The Entire World Relies on a Machine Made by ONE Company

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 3,1 тыс.

  • @Newsthink
    @Newsthink  2 года назад +535

    *@**1:38** We made a mistake and the map of the Netherlands was not to scale. Face palm moment*
    Visit brilliant.org/Newsthink/ to get started learning math, science, and computer science for FREE, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.

    • @charliewinterss
      @charliewinterss 2 года назад +10

      At 3:57 is not the Chinese flag

    • @worldmapping4895
      @worldmapping4895 2 года назад +16

      @@charliewinterss it is

    • @napoleon848
      @napoleon848 2 года назад +36

      @@worldmapping4895 Its not the flag of the real china ;)

    • @worldmapping4895
      @worldmapping4895 2 года назад

      @@napoleon848 communist china won the civil war so keep crying

    • @kanarie93
      @kanarie93 2 года назад +59

      we still wish it was that size, kingdom of the netherlands.

  • @MrZorroZorroZ
    @MrZorroZorroZ 2 года назад +4736

    In ASMLs video about their new machine, one of the engineers said the lenses by Carl Zeiss used in the machine are so flat, that if the lens were scaled up to the size of the USA, the largest bump would be the size of a dust particle. That's just insane

  • @ariearie5054
    @ariearie5054 2 года назад +836

    I grew up in Eindhoven and studied at the technical university. Everyone knows ASML here. One of my physics professors once said that the speed of progress in the world gets set here in Veldhoven by ASML, since they set the benchmark for the fastest chips.

    • @pietheijn-vo1gt
      @pietheijn-vo1gt 2 года назад +19

      I study there now. We have guest lectures from ASML, part time professors from ASML, there is even a template contract when doing work with ASML because internships and graduation projects are so common.

    • @seb4sti4n666
      @seb4sti4n666 2 года назад +8

      This is not entire true. If somebody use light and not electron to do stuff, it will be faster then what they produce right now. So they are making the fastest electron chips, but not the fastest.

    • @molrat
      @molrat 2 года назад

      kanker kaaskop

    • @mpownage4806
      @mpownage4806 2 года назад +17

      @@seb4sti4n666 except that isnt the case here, so they do make the fastest chips

    • @seb4sti4n666
      @seb4sti4n666 2 года назад

      @@mpownage4806 What about photonic chips then?

  • @MarcMichaud-lm2cq
    @MarcMichaud-lm2cq 9 месяцев назад +254

    I believe a short history lesson is called for here. ASML bought out a company called Silicon Valley Group (SVG), which had previously purchased the Microlithography division from Perkin-Elmer who had originally developed the technology in Wilton Connecticut, USA. How do I know this? I worked for SVG for 11 years, and my father worked for all 3 corporations for 46 years, and was one of the research and development engineers who made it all happen. In fact, my father was one of the physicists who cracked the deep UV problem in the 90's while working for SVG in Wilton, CT. The manufacturing facilities are continuing to operate in Wilton Connecticut, USA where most of the R&D still occurs.

    • @SixOhFive
      @SixOhFive 9 месяцев назад +3

      Very cool

    • @somcode5831
      @somcode5831 9 месяцев назад +21

      Your father can make billions working for china

    • @blind245
      @blind245 8 месяцев назад +14

      Tell you father to work for china

    • @JohnDoe34548
      @JohnDoe34548 8 месяцев назад

      swears...

    • @InvisibleHotdog
      @InvisibleHotdog 6 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@somcode5831 you think China would honor anything? lol

  • @kasimirdenhertog3516
    @kasimirdenhertog3516 2 года назад +1921

    In The Netherlands, ASML is often mentioned in the news, always described as a ‘chip maker’. So I thought it was a small sort of Intel, making chips for some niche markets. This video completely changes that perspective. I wouldn’t call them a ‘chip maker’ at all! They’re the company making the machines that make chips, something different entirely! It’s like calling JCB a building company…

    • @justayoutuber1906
      @justayoutuber1906 2 года назад +38

      Who is JCB?

    • @PDBisht
      @PDBisht 2 года назад +34

      @@justayoutuber1906 lol

    • @KucheKlizma
      @KucheKlizma 2 года назад +71

      You could say that they are more of a ""chip maker" maker."

    • @kasimirdenhertog3516
      @kasimirdenhertog3516 2 года назад +85

      @@justayoutuber1906 JCB is a company that makes (among other things) construction equipment, like the cranes and shovels you need on a building site. So they're not a building company but a company that makes equipment for building companies to do their building 🙂

    • @RedRingOfDead
      @RedRingOfDead 2 года назад +5

      @@kasimirdenhertog3516 mate honest you just found out ASML is one of our best grossing companies 😂. No stress tho, i also only know for a year. But damn mate, you're right about JCB. But the same goes for Manitou, Lindt or still.

  • @michaelkeudel8770
    @michaelkeudel8770 Год назад +54

    Started working on EUV stuff back around 2014, 9 years later I'm involved in it's vacuum control system design. Been an interesting ride so far, and the changes never stop as fine tuning in the processes get worked out requiring different controls, valves, gases, volume, evacuation, abatement, etc.... most fun job I've ever had,

    • @danicule8671
      @danicule8671 4 месяца назад +2

      You should not say you work for ASML, maybe go watch the safety CBT again

    • @michaelkeudel8770
      @michaelkeudel8770 4 месяца назад

      @@danicule8671 I never said I work for ASML, I said the machine I design, prototype and build is connected directly to the ASML EUV. The system I'm involved in provides the Vacuum Control System for the ASML EUV.

    • @JR-mh8vn
      @JR-mh8vn Месяц назад

      @@danicule8671 Doubt he worked there.

  • @imdoodoo9412
    @imdoodoo9412 2 года назад +1538

    Wow I didn’t know ASML was that big, I live in the Netherlands, and I am a CNC lathe worker for a local company. I make some simple pieces for ASML not thinking it was that big of a company. Sick!!

    • @debraerts9171
      @debraerts9171 2 года назад +49

      Yea i know right, I am a sheet RSV worker for a metalworking company in Bergeijk. We make some of the more conplecated parts for their prototypes

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm 2 года назад +57

      Did you know WIFI and Bluetooth are also Dutch inventions!?

    • @imdoodoo9412
      @imdoodoo9412 2 года назад +10

      @@Joey-ct8bm yess I do haha

    • @PatrikKron
      @PatrikKron 2 года назад +51

      ​@@Joey-ct8bm I thought Bluetooth was a Swedish invention. Apparently, it was developed in part by a dutch person for Ericsson (company) in Lund, Sweden.

    • @findingandvalue
      @findingandvalue 2 года назад +17

      @@Joey-ct8bm Bluetooth is swedish.

  • @eriknystrom5839
    @eriknystrom5839 2 года назад +459

    Please note: ASML advanced EUV lithography uses mirrors instead of lenses, as EUV light cannot pass any lense material. For the slightly less advanced technology, DUV, lenses are used.

    • @bigsmall246
      @bigsmall246 2 года назад +7

      Man, thanks for the info.
      It's astounding how most people are just lazy and pass on their misconceptions to others, when all the info is readily available on Google.

    • @markhonea2461
      @markhonea2461 2 года назад +5

      You have been watching 'asianometry' haven't you?

    • @eriknystrom5839
      @eriknystrom5839 2 года назад +7

      @@markhonea2461 I checked the channel, found out about how Zeiss and ASML worked together on the EUV mirrors.

