Hi! Thanks for watching! Interested in seeing us cover the other key innovation behind this machine-the optical mirrors? Let us know in the comments below and check out our playlist for more episodes: bit.ly/31Ms6mj
Why couldn't Science be this cool when I went to school maybe I wouldn't of ended up a roofer ,Thanks for the video i've always wondered how a microchip worked.
@@lunchbox1398 smaller architecture, can fit more chips, start bootlegging multiple chips together e.g.dual core, quad core, etc etc. allow space for more ram, etc ...= Faster. Until we sneeze on our phones and break em' my old nokia could take a beating even without a case, these new glass ones, so sensitive😣🤔
@Seeker Yes please - that would be very interesting. This video was incredible, I've never seen anything like this. I had absolutely no idea how cutting-edge EUV lithography was. Mind totally blown.
@@icecoldnut5152 Actually the machines to make the chips get bigger as the chips get smaller. The first generations were the size of modern 3D printers. So more likely it will be the size of a building :D
@@rowdyjansen8159 You are right, but that assumes that 3D printers will not be super advanced in ~50 years. If they reach a point where they can print _everything_ (as long as you provide the required file or detailed instructions) then the sky is the limit.
@@NikolaosSkordilis actually the 3D printer was just a size reference and nothing else. I just meant that in order to make something smaller (more complex) you actually need a bigger "tool". Which i find fascinating, since there are almost no other fields to which that theory applies.
@@rowdyjansen8159 well as telescopes amplify, we need something that shrink image, so it just make sense in opposite. The smaller the image we need, the more optics and devices we need.
Retired professor of physics and astronomy here, Seeker is a global gift!! The most current and outstanding series of our day and age!! A heartfelt thank you for your unprecedented work!!
Ok, I wanna know who did the 3D modeling for this video. There’s a LOT of really detailed intense shots over the course of this video. Someone in their CG department is off the yak
@@jonathanlange1339 in the contrary, we live slightly in the future for a couple of milliseconds and other animals as well due us being able to have low level precognition inorder to perceive events and dangers. Some animals and insects even have faster reaction times than us. the world is slow to them and they are faster at reacting
The media got burnt one to many times by celebrity scientists. Like Tesla, who lived on the New York high-society party scene, and was the talk of the town with his wild stories of insane secret advances & technologies. If only his millionaire friends would gift him even more money, and forget about his long list of failed past promises and inventions
It took me 6 months in an independent study class to begin to grasp nanotechnology and this video just explained it in 12 minutes and it's way more inspirational than my presentation ever was.
is there a mooc for microelectronics course? I got my bachelors in electronics long back but they did not teach us anything about microelectronics. In the last sem, they taught us little bit about VLSI
@@blasttrash consult nanohub.org for starters. Although I never encountered a good course about VLSI process in the internet. I highly recommend reading "Fundamentals of Semiconductor Fabrication" by Gary S.May and Simon M.Sze Good luck.
I’m amazed by pretty much anything re: mass production. But I’m basic. Haha There’s a funny video you should look for about a woman manufacturing her own toaster....... from scratch. It’s awesome. And terrifying.
Beeing a PhD in Chemistry myself, I can tell you that these are actually just a lot of regular people with a 8 year background of physics and chemistry ;) But everyone makes one part better or finds something new and it probably took hundreds or more people for this machine on the upper level to create
For example to find out about the two laser pulses needed for the tin plasma probably required 2-3 PhDs in chemistry and physics. But still these people are like you and me, just with more experience
When i saw how they were using a matrix like laser tech just so we can open apps a bit faster I suddenly got a deep appriciation for science and the that people work on creating such miraculous machines.
@@mM-sp4ui the clothes are to prevent your from getting dust anywhere. Any skin flakes or particles have to be kept contained. As the systems are so precise a lot of the areas have to be clean rooms as a single spec of dust can disrupt the entire machine..
@@floresaaronj The stage is the large metallic plate on which the carriages with the wafers glide. As they glide they make minute vibrations. the faster they glide the more and stronger vibrations are generated. The resonance group handle the vibrations generated in the system and ensures no constructive interference from vibrations or resonance effects on the stage and its subsystems.
