulick2463
      @stevegulick2463 Год назад

      Purchasing Bitcoin doesn't always assures winning, the ability to make profit off your capital is what makes you win.. Stop relying on the market price to make profit. Choose trading

    • @benardlambert1888
      @benardlambert1888 Год назад

      @@stevegulick2463 I truly agree with you on that, I must say trading is the future and with the way Bitcoin is growing, it's really advisable for people to trade now.

    • @ChriLuis636
      @ChriLuis636 Год назад

      Initially, my intentions was to start trading Bitcoin full time, I also need good mentorship. Thanks?

  • @MustangsTrainsMowers
    @MustangsTrainsMowers Год назад +9

    Chipping in when the chips are down.

  • @ruthwright6247
    @ruthwright6247 Год назад +1

    Great informative video. Thank you for this awesome info !

  • @TheKopal1234
    @TheKopal1234 Год назад +1

    Amazing story, hats off to consolidate all this

  • @luisquintero2992
    @luisquintero2992 Год назад +14

    Is this a "re-fry" video from 6 months ago, right? 🤔

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe Год назад

      Luisito Yes it is Qué Triste 1

    • @paulzuithoff9527
      @paulzuithoff9527 Год назад

      This is the expanded uncensored director's cut, lol

  • @FunKitYourSelf
    @FunKitYourSelf Год назад +7

    ASML is a awesome company! It doesn't matter if you clean the toilets or build the chip machines. They take care of all their employees. A lot of companies should learn a lesson from them.

  • @tinah142
    @tinah142 Год назад

    This report is so thorough!

  • @squidster3128
    @squidster3128 Год назад +3

    The thing everybody missed out of why would TSMC help Intel to build capabilities to compete with itself in the future? All these will NOT come to pass

  • @judelarkin2883
    @judelarkin2883 Год назад +31

    The capabilities of much of the technology we use is often exaggerated, simpler principles than marketing and culture would have you believe but chip manufacturing is a real wonder of the modern world.

    • @pencilandpaper4516
      @pencilandpaper4516 Год назад +5

      *Why I had the teeling that they were not going to talk about it is the Taiwanese inventor who sold ASML the patented EUV technology*

    • @censoredyoutube4902
      @censoredyoutube4902 Год назад +1

      @@pencilandpaper4516 Whom were you talking about? Anthony Yen? Yen is a EE undergraduate from Purdue Univ., then obtained his PhD from MIT. He realized EUV lithography while working at TSMC to make breakthrough with Moore's law, and then moved to ASML as the Head of Technology Development Center at ASML in 2017. Yen was later awarded the highest honor by IEEE for his breakthrough in EUVL technology. I can't think of anyone else you're referring to.

    • @crazycutz8072
      @crazycutz8072 Год назад

      That's a designer Choice at any company not a chip maker selling point

    • @stevenlau7921
      @stevenlau7921 Год назад +2

      Tsmc’sl success is in their executin land the work ethics of their engineers: their dedications and hard works, no short cuts or magics. Pure executions.!!!🤔🤔👌people:
      Human resource and focus.🇹🇼

  • @fredsmith4134
    @fredsmith4134 Год назад

    chip making is a modern miracle, the mind boggling small scale of what they do is astounding, and to think when they put four transistor's into a chip package they thought that was cutting edge at one time, they put millions of them into one chip now ???

  • @brexistentialism7628
    @brexistentialism7628 Год назад +2

    Proper Dutch CEO 😃😃 nice guy

  • @AgentSmith911
    @AgentSmith911 Год назад +5

    It's gonna be interesting to see what can be done with less than 1 nm with GAA and nanosheet tech

    • @therealdutchidiot
      @therealdutchidiot Год назад +1

      Less than 1nm opens you i up to a world of quantum level hurt.

    • @leogama3422
      @leogama3422 Год назад +1

      Maybe if you ask electrons kindly enough to not quantum tunnel through the gates?

    • @shmookins
      @shmookins Год назад

      IBM (and I think also Intel) demoed one atom transistors. A single atom.
      But ultimately, we will hit a limit. I think we are safe for at least a couple of decades.

    • @therealdutchidiot
      @therealdutchidiot Год назад

      @@shmookins There's a problem with that though, because a transistor isn't a single component, meaning they can't ever be the size of just a single atom.
      It seems more likely to me that you've seen pictures that were taken at a virtual single atom resolution a released by IBM some time back. But being able to "see" it doesn't mean you can produce at those limits.

    • @SplendidKunoichi
      @SplendidKunoichi Год назад

      @@therealdutchidiot even aristotle could tell atoms aren't "a single component" come on now

  • @MrRight-xc5nw
    @MrRight-xc5nw Год назад +4

    If I learned anything it’s that I need to invest in AMSL stock. How come I didn’t hear about them 20 years ago. I suppose they still have another decade if not more as leader. Not sure who is making lithography machines. Seems they will be the leader for quite some time.

  • @kylehawj2273
    @kylehawj2273 Год назад +1

    I want to work at asml!! I have always wanted to work for them!! Since i heard about them 15yrs ago!!

  • @balboaid1
    @balboaid1 Год назад

    Amazing production!!