    • @Newsthink
      @Newsthink  2 года назад +14

      Just released a video on Zeiss's mirrors ruclips.net/video/AHfQLjtLJdY/видео.html

    • @molrat
      @molrat 2 года назад

      kanker kaaskop

  • @pranavmanie1479
    @pranavmanie1479 11 месяцев назад +43

    what is more impressive about ASML is that their stronghold in EUV lithography is not because of a patent advantage. It's because it's DAMN hard to build a machine like that. They know how to do business.

  • @SeverityOne
    @SeverityOne 2 года назад +42

    A friend of mine works there. He had a PhD in physics. There is A LOT of high tech companies around Eindhoven in the Netherlands, and it's not a coincidence that the Eindhoven University of Technology exists.

    • @draregrevtaam1147
      @draregrevtaam1147 2 года назад +2

      Brainport. If anything we should appreciate as dutchies is the way this country provides incredibly efficient and advanced hubs.

    • @Toderiox
      @Toderiox 2 года назад +3

      Interesting, it is the Belgium research facility called IMEC that has pushed ASML to the company it is today and their partnership since 1991. ASML builds the machines but the knowledge and tools are done by IMEC.

    • @jasonborne5724
      @jasonborne5724 8 месяцев назад +2

      Sounds like an idea target for a Chinese EMP……

  • @Rick-vm8bl
    @Rick-vm8bl 2 года назад +64

    It's more concerning that just 1 location has the ability to produce such a vital piece of equipment.

    • @dennisengelen2517
      @dennisengelen2517 2 года назад

      Better a friendly peaceful nation in Western Europe than a country like China, Russia or the US to have this though.

    • @oybekolimov2458
      @oybekolimov2458 2 года назад +24

      But I am happy it's not a country or government who uses it as a politics tool

    • @adayinthelife5496
      @adayinthelife5496 2 года назад +4

      Soon to be China too from the sounds of it.

    • @ultranux
      @ultranux 10 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@oybekolimov2458thats what the us is aiming for. Making it a political weapon

    • @caterpilar
      @caterpilar 4 месяца назад +15

      @@oybekolimov2458 this video _literary_ tells you how it's already used for US political gains

  • @nameinvalid69
    @nameinvalid69 2 года назад +36

    there are a tons of "how it's made" videos, but it's not very common to find video about who made the machine factory uses, this is good one. Wish there are more.

  • @numberpirate
    @numberpirate 2 года назад +322

    For an explanation of how the photolithography works, basically:
    1. 300mm wafer is put on a chuck, it is held down by suction.
    2. a photosensitive chemical is laid down. The thickness is determined by pour rate and rpm of spinning wafer which distributes and sheds any excess.
    3. quick bake of photosensitive chemical.
    4. loaded into photolithog machine. The ones I used were Nikons. But I remember having ASMLs next door. A UV light is generated using mercury arc lamps, the image is shrunk a different amount, (2x, 4, 5x) using a lens. The image is serially burned into the wafer, called step and repeat. This is why you see the same pattern on the wafer.
    5. Once done the wafer has its images developed. I remember using HMDS hexamethadisilazane (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bis(trimethylsilyl)amine). Then I believe it is baked again.
    6. then off to CMP(cold metal polish), where they grind off the excess to expose either the circuit wires or the spaces those wires will go.
    There were many layers to the chips, each one requiring the blue print of the circuit to be photolithogged on. the circuit layers had a M prefix, like M1, M2 etc, interconnecting(so perpendicular to the chip surface would be called V1, V2 etc (for via, road in latin), then there were random names for the n-wells and p-wells.
    20 years ago or so I worked at an IBM 200mm line in Vermont. Since then it has been bought by the middle eastern fab company called Global Semiconductor. I still remember enough to explain it apparently but forgot enough to not remember the trauma of working 12 hour shifts lol.
    PS Nikon was a competitor

    • @slawomirczekaj6667
      @slawomirczekaj6667 2 года назад +11

      that is the theory. In Practice to do it is a completely different story. My PhD Thesis in antiferromagnetic domains studied by PEEM using synchrotron light was based on one sample. I have produced 70. But all but one were completely useless. I new the exact conditions how it was produced. Or did I? that is the difference between theoretically knowing how to do something and actually doing it. Working on a production line does not make you an expert in the technology.

    • @Musicdudeyoutub
      @Musicdudeyoutub 2 года назад +22

      @@slawomirczekaj6667 "In theory there is no difference between practice and theory, in practice there is"

    • @bambur1
      @bambur1 2 года назад +4

      HMDS then photoresist. HMDS is an adhesion promoter that prevents the resit from lifting. 12 hour shifts..Yea 7pm- 7 am making 386,486,K5-K6 w/3Dnow in the 90s @ AMD

    • @tomoconnell2320
      @tomoconnell2320 2 года назад +9

      Middle eastern fab isn’t exactly a fair way to describe GloFo…. They used to be AMD and are currently a public company. Yes they were owned by a sovereign wealth fund for a few years but they are certainly a US headquartered company and now are a US owned company

    • @robmerrill3460
      @robmerrill3460 2 года назад +2

      worked at varian semiconductor - but built gas based lasers vs the photolithography mentioned here.

  • @pancaagung3653
    @pancaagung3653 2 года назад +11

    Dutch company having the monopoly of one of the most precious commodity? Indonesians having VOC flashbacks LOL

  • @s0659651
    @s0659651 2 года назад +62

    Thanks for doing a video on this. I’ve heard about the Dutch company but this was very informative. Great video.

  • @gag_singh
    @gag_singh 2 года назад +849

    Great, now make a video about Zeiss lenses that ASML uses in their lithography machines. Fun fact both Zeiss and philips helped in building ASML as a company.

    • @temenow
      @temenow 2 года назад +16

      Haha, but ASML and Zeiss are one family 😂 Those Zeiss mirrors are crazily big ! #3FM Project🤣

    • @othmarbrunner9639
      @othmarbrunner9639 2 года назад

      good point Gagan I said in one of my e-mails that without American chip design ASML would not exist
      why is the media always bias and never really tells the truth

    • @dreckman69
      @dreckman69 2 года назад +33

      Someone watches asianometry here, or at least you should watch his channel if you're interested in the chipmaking process. He has a great video on zeiss and their mirrors. He also goes in much greater depth on EUV and other technologies in the process.

    • @gag_singh
      @gag_singh 2 года назад +5

      @@dreckman69 yep i've subscribed to it and watched most of the documentaries but i still think we need a few more videos on Zeiss. Content related to it is pretty much scarce.

    • @madloop3217
      @madloop3217 2 года назад +9

      Fun fact: ASML don't even own the software to run that.

  • @bigutubefan2738
    @bigutubefan2738 2 года назад +5

    Great video Cindy - nice work. Hope to see more from you in future.

  • @johnkingsley9525
    @johnkingsley9525 2 года назад +321

    My radio when I was a kid had tubes so when I read these comments they are Latin to me but I am blown away by the progress that has been made in just my 86 years. My hat is off to the scientific community and let’s pray that all these accomplishments go toward the good of mankind 🙏

    • @glasstuna
      @glasstuna 2 года назад +7

      You haven't been paying attention.