Its already dead because it took to long to figure out how to produce 7nm chips. And it has to have an end halfing the size every two year is only possible till you reach Atom size or atleast the plank length.
These scientists and engineers are the unsung heroes of our times! Mega respect to you guys, thanks for pushing humanity forward. And great job with this documentary!
Somewhere, there’s an 8 year old watching this video and he’s beyond fascinated with this technology. He’ll end up pursing physics, engineering and the new iPhone 30 will be scheduled to release years from now.
Sir Wavy I’m pretty sure if he’s watching this video and he’s fascinated by technology’, it would can be safe to assume that he wouldn’t think that Apple is still the best. Anyone who knows ANYTHING about electronics or technology to some degree that is interested in watching videos like these know otherwise.
This statement isn’t true. Moore’s Law is only being challenged in classical chip making but the next frontier is actually Quantum. Moore’s Law effectively resets on the Quantum Computer platform which is levels of multitudes more capable than classical computer systems. Sure much of our tech won’t run on Quantum yet but this is hardly the next frontier. 💯💯
@@danielcepeda4313 He wasn't talking about Moore's Law. ASML is literally the only company in the world that can manufacture CPUs. That ASML machine you've seen is sold to Intel and TSMC.
@@SimonYells I know that. What I’m saying is that these lithography machines which attempt to push beyond Moore’s Law by crunching more transistors onto silicon integrated circuits are not the future of Moore’s Law. Currently we’re at over 2,000 qubits in D-Wave systems which means their quantum transistor count on their CPU has essentially reset. Billions of bits on a classic CPU only 2,000 qubits on a QCPU but theirs a catch. Put that QCPU in superposition and we now have a 2,000 qubits to the power of 2,000. It’s mind boggling and easily the next frontier! 💯💯
@@SimonYells My mistake ASML isn’t trying to push beyond Moore’s Law, they’re trying to continue Moore’s Law even tho sooner or later it’s coming to an end. How many more transistors can they fit on those chips? Beats me but regardless the next frontier in Moore’s Law which is what I meant from the start is Quantum. 💯💯
you should never cook your food in the microwave. Unless you want cancer of course. But its been proven that any type of radiation will cause cancer. Microwaves, 5G, cell phones, cell phone towers, wifi. All very dangerous. Most you cant avoid, but you can avoid not microwaving your food lol.
@@BxrHavik It's non-ionizing radiation. They aren't powerful enough to damage DNA. A helpful tip is to look at a wavelength chart, the shorter it is, the more high energy it is, meaning the less damage they can do. You start getting to ionizing radiation near the end of ultraviolet and off to gamma rays. Generally visible light and anything to the left of it is safe. TLDR: If microwaves and infrared cause cancer, then visible light does too, so therefore there's no point.
@@osamabinladen824 this kind of tech is not being done in any socialistic country. Capitalism and greed is drives the people who asked these people to do their absolutely amazing work.
Titans Tracks I think it demonstrates a fact about science that people misunderstand. Science doesn’t progress by random serendipity. People think there are big leaps and breakthroughs that suddenly shift things forward. And while that does happen, the majority of progress is made in continuous small steps through diligent efforts of hard working scientist over years. Even the flashier eureka moments often have years of work applied after the realization
I'm a mechatronics engineer and i found it difficult to understand EUVL from the video as well, so do not despair. But read some papers about it and it's not too complex when you break it up. Have a read if you're intrigued: aip.scitation.org/doi/full/10.1063/1.4863412
It's nice to know a stupid person like you who can't even pay attention to the way they type is looking towards intelligence. Maybe you might get smart enough to not capitalize some letters and use proper punctuation.
Zabieru McCloud I mean he didnt say he wasnt stupid so i dont know whats the problem. Im not capitalising or punctuating cuz im not bothered and no one really cares about it wxcept a few people online :)
@@kendaswagger7958 Well yes I realize some people will eat with their hands when they have utensils next to them or some people will will wipe their ass with socks lol... Yes I know people are stupid lmfao!
@infernovoid I'm one of those people who believes most people are stupid... If you believe (in general) what he did was intentional... What do I think you are?