    • @zapfska7390
      @zapfska7390 2 года назад +6

      bro really said pray lol

    • @FilosophicalPharmer
      @FilosophicalPharmer 2 года назад +13

      I’m 53, John, a GenX’er. I see what was, what is and what’s coming. I’m afraid life has become so complicated, no one has the time to appreciate the venerable vacuum tube or any other tech the young people today take for granted. Good for you commenting on videos at 86!! 👍🏼

    • @FilosophicalPharmer
      @FilosophicalPharmer 2 года назад +2

      @@glasstuna You can only “pay attention” to things that ACTUALLY EXIST. The year I saw first jpeg from web, John was 55 years old, if my math is correct.

    • @antiqueantique7786
      @antiqueantique7786 2 года назад +8

      @@FilosophicalPharmer Being GenX is like standing with your feet planted in two alien worlds.

  • @sevdalink6676
    @sevdalink6676 2 года назад +153

    I do not remember when a story fascinated me like this one. To be the only one in the world manufacturing something, and to not get copied, is really unbelievable.

    • @RetroJack
      @RetroJack 2 года назад +38

      Like most things that "can't be copied", you can be sure the chinese are working on it.

    • @evermunt
      @evermunt 2 года назад +33

      @@RetroJack they are trying for decades now. They've tried to make an exact copy of the ones they have, but it didn't work. And the chinees are experts in copying stuff ;-)

    • @marioluigi9599
      @marioluigi9599 2 года назад +9

      Yeah and just about the only other thing that they can't copy is Rolls Royce / GE's jet engines.

    • @michaelxz1305
      @michaelxz1305 2 года назад +17

      There's some slight barriers to entry. It's not like copying legos

    • @fineguy334
      @fineguy334 2 года назад +1

      @@RetroJack, you can be sure russian already making cpus

  • @bigchill9065
    @bigchill9065 Год назад +16

    fun fact: The EUV lasers, that are employed inside the lithography machines of ASML are made by a german company called TRUMPF. It is the only company world wide that can build these lasers.

    • @WazzoLazr
      @WazzoLazr 8 месяцев назад

      As the ASML ceo mentioned, never say never. Someone might be already working on making them somewhere else. Laws of physics are same in China.

    • @marcdeboer1280
      @marcdeboer1280 8 месяцев назад

      Actually, it's the CO2 laser from TRUMPF you're describing; it's not an EUV laser. This laser shoots each tin droplet twice, first to flatten the drop and increase it's surface area then again to energize the tin and cause it to release EUV photons. These photons are then in turn mirrored onward. These lasers also are not inside the actual machine like the NXE but are sent from an outside beam tube. The CO2 laser itself is another $50M behemoth.

    • @sakthiarul109
      @sakthiarul109 5 месяцев назад

      Co2 laser invented by an Indian kumar patel....Raman effect by an indian CV Raman

  • @stevemcdonnell2922
    @stevemcdonnell2922 2 года назад +44

    I saw an ASML Air Frieght Crate slipping off the Elevator while unloading at the airport. Luckily they are shipped in 5 Crates (each machine doesn't all come in one part) and there wasn't much physical damage but there was a €90 million cost and 6 month delay just to readjust the accuracy tolerance parameters of the lasers. Crazy.

    • @cvn6555
      @cvn6555 2 года назад +4

      That is an "Oh, sht!" moment.

    • @soulergy1soulrgy1
      @soulergy1soulrgy1 6 месяцев назад

      @@cvn6555it's a holy fu@k moment!

  • @greatndit
    @greatndit 2 года назад +237

    And the heart of ASML lithography machine is lenses from Carl Zeiss

    • @12time12
      @12time12 2 года назад +19

      IMO, it’s actually the EUV laser because the design of such was incredibly difficult due to the possibility of liquid tin explosions fowling optics.

    • @gurbanguliberdimuhamedov4228
      @gurbanguliberdimuhamedov4228 2 года назад +2

      @@12time12 isn't laser would require lenses?

    • @12time12
      @12time12 2 года назад +2

      @@gurbanguliberdimuhamedov4228 yes, but there are lense manufacturers in Japan and the US who can develop similar lenses. That doesn’t take away from the incredible Zeiss lenses. The laser was easily the most difficult part of EUV, there is very little room for error. I encourage you to watch the Asianometry video about EUV, he gives a quick explainer. If you want more in-depth discussion then Google scholar has the best work.

    • @marcelvszurek7607
      @marcelvszurek7607 2 года назад +16

      The EUV systems dont use lenses, becaus most of the euv light would be absorbed that way. Instead they use hightech mirrors

    • @yomiyama
      @yomiyama 2 года назад +11

      @@12time12 , incorrect, you don't know what you're talking about. There aren't anyone that's able to build perfect on an atomic scale mirrors like Zeiss does. These mirrors are grown in labs for half a year, and if something goes wrong you lose basically twice as much money while growing it, it's a risky business so no one attempted it other than Zeiss thanks to their partnership with ASML.
      Edit: apparently the person I answered deleted the comment in question.
      Originally, the comment I answered was something in the lines "Anyway, there are countries like Japan that can manufacture such mirrors".

  • @Eitner100
    @Eitner100 2 года назад +22

    My deepest respect for all those engineers, designers, technicians and others who were there from the beginning constructing this marvel.

    • @Davethreshold
      @Davethreshold 4 месяца назад

      ITA! I STILL have great respect for an ancient Hard Drive that was 50 MB and cost a thousand dollars, back in the day!

  • @tetchuma
    @tetchuma 2 года назад +146

    I work in the Photo (Photolithography Dept) at Texas Instruments. Our fab is full of ASML machines. DUV’s are our fastest tools, where I-Line tools are slower (typically an older-style, thicker wafers, but still important to the supply chain.)

    • @alvinalsino7836
      @alvinalsino7836 2 года назад +2

      TI Baguio or TI pampanga?

    • @ElBach1y
      @ElBach1y 2 года назад

      that's rad

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 2 года назад

      What's DUV mean? (I guess UV = ultraviolet?)

    • @jeroen81
      @jeroen81 2 года назад +3

      @@rosiefay7283 Deep UV. It's mentioned and somewhat explained at 2:00.

    • @seawatchmakers
      @seawatchmakers 2 года назад +2

      Litho is just one process in semiconductor manufacturing. There are many other process example Etch , thin films ETC.

  • @PopeBenedictXVIHollyman
    @PopeBenedictXVIHollyman 2 года назад +109

    Almost every chips made with 7 or 3 nanometer technology are use for cellphone, tablet or high end graphics (better known as gaming). Most of the automotive and general appliance use typically 28 nanometer technology because it's much cheaper and especially because it's much more robust in a variety of harsh environment. The Russian and Chinese military and space industry also use widely the 28 nanometer chips or bigger, in combination with special hardening technologies against electronic warfare and cosmic radiation.

    • @DavidKnowles0
      @DavidKnowles0 2 года назад +2

      There is a big move towards using mass produce civilian technology in military applications.

    • @bigsmall246
      @bigsmall246 2 года назад +12

      @@DavidKnowles0 it's just a matter of cost. Mass-produced civilian stuff is so much cheaper than custom-made military stuff.

    • @mynameismatt2010
      @mynameismatt2010 2 года назад +2

      The main reason the US doesn’t want China to get the most up to date chips is they want to stay ahead on the AI front.

    • @nasseemmuttur778
      @nasseemmuttur778 2 года назад

      @@mynameismatt2010, it's more the US want to prevent China from being the leader in AI.

    • @burakozc3079
      @burakozc3079 2 года назад +2

      @@mynameismatt2010 china doesnt need silicon chips to be good at a.i. think again.