It is most likely in a protective container of some sort. The worker's finger is touching the surface, which would otherwise completely destroy the wafer pattern.
I worked at Intel for a bit, it's every bit as insanely high tech and interesting as this describes, and then some. That is the most amazing place I've ever been inside of. Literally every technology we have as humans is brought to bear inside a fab. And the wafers really do look like little rainbow cities under microscopes of sufficient strength. It's very , very cool.
Ghani Chishty often you don’t hear about the biggest and most important companies in the world because they don’t need to advertise directly to the general population. Instead these companies work in hidden projects for the government or are in contracts with other big companies. I remember a few SuperBowls ago one of the commercials was about CISCO you know the giant of networks equipment and cloud computing, lots of people were confused and saying they never heard of the company. I was laughing
I remember Paul Otelini of intel saying that 5nm was about the absolute limit of moore's law. Crazy to see how far we have pushed it. I wonder where we will hit a true wall. Quantum physics is incredibly hard to overcome but we have continued to push. Gordon Moore would be proud.
We still haven't really reached that. Also when you see nanometers written on CPU box is basically just brand name, not technical spec, because different semiconductor components are different size and often marketable number is often the lowest one or very optimistic.
I am a musician (with a curious mind for all things that feed that need), this story is a glorious example of human ingenuity, perseverance to innovate and express ones creative thoughts. Thank goodness we're all made differently. Bravo to you Physicists, Scientists, geeky or not...well you know who you are...cheers!!!
Hats off to you guys! The video graphics for demonstrating how that laser travels & hits the droplet with perfect accuracy was awesome. I actually understood what you guys were trying to tell us. Many thanks for sharing it publicly. And like Mike said - It's encouraging!
Amazing video, something I didn't expected to find as a regular upload. I hold EUV lithography very close to my heart, I'm currently a PhD student at the Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, but as an undergraduate at this same university I conducted research and published a conference paper on photoresist for use in Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography. Nice to see such relevant and personally interesting work.
@Marc Jackson It's from an annual SPIE conference in 2018. doi: 10.1117/12.2316333 Mostly a study on the chemistry of a class of potential EUV photoresist.
@Bernd DasBrot Quantum tunneling is used in many non-quantum computer technologies. From the STM scanners used by these microchip companies to lots of technologies like flash memory, etc. Quantum tunneling is in many ways what makes it hard to build a quantum computer. And why do you say quantum computers can't do shit...?
Let's also remember that if the average rate of improvement during the 1990's had continued until today, the 50% per year clock speed improvement and ~30% power increase would have gotten us 5 THz processors, still single core, with a 15 kW TDP. It really hasn't been this smooth exponential increase in performance. The 90's were pretty magical, especially for real-time applications like games. Since then, parallel tasks like graphics have improved greatly while framerates and overall complexity of games have stagnated. Multicore CPUs are a mixed blessing, to use more cores, work is split over multiple frames, so framerates are improved, but there is more latency and now you need ~144 FPS just to feel like 60 FPS used to. The big gains have been in graphics, throughput computing and power consumption.
Baghuul and showing it will people in 70 years. They’ll be like “awww the machine was as big as a school bus. That’s cute. Now I can 3D print chips at home with my phone and a toaster sized tool.”
They would take their box of cigarettes, lsd, manual transmissions, turquoise rings, and record players then storm off all whilst calling you millenial trash
You should watch a video on how practical quantum computers work, that would blow your mind. While it's not quite a more complicated product. The abuse of physics is much worse
@@patrickbodine6010 "The basis for this invention is an event, referring to FIG. 1, occurring on May 2, 2004, in which the inventor (“he”) personally experienced a full-body teleportation while walking to the bus stop (A) along a road (B) that runs perpendicular to the nearby commercial airport runways where planes are landing." ... PATENT STATUS: Abandoned
If you're watching this video without complaining about understanding the physics you are a gift to humanity. Thanks for sharing this video @Seeker. We might not understanding everything but we're glad technology has advanced to the point we have enough fans.