  • @Wrutschgeluck
    @Wrutschgeluck 2 года назад +8

    I work in a separated company of the company Carl Zeiss in Jena
    and I'm proud to say that we're the only ones that can make the metrology that's built into THIS lithography machine.
    This sayed, ASML can only build their machines because of our products. :)

    • @bartobruintjes7056
      @bartobruintjes7056 2 года назад +2

      You must be proud.

    • @Wrutschgeluck
      @Wrutschgeluck 2 года назад +4

      @@bartobruintjes7056 everything connects on the world somehow. even we cant build this sensors without other companys. if you do work, you should be always proud of what you did :)

    • @JR-mh8vn
      @JR-mh8vn Месяц назад

      @@bartobruintjes7056 why do I see so many salty Americans in this comment section? Saw 1 American type a whole essay about how Americans if they wanted could build such machines themselfes as they are leading in such tech and blabla while we all know if a American company could make some money they would've already been making them years ago

  • @lawrencefrost9063
    @lawrencefrost9063 2 года назад +74

    It was about three years ago when I saw a video about ASML and it's Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography technology and when I found out there isn't a single entity in the universe that has this technology I immediately realized the gravity of the situation. I also told my friends who invest to check this company out, because they will be the most important and underappreciated company in this space by far for a long time. I remember the video I saw about them was aptly named "the most important company you have never heard of"

    • @lUnderdogl
      @lUnderdogl 2 года назад

      I randomly found out asml. Working in 3th world county pushed my to check job offers. Wanted thing that i saw was incredibly then i dig. Now we are here my dude. This mfs can singlehandedly cause war.

    • @eliharman
      @eliharman 2 года назад +10

      I can't imagine how you know this technology doesn't exist *anywhere* else in the universe...

    • @PDBisht
      @PDBisht 2 года назад

      @@eliharman haha

    • @Megalomaniakaal
      @Megalomaniakaal 2 года назад +11

      @@eliharman If you get a super powerful microscope and read the fine print it says: "...universe as known by humans at the time of writing."

    • @lawrencefrost9063
      @lawrencefrost9063 2 года назад +4

      @@eliharman The presumption was made that we are the only semi-advanced species in the universe ;D But it also sounded cooler than "the world"

  • @Blurb111
    @Blurb111 2 года назад +33

    I lived near ASML for many years and I never knew it produced something so important. They don’t talk much about it on the Netherlands.

    • @you2be839
      @you2be839 2 года назад +7

      ASML in the semiconductor industry is probably the equivalent of KUKA in the automotive industry
      Everyone knows about Intel and AMD and TSMC and Porsche and Mercedes and BMW.
      But how many have ever heard about ASML and KUKA?...

    • @magnusericsson
      @magnusericsson 2 года назад

      Yeah, I feel the same about Mycronic. It was just a building located wierdly between the highway and the towns only outside pool.

  • @elblopex
    @elblopex 2 года назад +4

    And what machine is used to build this one? THATS the real deal

  • @Solvables
    @Solvables 2 года назад +15

    ASML’s San Diego teams & subsidiaries (Cymer) help lead their lithography program. Very proud as a San Diegan to contribute to this incredible story out of the Netherlands.

    • @kl1970
      @kl1970 Год назад

      Arent the pulse sources made there?

    • @sepolopez6706
      @sepolopez6706 Год назад +1

      CYMER is 100% ASML, the USA has nothing to do with this.

  • @edwinov
    @edwinov 2 года назад +111

    The fastest chips in the world are from Croky. A Dutch chips brand. They come in different flavours, personally I prefer 'Paprika' the most. They are so fast that once I open the bag it's empty in a minute or two. Now, that's fast!

    • @DriftWizard750
      @DriftWizard750 2 года назад

      What factory does the “paprika” come from?

    • @edwinov
      @edwinov 2 года назад +5

      @@DriftWizard750 It's called 'Earth'.

    • @erikstekelenburg3020
      @erikstekelenburg3020 Год назад +3

      🤣👍

    • @andrealexandre2422
      @andrealexandre2422 Год назад +3

      Ik ga helemaal stuk van je opmerking Croky chips!..hoe verzin je het 😂

    • @erikstekelenburg3020
      @erikstekelenburg3020 Год назад +1

      @@andrealexandre2422 Dat weet ik eigenlijk ook niet, maar ik vond't wel geinig klinken in deze setting. 🤣👍

  • @alansandybay
    @alansandybay 2 года назад +18

    This is the reason why helping companies High Value Technology Industries is essential to the growth of a country

  • @lurkalisk
    @lurkalisk 2 года назад +19

    Fun fact:
    Part of ASML's earlier success came from (allegedly) violating Nikon patents (Nikon was the previous leader in high end lithography equipment). Nikon ultimately settled several lawsuits for what now seems like a small amount, but they do effectively get royalties from some of ASML's activities.

    • @keithframe3489
      @keithframe3489 11 месяцев назад

      But Nikon's dead

    • @lurkalisk
      @lurkalisk 11 месяцев назад

      @@keithframe3489 Uh, no, they are not.

  • @lazyboy9362
    @lazyboy9362 2 года назад +7

    I work at a company that makes a part of the machine and its realy cool to see what kind of stuff they do with it

  • @TheAverageDutchman
    @TheAverageDutchman 2 года назад +54

    I've been working on a subsystem of the ASML NXE systems since 2012 and it's fun to see it going from something nobodies ever heard of to being much more widely known, in the news and recognized as the technological tour-de-force that it is.

  • @jolex_nerd8132
    @jolex_nerd8132 2 года назад +9

    As a dutch person, i am proud of this video.

    • @deborahwhit9583
      @deborahwhit9583 6 месяцев назад

      Iam part dutch....Dutch. English and Welsh

  • @just1it1moko
    @just1it1moko 2 года назад +24

    I used to work for FedEx in Veldhoven and you wouldn't believe how many man sized packages they ship out daily. its insane!

    • @molrat
      @molrat 2 года назад

      kanker kaaskop

    • @molrat
      @molrat 2 года назад

      @@just1it1moko neeuuuu ik ben een domme kutbelg

  • @isaosauzedde5513
    @isaosauzedde5513 2 года назад +35

    I was so confused at what was happening at 1:38. The zoom on Netherland makes it looks like they invaded Belgium, France, Luxembourg and Germany all at the same time.

    • @davidvandenberg846
      @davidvandenberg846 2 года назад +1

      Yea right? I was like what the f. Is this...

    • @Newsthink
      @Newsthink  2 года назад +4

      Apologies we made an error; it wasn’t to scale

    • @Holland1994D
      @Holland1994D 2 года назад +1

      @@Newsthink It's also the wrong way, because the islands are now on land?

    • @CrazyDutchguys
      @CrazyDutchguys 2 года назад +11

      The map is a few years ahead of its time.
      BEWARE, EUROPE, WE ARE COMING

    • @DuBstep115
      @DuBstep115 2 года назад

      @@Newsthink Why USA is banning European country for selling its products on the free markets and why you are so proud of it?

  • @michaelsaucier9790
    @michaelsaucier9790 21 минуту назад

    I work for a glass optics company in Connecticut, and we make lithography stages for ASML‘s printing machines

  • @gabrielrej834
    @gabrielrej834 2 года назад +22

    I work at a company that supplies ASML with electric cabinets that serve as controllers for those EUV machines. Each EUV machine uses 1-2 of our cabinets.
    We make 7 a week.
    So only in the past year ASML's production line increased by about 300 new EUV machines.
    This is an outstanding pace of growth.

    • @heardistance
      @heardistance 2 года назад

      Surely they buying for the future production, just in case. That will explain why they order that much cabinets.

    • @permanenceinchange2326
      @permanenceinchange2326 2 года назад +6

      And I work at a company that supplies companies that make electric cabinets with special pallets to ship them to ASML :) (and many more parts). It sometimes seems the whole region is the supply chain to ASML... that should also be mentioned. Among them are other high tech industries on which ASML depends for their parts - like VDL and Prodrive. Those are also the key to success.

    • @heardistance
      @heardistance 2 года назад +2

      @@permanenceinchange2326 Hi tech need really that much, and mostly in high quality.

    • @tiemen9095
      @tiemen9095 2 года назад +2

      @@permanenceinchange2326 nah, not the region but the whole country. I worked in Z-Holland at a company that also supplies ASML and I was sometimes in touch with our suppliers also in Overijssel, N-Holland and elsewhere.

    • @kphillips999
      @kphillips999 2 года назад +5

      @@tiemen9095 nah, not the whole country, but a huge part of the world. I work in California and ASML has a huge stamp here as well.

  • @SP4CEBAR
    @SP4CEBAR 2 года назад +4

    This was the most seamless transition to a Brilliant AD I've seen so far

  • @joebass5
    @joebass5 2 года назад +1

    Beautiful video. Your voice, pace, content…perfect. Keep up the great work.

  • @YnseSchaap
    @YnseSchaap 2 года назад +28

    1:37 You just gave us Belgium and half of western Germany 😁 Thank you

    • @Newsthink
      @Newsthink  2 года назад +5

      Total face palm moment on our part! My bad.

    • @YnseSchaap
      @YnseSchaap 2 года назад

      @@Newsthink 😁

    • @jingex7816
      @jingex7816 2 года назад +6

      Rightful Dutch land.

    • @YnseSchaap
      @YnseSchaap 2 года назад

      @@jingex7816 🤣

  • @thomvanhoof480
    @thomvanhoof480 2 года назад +12

    I study mechanical engineering pretty close too where ASML is located basically all of our courses have some sort of ASML reference. Our study association is sponsored by them.
    We learn their much more expensive and less widely used version of CAD software(which I must admit is pretty good).
    It’s incredible how much influence they have

    • @robertr7923
      @robertr7923 2 года назад +1

      Groetjes uit eindhoven

    • @molrat
      @molrat 2 года назад

      kanker kaaskop

    • @thomvanhoof480
      @thomvanhoof480 2 года назад

      @@molrat Eric doe rustag

    • @molrat
      @molrat 2 года назад

      @@thomvanhoof480 zo kan ik echt niet met je werken eric

  • @Davethreshold
    @Davethreshold 4 месяца назад +1

    THIS was fantastic. I try to follow this technology as a technically proficient Layperson, but I never knew the light waves were so small, that they, "Came From Outer Space!" BRILLIANT!

  • @domingosvarelamarreiros7490
    @domingosvarelamarreiros7490 2 года назад +42

    As someone studying Mechanical Engineering in Eindhoven (basically where ASML is), every single day I hear about it but do notice outside the Netherlands (and even within) it’s not that known. Glad to see it recognise as the absolute beast of a company that it is!

  • @Netsuko
    @Netsuko 2 года назад +10

    Even before I clicked the video I KNEW it had to be ASML. It’s crazy how reliant we are on their tech.

    • @you2be839
      @you2be839 2 года назад

      Absolutely crazy if you ask me, at least on the long run: largest supplier of photolithography systems; and the whole EUV photolithography show run by one and only one company in the whole world, what could ever go wrong!...

    • @michaelxz1305
      @michaelxz1305 2 года назад

      Yup it was obvious

    • @jackelgitino631
      @jackelgitino631 2 года назад

      Wifi , bluetooth, telescopes , radio , aaah so more
      The netherlands make it happen.
      And we fight against the northern sea the same time.

  • @Oxazepam65
    @Oxazepam65 2 года назад +707

    If Netherland ever stop selling their most advanced machine to Canada, we will stop selling them maple syrup. 🦫🇨🇦

    • @miles5600
      @miles5600 2 года назад +23

      love you, won't stop selling.
      not gimme ma syrup.

    • @thommyneter168
      @thommyneter168 2 года назад +62

      I don't think I've ever seen Canadian maple syrup in a Dutch supermarkt sorry

    • @miles5600
      @miles5600 2 года назад +12

      @@thommyneter168 than look better cause we do have maple cyrup

    • @jerardang3662
      @jerardang3662 2 года назад +6

      A fucking leaf

    • @AlbertAlbertB.
      @AlbertAlbertB. 2 года назад +2

      Hahahahahaha

  • @matthewhuszarik4173
    @matthewhuszarik4173 11 месяцев назад +1

    Much of the technology in AMSL lithography machines use was developed in the US and purchased by AMSL. AMSL is more an aggregator of technology much of it purchased in US technology acquisitions. That is why the US has so much control over who AMSL does business with.

  • @alexanderphilip1809
    @alexanderphilip1809 2 года назад +132

    ASML just got thrown into the spotlight after the chip crunch. I remember reading about their EUV machines which were used at TSMC's fabs and then suddenly they are on the news and everything. Also should've added Carl Zeiss and imec to the list.

    • @sybrandwoudstra9236
      @sybrandwoudstra9236 2 года назад

      And the Chinese stealing the technology in 2018.
      }:(

    • @shivabreathes
      @shivabreathes 2 года назад

      Now you know why China wants to take over Taiwan so badly

    • @Brozius2512
      @Brozius2512 2 года назад

      @@TheCarmacon VDL ETG in the Netherlands is also a big part of of building the ASML machines. I know because I work there.

    • @Newsthink
      @Newsthink  2 года назад +1

      You're right Zeiss is integral to the whole process so just dedicated a video to them: ruclips.net/video/AHfQLjtLJdY/видео.html

    • @matze98md
      @matze98md 2 года назад +2

      This went really fast, and the employees holding shares are quite lucky now :D
      I have worked for a different company in Eindhoven, and one colleague had friends over at ASML. It is like their Apple of the Netherlands now.

  • @kowalskikowalski8080
    @kowalskikowalski8080 2 года назад +53

    I'm quite fascinated by small countries that are powerful. Netherlands, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Uruguay etc...

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 2 года назад +14

      The Netherlands has the only farmers consistently more efficient than American ones. They're amazing.

    • @12time12
      @12time12 2 года назад +5

      Japan. ASML basically relies on research from the transatlantic plus Japan.

    • @DoozyyTV
      @DoozyyTV 2 года назад +9

      @@toomanymarys7355 Are the Dutch government treats them terribly lately

    • @thedownunderverse
      @thedownunderverse 2 года назад +5

      Israel

    • @nmew6926
      @nmew6926 2 года назад +4

      Its because they are small that they are allowed to be rich.

  • @paradoxc137
    @paradoxc137 2 месяца назад +1

    I know this video is a bit older, but just wanted to add that the USAs DoD has a branch called Defense Microelectronics Activity (DMEA). They maintain a chip foundry in Sacramento CA, presumably to support the other DoD entities with microchips. Would be very interested to know more about what capabilities they have.