There already is. We are kept roughly 100 years behind in understanding which is why Tesla's "incorrect" formulas were recently declared as correct all along. Do you think that was accidental? Along with a Navy patent for am inertia-negating saucer based on his work? And scalar waves transmitters? Because the OAA said his dozens to trunks of notes and prototypes had "no scientific value"? ;)
"Son, I told you not to entangle those until I paid the singularity bill and changed it's spin. You'll have to limit your teleportations this week and stop looking at social media from anti-Earth."
I have started my PhD in this field and my professor suggested me this video along with other such videos which are gems, as it narrates about what is presently going in the industry.
@@sasmitvaidyaThere's a paradox when using the word "nothing" in this way. "Nothing more beautiful than this stuff... " Can mean an affirmation or a negation at same time. A negative affirmation or an affirmative negation.
99.9% of students: Ok teacher, that's all fine but what's the point of studying all this??? Teacher: Well, you will pass the exam with flying colours! 0.1% students: Quietly making the future.
This was a triumph! I'm making a note here: "huge success!!" It's hard to overstate My satisfaction. Aperture science: We do what me must Because we can.
That purple light ...is making me wondering if my eye sight might take a hit after I'm done watching this incredible backstory about the gap between people who design those purple lights and people like me who is so broke that I still haven't made up my mind between fixing my car's window or the back of my phone's screen
No , the taxes of the average citizen are put into the military and other stupid stuff , for example , only 2.3% of America’s total budget is given to NASA , meaning that most of the money is put into things other than science .
@@shukrantpatil nobody talked about public funding of science in the US, these kind of advances come from the improvement of products that are consumed by a lot of people, that's what the person above you meant.
Wow, these guys are amazing, so clever, we take our devices for granted but you don't realise the technical genius that creates the machinery behind end product.
This is nothing new. It's marketing 101 for high end brands. Make something ridiculously expensive that no one will buy. This just maintains the illusion that this brand is higher end than all others. Then people associate everything they sell as 'luxury' and 'high end'. It's mainly to convince all the vain wealthy people and the one's who have to show they spent money, to keep buying their brand.
Fun fact, that stand is extremely inefficiently made. They start with a giant block of aluminum and mill it down instead of casting the general shape and finishing it. When made that way, the $1000 price tag becomes almost reasonable. But you still have to ask why as there are better ways of making extremely sturdy stands. I guess Apple can't get enough of that free marketing of people complaining about it.
Humans are interdependent so don't feel bad about this. Even these people will indirectly need you, me and other regular people so they can keep doing their work.
@@calamorta nah, not really. Crushing majority of this planet is useless and we only need maybe a couple dozens of millions for subsisting most of our modern life style and industries, while being able to severely reduce our poisonous enviromental emissions and failing systems due to useless people overpopulating. It's a harsh thing to say but most of the people around will never do anything noteworthy in their life aside from wasting resources and fart gasses. That being said, the best and brightest sometimes grow in the greatest of needs. If everything was already good and easy due to less pressure from a stable healthy population we might not have pushed to advance as much. Who knows.
@@gorgolyt I was under the impression that graphene (in it's one atom thick lattice arrangement) has not been able to be manufactured inexpensively enough to warrant it's full potential....that the "race" for graphene hasn't been met quite yet. Sure carbon is altogether cheap as hell but the process for manufacture just hasn't caught up enough to make it affordable. Forgive me if I've mistaken.
@@blackoakmushrooms From what I've gathered, it's not that graphene is too expensive to manufacture, but that the manufacturing processes aren't able to create large enough sheets which are defect free, and single atom defects can disrupt all the properties that make graphene so great.
@@blackoakmushrooms For Graphene there is really only one arrangement of the atoms possible, any other arrangement from the carbon atoms is per definition not Graphene. Graphene can only be called Graphene if the atoms are arranged in such way that the carbon atoms form a one dimensional sheet of carbon atoms. That means that the sheet can be only one single atom thick. That is THE definition from Graphene. There are some composite materials, but those materials are strictly seen no longer Graphene because the combined materials have different specifications from the original base materials. I've had this discussion many times with internet fraud Robert Murray Smith, who claims that he can produce Graphene with his kitchen oven and some other kitchen tools. And he sells his DIY charcoal (so called Graphene) as if it is Graphene on his website, and people are falling for his scam and people actually buy his crap. I have tried to warn people, but my comments get removed, and his group of followers even seem to look at him as if he is a hero. Secondly, if you search for skeleton ultra capacitors you will notice that Graphene is already in production for commercially available products.