  • @AmoghA
    @AmoghA 2 года назад +47

    I love how the world’s most powerful chip manufacturing machine is built by scientists who use Lenovo ThinkPad 2:39. It’s a laptop that transcends humanity.
    Edit: Time stamp

    • @othmarbrunner9639
      @othmarbrunner9639 2 года назад

      Lenovo is the old IBM bought by Lenovo the Chinese are incapable to invent they buy other companies or copy

    • @Zaydlayd123
      @Zaydlayd123 2 года назад +5

      I work here and only good thing about that laptop is the nipple so I can use it whilst in the cleanroom instead of the touchpad.

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm 2 года назад +1

      I'm guessing those Lenovo's have 5nm chips in them since it's ASML.

    • @fss1704
      @fss1704 2 года назад +2

      louis rossmann aproves this message.

    • @othmarbrunner9639
      @othmarbrunner9639 2 года назад +1

      If you look on your lab top it will say Intel chip made by an America company

  • @CHMichael
    @CHMichael 2 года назад +21

    The entire process can't happen without many insanely specialized building blocks. This is only one piece of the puzzle

    • @bartobruintjes7056
      @bartobruintjes7056 2 года назад +1

      This is the whole puzzle without missing a part.

    • @CHMichael
      @CHMichael 2 года назад

      @@bartobruintjes7056 yup - just ordered one and start pumping out chips. look at all the country's doing it. ( sarcasm)

    • @Bramfly
      @Bramfly 2 месяца назад

      No it’s the heart/brain of it

  • @rickozzy6898
    @rickozzy6898 10 месяцев назад +1

    There's ASML and then there's ASMR. Two very different things.

  • @junkfood706
    @junkfood706 2 года назад +20

    ASML is the world' s most important company
    Source: ASML bro 😎

    • @how2pick4name
      @how2pick4name 2 года назад +1

      @Tin Watchman Most of us are below sea level, what do you mean? lol

    • @MonkeyDLuffy-gd6se
      @MonkeyDLuffy-gd6se 2 года назад +1

      @Tin Watchman No worries we got measures so that we do not fall short to the ocean😎

  • @chrisbryden8102
    @chrisbryden8102 2 года назад +8

    The world isn’t coming to a end without the smallest process. We can get along just fine with larger nm wafers

    • @TehBananaBread
      @TehBananaBread 2 года назад

      This is what people dont understand.

    • @DuBstep115
      @DuBstep115 2 года назад +1

      @@TehBananaBread Intel 2023 keynote " So for next year we are going back to 14nm+++++++++++++

  • @manoubaudet5843
    @manoubaudet5843 2 года назад +3

    i am a netherlands person. and i know a person that works by ASML and he is a GENIUS

    • @ml8022
      @ml8022 Год назад +1

      A netherlands person?? Wtf is that?😂

  • @rayberger2694
    @rayberger2694 2 года назад +50

    Refrigerators, cars, air conditioners all worked just fine before micro-chips ever came into existence.

    • @Crazmuss
      @Crazmuss 2 года назад +7

      What, you mean refrigerator that can't even run skyrim? Pathetic!

    • @Crazmuss
      @Crazmuss 2 года назад

      @Trevor Phillips chips are not making your refrigerator more efficient, its only make it spy on you, and spying cost electrical energy.

    • @henryh95
      @henryh95 2 года назад +6

      They didn’t, that’s why the micro chips are important.

    • @Telhias
      @Telhias 2 года назад +4

      @@henryh95 Both did and didn't. Refrigerators did perfectly fine and were no less efficient. All the efficiency comes from how well insulated it is. No microchip management needed. Cars on the other hand...

    • @carabela125
      @carabela125 2 года назад +7

      What's different is, when the old machines broke, you could fix them. Now we throw them away and buy another one. 51% of Americans buy a new smartphone every year. Lots of money changing hands.

  • @ikmarchini
    @ikmarchini 2 года назад +5

    Absolutely fascinating. Thank you.

  • @MaxMustermann-oo2ly
    @MaxMustermann-oo2ly Год назад +2

    ASML can't work without the world's precisest Mirrors from Zeiss in Germany

  • @jonmichaelgalindo
    @jonmichaelgalindo 2 года назад +26

    ASML is amazing, but it took hundreds of published papers from researchers around the world to develop the 13.5nm lasers modern lithography uses. It's absolutely astounding the technology actually works. Probably just two steps less complex than getting nuclear fusion to work. 😳

    • @fss1704
      @fss1704 2 года назад +1

      man nuclear fusion is easy.

    • @wally7856
      @wally7856 2 года назад +6

      Nuclear fusion is easy, just look up in the sky. During the day you'll only see 1 reactor, but at night you'll see 10,000!

    • @jonmichaelgalindo
      @jonmichaelgalindo 2 года назад +2

      @@wally7856 LOL unless you live in the city. :-P Then you'll see like twelve. Even if we get enough solar deployments to supply all our energy, I still hope researchers solve fusion one day.

    • @jonmichaelgalindo
      @jonmichaelgalindo 2 года назад

      @@fss1704 Or shaping a molten tin droplet suspended in midair, using the width of a laser pulse, before gravity can affect, it is jaw-droppingly difficult. That's just step 1 of how this laser works. Definitely look up a video on how EUV lasers work if you're interested in that kind of stuff. :-)

    • @xTheUnderscorex
      @xTheUnderscorex 2 года назад

      @@wally7856 The Sun's core has roughly the power density of compost, we need something a little different for practical fusion generation

  • @petsandpaws8906
    @petsandpaws8906 2 года назад +5

    This is the most important Dutch company, and located 10 miles from where I live.
    Its a massive giant in the chip industry.

    • @Vincrand
      @Vincrand 2 года назад

      Half a mile from where I work. During my studies I had an interview there, which took a pleasant left turn. It started out with logistics (my field of study at that time) and ended with encouraging words about how to set goals and go for it.

  • @robzbuzz
    @robzbuzz 2 года назад +2

    "Don't make the thing. Make the thing that MAKES the thing!"

  • @jandutch5934
    @jandutch5934 2 года назад +6

    so i never knew asml was that big, cycled past it many times and always thought it was just like some small dutch computer company

  • @thelammas8283
    @thelammas8283 2 месяца назад +8

    Don’t worry. As long as the US prohibits ASML from selling to China, it will motivate China to build their own and soon you will have another manufacturer

    • @ridhamh2966
      @ridhamh2966 2 месяца назад +1

      Exactly .I am honestly tired of monopoly in this tech.

    • @JR-mh8vn
      @JR-mh8vn Месяц назад

      China hasnt been working on making these the past 20 years? With the past 10 years heavily trying to do everything like taking ASML workers and even getting spies inside ASML lol

  • @GarbageMan2025
    @GarbageMan2025 Месяц назад

    Aside from the solicitations to buy products I don't want, this was a great video.

  • @dixanshtiwari6003
    @dixanshtiwari6003 2 года назад +3

    So basically Dutch (EU) makes a monopoly machine for chips and Taiwan makes chip and out of nowhere, US wants to rule chip market.

    • @Nik-tm6vq
      @Nik-tm6vq 2 года назад

      Yeah lol

    • @JR-mh8vn
      @JR-mh8vn Месяц назад

      Because USA always was leading in Chip tech or atleast 30 years ago or something, I bet theyre still salty they lost that lead.