Since you’re apparently an expert in the subject. Would you agree that these guys are far above everybody else like they claim or just barely ahead maybe at the moment?
You have to choose between more for the same price. Or...the same for cheaper. If Intel just kept on making Pentium 1's...not cramming in more transistors...Intel CPU's would be very cheap. Do you want more? Or do you want cheap?
@@tylerdurden3722 But it can't be always increasing in price. You see, pentium 1's were expensive when they were lauched their cost was upwards of 600$. By your logic, a i9-9900k would be 2000-3000$. Just because the techniques of manufacturing something improve, it doesn't mean that it will be automatically more expensive. Hell, it can even come out as being cheaper to produce.
This would sound a lot less alien to us if Seeker could get quick interviews from individual employees about their roles in the company. Undoubtedly, there is some general understanding of how the product comes together as a whole, but the video emphasizes this much more then the individual specialties that come together to form a greater whole. Mechanical engineers, material scientists, programers, physicists and etc all play roles and probably have specialized positions even within those categories.
They explained how they did it. It is a droplet of metal shot twice to generate a ray and it is like normal photolithography from there. The problem is making it all work
I recently saw a video by PsiQuantum explaining their present process in building optical computers and the founder chose to delay some information on their process. It’s to prevent other counties like China or Russia to gain advantages in tech.
There are way too many steps to explain in a 20 minute video. I work at a semiconductor fab and they had to dedicate an entire week 8am-5pm just to teach us a "brief" overview of the production process.
They have a factory here, I made parts for the waver-transport-system yeaaaars ago. Massive highgrade aluminium slabs with hundreds of holes to transport the wavers like air hockey! Never forget that part!
The most mind-blowing thing is that only ONE company on earth makes this. How tf does a single company risk so much, invest so much, push the limit so much, and yet doesn't have a single competitor? I mean considering every person on earth relies on this technology you'd expect more interest to catch up. It's lucrative af.
Lord Gospodin at sub 5nm quantum interference occurs. That’s the issue AMD is currently trying to overcome for Zen 4 since Zen 3 is going to be above 5nm or true 7nm.
This is most advanced technology of this century that made all other advance technology possible! It's amazing how all of us hsve access to it in forms of different gadgets like of our phones. We are basically holding piece of most advanced technologies coming together to form this wonderful gadget.
This makes me appreciate the people who put real effort into their passion to innovate and for the betterment of technology and the world. We use these devices every day and take them for granted. I can't imagine where we'd be if it weren't for these brilliant people.
7:53 they didn't blur those screens because they had confidential data or anything they did it out of shame as they, the largest supplier of photolithography machine, are still using windows 7
When you finally get such a complex system stable, you don't worry about updating the OS, unless absolutely necessary. It's not like the computers are on the internet anyway, so once stable, there is very little need to update them.
It is a common practice in most process heavy industries. It takes time to reprogram all the codes and other things to keep up with windows; so what companies do is they keep updating on the previous softwares and process related codes without worrying about trying to refix them for an updated windows OS.
Not really. In fact virtually all the technology in a chip fab like this existed 20 years ago, just in somewhat less refined a state, except for the tin microdroplet laser plasma light source. This was filmed in skyworks about 2 decades ago: ruclips.net/video/0wrsZog8qXg/видео.html
10mintwo You're like saying that electric self-driving cars are not that futuristic because batteries already existed 200 years ago and wheels are already more than 3000 years old, except for the AI.
=.=? um why? who would disagree with him? if anything is a inside joke that became a name that business rely on because the hole industry needed the flow of new computers. So yes a expectation, a self fulfilling prophecy.
David Dickey technically could be a natural law, we just don’t know if it is and have no way of proving it but it just continues then we’ll probably just except it as one.
Hi! Thanks for watching! Interested in seeing us cover the other key innovation behind this machine-the optical mirrors? Let us know in the comments below and check out our playlist for more episodes: bit.ly/31Ms6mj
Why couldn't Science be this cool when I went to school maybe I wouldn't of ended up a roofer ,Thanks for the video i've always wondered how a microchip worked.
Can someone help out and tell me in numbers how will that change CPU power ? Thx!
Could turn nuclear reactors into chip factories if they find out how to use gamma rays to 'print' the transistors.
@@lunchbox1398 smaller architecture, can fit more chips, start bootlegging multiple chips together e.g.dual core, quad core, etc etc. allow space for more ram, etc ...= Faster. Until we sneeze on our phones and break em' my old nokia could take a beating even without a case, these new glass ones, so sensitive😣🤔
@Seeker Yes please - that would be very interesting. This video was incredible, I've never seen anything like this. I had absolutely no idea how cutting-edge EUV lithography was. Mind totally blown.
"It's about the size of a school bus"
50 years later: godammit I forgot to charge my pocket sized microchip printer again, silly me.
Dio Brando you’re useless, good thing I brought my microchip printer printer in my backpack, just don’t touch my road roller printer please
@@icecoldnut5152 Actually the machines to make the chips get bigger as the chips get smaller. The first generations were the size of modern 3D printers. So more likely it will be the size of a building :D
@@rowdyjansen8159 You are right, but that assumes that 3D printers will not be super advanced in ~50 years. If they reach a point where they can print _everything_ (as long as you provide the required file or detailed instructions) then the sky is the limit.
@@NikolaosSkordilis actually the 3D printer was just a size reference and nothing else. I just meant that in order to make something smaller (more complex) you actually need a bigger "tool". Which i find fascinating, since there are almost no other fields to which that theory applies.
@@rowdyjansen8159 well as telescopes amplify, we need something that shrink image, so it just make sense in opposite. The smaller the image we need, the more optics and devices we need.
Physicists and engineers are absolutely amazing people.
Thank you. I'm an engineer
Flash Tech not you tho
@@datgio4951 r/murderedbyword
@@datgio4951 not polite bro
Just nerds
Retired professor of physics and astronomy here, Seeker is a global gift!! The most current and outstanding series of our day and age!! A heartfelt thank you for your unprecedented work!!
Please see isaac arthur. Youll have fun
On youtube
why u retired
@@nvytebhygtvbvtyebr yeh that channel is pretty interesting
@@wajahatwow1232 hes sick of your shit
Ok, I wanna know who did the 3D modeling for this video. There’s a LOT of really detailed intense shots over the course of this video. Someone in their CG department is off the yak
I believe it’s the chip company that made those
@@vahgarimo9864 Micron Technology is the name of that company
@@vahgarimo9864 Either ASML or its parent company Philips. Probably all footage from their sells team.
CGI was made by ASML company It self.
@@owais.wingsjilani8255 well props to whoever they have on their visual effects team. It looks wonderful
Sometimes I forget we’re in the future
Yes, were no longer in the modern era but the tranhuman era
No we are in the present.
Although it now became present, and now away into the past.
@@jonathanlange1339 You are in the future of your past
@@jonathanlange1339 in the contrary, we live slightly in the future for a couple of milliseconds and other animals as well due us being able to have low level precognition inorder to perceive events and dangers. Some animals and insects even have faster reaction times than us. the world is slow to them and they are faster at reacting
These are the people we need to be celebrating, not celebrities
The media got burnt one to many times by celebrity scientists. Like Tesla, who lived on the New York high-society party scene, and was the talk of the town with his wild stories of insane secret advances & technologies. If only his millionaire friends would gift him even more money, and forget about his long list of failed past promises and inventions
This comment ⬆️✅
@@GoatPopsicle are you kidding? tesla revolutionized the world. you have a very misguided idea of him.
@@MyBinaryLife don't expand his horizon , don't burst his little bubble. He will be cunfused and mad.
@@GoatPopsicle to be successful, one must fail multiple times.
As a microelectronics engineer, this is the best video available online that explains the process for the general public
@ungratefulmetalpansy i already watched it hh, but thanks, it's a great talk.