  • @helenamcginty4920
    @helenamcginty4920 2 года назад +8

    Ha! My life is not ruled by microchips. Yes I do miss my wifi when its occasionally down but it doesn't affect my basic survival.
    my electricity source would be troubled but I have a wood burning stove that can be used for small scale cooking.
    I am lucky to live in rural southern europe so would even have access to locally produced vegetables in local small shops. I do keep dried beans and lentils in the cupboard. I already make my own bread.
    But I am old so grew up before the days of fridges in the home. Before tv. And have shelves full of books that need reading and re reading. Life would revert to that of my childhood but I would miss the radio.
    That reminds me. I need to plant some tomato seeds and sort my patio planters to make room for some veg.

  • @anujchaubey8524
    @anujchaubey8524 8 месяцев назад +2

    It's great to watch👍

  • @Moribus_Artibus
    @Moribus_Artibus 2 года назад +5

    Not the first time the Dutch had a company that everybody depended on 🇳🇱🌊

    • @flower5175
      @flower5175 2 года назад

      yeah i still remember how dutch company (voc) monopolised my country for 300 years

    • @carabela125
      @carabela125 2 года назад

      @@flower5175 Indonesia?

    • @onebigsnowball
      @onebigsnowball 2 года назад

      @@flower5175 Japan?

  • @Riverbed_Dreaming
    @Riverbed_Dreaming 2 года назад +14

    I’m amazed nobody else does this. It must be super complex for China not to build a copy. It’s known that sending any tech to China will end up with copies being made, so especially for something so important I’m very surprised they haven’t reverse engineered it. And given how tech-driven the US is, and how good it is at making very complex and advanced machinery, I’m a little surprised they haven’t done it either.

    • @WoefulMinion
      @WoefulMinion 2 года назад +13

      I'm sure the market is too small to justify a second company. It's actually quite common for a company to be the sole manufacturer of a machine when they are custom-made and only a very few are ordered each year.

    • @f1reguy587
      @f1reguy587 2 года назад +4

      China also lacks the metalurgy to do some things aswell, i can almost guarantee theres reasons why the old models wernt just improved. I guess the question could even be “what needs improving?” Because without learning how to get to where the machine is now, but not sure where it was generations before, you cant see the full thought process, and on top of that, your looking to improve the whole system which could be endless in decision making and trade offs.

    • @ageoflove1980
      @ageoflove1980 2 года назад +5

      I believe that even if they copy it, the machine would soon be out of date because constant updates and upgrades are made. It can really only be made by people who know exactly what they are doing. It would really require many years of planning, training and investing before they have the people that can succesfully operate such a company. Eindhoven has been a technology center for more than a century driven by Philips and it has its own Tech University. They invented things like the Cassette Tape, CD Player (together with Sony) and even the DVD. You cant just copy a culture like that.

    • @arthurfleck1554
      @arthurfleck1554 2 года назад

      China does not have TALENTED ENGINEERS!

    • @moneyobsessed
      @moneyobsessed 2 года назад +1

      asml has hundreds of suppliers that are at the top tech of their fields, most of the 100k parts come from outside the company

  • @wazzup233
    @wazzup233 2 года назад +2

    ASML is the Dutch East India company on silicon.

  • @narff1878
    @narff1878 2 года назад +5

    But the fun part is ASML uses chips from TSMC... so that leads us back to the conundrum "what comes first the chicken or the egg?".

    • @katakouzina
      @katakouzina 2 года назад

      asml comes first, and "pure" science comes ever earlier, like physics optics and mathematics

  • @dorianphilotheates3769
    @dorianphilotheates3769 2 года назад +4

    The Dutch have always had a way with potatoes: they make the best chips.

  • @emiliorafaelvalls9834
    @emiliorafaelvalls9834 2 года назад +1

    How can a foreign government impose restrictions on a foreign companie outside the government territorie its insane

  • @shawnbegay4966
    @shawnbegay4966 2 года назад +4

    I should get back into the semiconductor capital industry. For few years, I was a technical writer and illustrator creating and editing work instructions to build DUV (Deep Ultraviolet Light) lithography machines for Cymer, a division of ASML. I made a lot of hay with that experience and worked for the Intel Ocotillo factory in south Chandler.

  • @delondestan8961
    @delondestan8961 2 года назад +6

    1:39 ASML machines are for sure more accurate than your map of the Netherlands 😄

    • @Newsthink
      @Newsthink  2 года назад +2

      True, a silly error on our part

    • @user-ue9jq6fp9b
      @user-ue9jq6fp9b 2 года назад +1

      What's Germany, Luxembourg, France, and Belgium gonna do? WE MAKE THE ONE MACHINE.

    • @delondestan8961
      @delondestan8961 2 года назад

      @@Newsthink thanks for your answer ❤

  • @BarbaraMcdowell-e5f
    @BarbaraMcdowell-e5f 6 месяцев назад

    Your advice helps me minimize risks and increase profits.

  • @jamiek1714
    @jamiek1714 2 месяца назад +3

    God bless the Dutch.
    A great partner to Asia.

  • @BaronVonQuiply
    @BaronVonQuiply 2 года назад +7

    I didn't know they were Dutch, but the second I saw the title I knew it could only be a fab machine.

  • @navneet7075
    @navneet7075 25 дней назад

    Thanks for detailed info

  • @LVIS-a
    @LVIS-a 2 года назад +8

    Hi from the Netherlands.
    People know us for our weed, red light district, cheese and bicycles.
    We also invented the microscope, WiFi, birth control pills for woman, DVDs, the stock market, perfected water management, are leaders in greenhouse harvesting and we're sorry for VOC times.
    We're the best English speaking non-english country in Europe, our people are one of the tallest and we know it. Does it make us a little arrogant? Sure, but we earned that right.
    Did I mention our smart infrastructure and incredible roads? Oh well. We're awesome.

    • @Chunchukiran
      @Chunchukiran 9 месяцев назад

      I have a lot of respect to Dutch as a nation/race/society.
      U people have done and achieved much more than what others even imagine though it has some negative outcomes.

    • @Frank-r3y2i
      @Frank-r3y2i 9 месяцев назад +1

      You forgot modest.😊

    • @JR-mh8vn
      @JR-mh8vn Месяц назад

      ''Did I mention our smart infrastructure and incredible roads? Oh well. We're awesome.'' this made me cringe to much as a fellow Dutch like wtf dude.. doe normaal

  • @vasiovasio
    @vasiovasio 2 года назад +6

    China will put effort to copy these 100 000 parts and reverse engineering the machine, you can be sure!

    • @temenow
      @temenow 2 года назад +5

      They tried, but guesstimate is , it will take them another 20 years. Trust me, no one inside the company knows the complete machine. And I have been working there in one of the core areas.

    • @12time12
      @12time12 2 года назад

      They don’t have any EUV machines.

    • @arturlomakin3555
      @arturlomakin3555 2 года назад

      @@12time12 Now they have ability to produce 14nm chips by themselves

    • @ASK-ko9qx
      @ASK-ko9qx 2 года назад +1

      @@arturlomakin3555 28 nm not 14 nm. But they'll get there in next 5 years maybe lesser. But 5 nm and beyond will not be that soon.

    • @miles5600
      @miles5600 2 года назад +1

      @@ASK-ko9qx asml will be lightyears more advanced.

  • @jettrd_utilitychnl4230
    @jettrd_utilitychnl4230 Год назад +1

    It is not the only company that produce photography

  • @logii7761
    @logii7761 2 года назад +9

    do a video on the most powerful company in the world, Blackrock.

    • @SemperMaximus
      @SemperMaximus 2 года назад

      How is BlackRock the most powerful company? Just because they manage trillions in assets?

    • @dylangtech
      @dylangtech 2 года назад +1

      That's a no-no on social media. That will put your outlet on a list....

    • @neddiego2570
      @neddiego2570 2 года назад +1

      It's not that powerful 🤣

    • @XrisD147
      @XrisD147 2 года назад

      It owns a bit of everything and I own a bit of blackrock, ha!

    • @MadScientyst
      @MadScientyst 2 года назад

      I was looking for THIS comment! Kudos to u bro, a very informed intellectual indeed.
      Why continue attempts to oppress China via technology, etc?
      Good ole Uncle Sam should know that'll only encourage them to push the boundaries of their own research to develop either corresponding tech OR something entirely new & perhaps even better...IMO

  • @eaaeeeea
    @eaaeeeea 2 года назад +10

    I'm confident China has the will, money and expertise to start competing with ASML machines in few years. They will be a bit late to the game though, as we are very much approaching the size of a single silicon atom with these litography machines. Quantum computers must take over soon if we want to keep pushing for more computing power and efficiency.

    • @SNixD
      @SNixD 2 года назад +7

      It's also naive to think that China hasn't already started developing their own machines. Tensions with the west have been building for years and it's pretty much certain that this is one of the technologies that they've been trying to become self sufficient in.

    • @eaaeeeea
      @eaaeeeea 2 года назад +1

      @@SNixD I agree! Now that I mentioned Quantum Computers, I looked it up and China is already competing at the top end with at least 66-qubit quantum computer. Litography machines for traditional chip making will pale in comparison, when we start talking quantum computers being able to break all traditional encryption.

    • @brinkipinki
      @brinkipinki 2 года назад +7

      quantum computers will probably not "take over" in the near future. they do not have any sort of higher computing power than normal computers. they are just fundamentally fast at solving a certain subset of computing problems.

    • @3pan1
      @3pan1 2 года назад

      Forget about it.

    • @user-pd9ju5dk5s
      @user-pd9ju5dk5s 2 года назад +2

      @@3pan1 Are you from NY?

  • @killerfc909
    @killerfc909 2 года назад

    I'm an engineering student from South Africa, I personally know at least 7 people from my university who have all moved to Eindhoven to work for ASML in the past year.

  • @myconstruction
    @myconstruction 2 года назад +5

    So are all the machines they are making going to Taiwan? If they have that big of a company I would assume they sell quite a few of the machines. Aren't companies in other countries just buying the machine?

    • @sebastian192
      @sebastian192 2 года назад +8

      other countries can buy them too, otherwise sanctioning china would make no sense XD
      samsung and intel buys them as well
      those machines are very expensive, and having the machine doesn't mean you'll be able to manufacture chips, so it's a hefty investment
      like, you can buy an oven, but if you burn every batch of cookie you bake, your bake sale will not work out

    • @XrisD147
      @XrisD147 2 года назад +2

      The chip machines are about 200 million USD we're going to 3nm process!

    • @miles5600
      @miles5600 2 года назад

      the whole world buys them...

    • @0x1EGEN
      @0x1EGEN 2 года назад +1

      TSMC may be located in Taiwan but they own many chip making plants in other countries.

  • @WideCuriosity
    @WideCuriosity 2 года назад +9

    Sounds like a case of all the world's eggs being in one vulnerable basket. I can understand keeping cutting edge tech from tyrannies and the like, but there really ought to be more than one factory supplying the more civilised nations.

  • @stonethrower6065
    @stonethrower6065 Год назад +1

    There once was a time when only one nation had a monopoly on making gunpowder. What happened?

  • @DMulabiTalejan
    @DMulabiTalejan 2 года назад +5

    Thanks. It could have been good mention and interrogate recent reports of 3 nanometer chips made in China

    • @temenow
      @temenow 2 года назад

      Those are under legal issue as rumors had it that TSMC patents were infringed by China.

    • @Rjsjrjsjrjsj
      @Rjsjrjsjrjsj 2 года назад

      Yeah. And the Chinese are building a death star. Because they said so. What a pile of 💩

    • @thegreatneess
      @thegreatneess 2 года назад +2

      @@temenow bla bla bla TSMC is a foundry they own no patent

    • @ASK-ko9qx
      @ASK-ko9qx 2 года назад

      @@temenow BS. TSMC engineer were hired by the Chinese, so they will definitely be same. Got any evidence of stealing or are you projecting.

  • @AlexandreMS71
    @AlexandreMS71 2 года назад +4

    I is a clever way to give China a massive push to develop their own machines.

  • @robvanlimpt6874
    @robvanlimpt6874 2 года назад +2

    I live close to asml and seeing how much they are growing true the years is amazing

  • @philiphoward4966
    @philiphoward4966 2 года назад +5

    A thought, a few years after the second world war the Japanese were trying to catch up with the Americans on chip development and manufacturing but always found themselves to be one generation behind.
    In the end the Japanese Government of that time asked the top 50 Japanese IT companies to let them have their best Scientist to work on the project with a promise to share the data and technology. Not only did they catch-up but leaped frogged them to be a generation ahead. It was the basis which fed the great Japanese IT boom. Never say never with the Chinese

    • @jennrat2982
      @jennrat2982 Год назад

      I just watched a vid on a Scotsman who played quite a part in Japan's 'catching up'...they called him the Scottish Samurai...Thomas Glover.

  • @g3n3ricnam35
    @g3n3ricnam35 2 года назад +5

    Interesting too see both administrations effects on chinese and foreign lithography

  • @d30gaijin
    @d30gaijin Год назад +1

    Doesn't Zeiss Germany make the sub micron mirrors required for ASML machines to even operate?

  • @markbooth3066
    @markbooth3066 10 месяцев назад +2

    There was once a lithography machine manufacturer more advanced for EUV than ASML.
    The first commercial EUV micro-stepper was built just outside of Oxford, in the UK. ASML allegedly wanted too much money to develop it, and were concentrating their research on 193nm immersion technology, (which we also delivered to customers first) so the company I worked for was contracted to develop a 13nm micro-stepper for substantially less, which we did.
    Sadly, the budgetary constraints of the follow on project (an actinic EUV mask inspection tool) effectively killed the company, and a paper in the teens said this set back the EUV lithography industry for a decade, all because our customers weren't prepared to put in the investment needed to follow the project through to completion. That was years of my life, and that of my colleagues, wasted.

    • @will7its
      @will7its 9 месяцев назад

      You got paid though right???

    • @markbooth3066
      @markbooth3066 9 месяцев назад +1

      We got paid for the work we'd done, and got paid statutory redundancy, but that wasn't much of a consolation without a job.
      Our customer contracted another company to finish off the project, who then hired all of the team, except me. They were more interested in the hardware than the software, and my software was mostly waiting on the hardware anyway. Since I wasn't there, I don't know the full details of what happened in the years after, but my understanding is that the customer invested the same amount of money again, but the project was still cancelled due to budget overruns before it was completed.
      If they'd paid us what we originally told them it would cost, rather than trying to cut costs, the project would have been much more likely to succeed, and the once world leading company would still be probably still be making those machine today, having had a decades head start on ASML.

  • @timetodestination9538
    @timetodestination9538 2 года назад +1

    News updated. ASML announced US worker not to work with Chinese company/customer starting from today.

  • @sahrkastic7254
    @sahrkastic7254 2 года назад +4

    also of note is Austrian IMS producing the most advanced mask writers (no lithography without masks) the only company with high throughput electron beam litography for producing masks for 5nm processes and below