It took me 6 months in an independent study class to begin to grasp nanotechnology and this video just explained it in 12 minutes and it's way more inspirational than my presentation ever was.
is there a mooc for microelectronics course? I got my bachelors in electronics long back but they did not teach us anything about microelectronics. In the last sem, they taught us little bit about VLSI
@@blasttrash consult nanohub.org for starters.
Although I never encountered a good course about VLSI process in the internet.
I highly recommend reading "Fundamentals of Semiconductor Fabrication" by Gary S.May and Simon M.Sze
Good luck.
@@alihouadef5539 Thanks
I remember watching a How It's Made about darts a while back and being mind blown by the steps involved. Imagine how I felt watching this.
I’m amazed by pretty much anything re: mass production. But I’m basic. Haha There’s a funny video you should look for about a woman manufacturing her own toaster....... from scratch. It’s awesome. And terrifying.
Well, how I'm feeling is like we need a couple of those plants in the middle of the country, preferably in nuke proofed bunkers, lol.
@@TheAnticorporatist Samsung is building α plant in the US
Redstoners have some ground to cover here
Hahahaha, cant wait to see the youtube minecraft video of this.
XD
Hey guys, Sethbling here. I just created the worlds smallest computer chip in Minecraft, and I used it to play Minecraft in Minecraft
Brendan Kendall hahaha this is so gonna happen
@@brendankendall41 And it just needs a few armour stands.
What I learned from this video:
*I'm dumb as hell*
nvd Hell yeah 🙏
Lol same
Bro those are witches
Bermsy Fructa wait, sorry if I misunderstood, are you saying humans are making these because we’re bored?
the first few seconds after they started zooming in on the mircochip, i realized that im so fucked lol gonna be moved out the job market soon enough
This is actually insane. These people are so talented and genius.
Beeing a PhD in Chemistry myself, I can tell you that these are actually just a lot of regular people with a 8 year background of physics and chemistry ;)
But everyone makes one part better or finds something new and it probably took hundreds or more people for this machine on the upper level to create
For example to find out about the two laser pulses needed for the tin plasma probably required 2-3 PhDs in chemistry and physics. But still these people are like you and me, just with more experience
Notice the lack of diversity? I sure did!! Men of European descent rock!
Justin
Futures Paradise yes
When i saw how they were using a matrix like laser tech just so we can open apps a bit faster I suddenly got a deep appriciation for science and the that people work on creating such miraculous machines.
The beauty of profit incentive
true rlly trie
@@Intelwinsbigly well no but okay
@@phenax1144 Masterful rebuttal
@@Intelwinsbigly What can i say it's what i do
I started at ASML two weeks ago as a stage motion resonance engineer . I can say, Holy shit this stuff is complicated.
The clothes the workers are wearing, is it due to high radiation exposure?
@@mM-sp4ui the clothes are to prevent your from getting dust anywhere. Any skin flakes or particles have to be kept contained. As the systems are so precise a lot of the areas have to be clean rooms as a single spec of dust can disrupt the entire machine..
Please explain what that title entails.
@@floresaaronj The stage is the large metallic plate on which the carriages with the wafers glide. As they glide they make minute vibrations. the faster they glide the more and stronger vibrations are generated. The resonance group handle the vibrations generated in the system and ensures no constructive interference from vibrations or resonance effects on the stage and its subsystems.
@@TheNitrean much appreciated.
Remember when the height of advanced, cutting edge technology was grinding two rocks together to make a pointier rock? I remember. Good times.
@MBYahooo I am PRETTY sure that the first Christmas was well after the last of the stone age, i.e. neolithic age.
@MBYahooo ah sorry, my bad. Didn't read the comment properly.
only 50,000 BC kids remember
Oh I memba!
i want to shove rocks up my arse
"The number of people predicting the death of Moore’s law doubles every two years." -Peter Lee
Lee's law
Its already dead because it took to long to figure out how to produce 7nm chips. And it has to have an end halfing the size every two year is only possible till you reach Atom size or atleast the plank length.
@@Nagria2112 Moore's law is not about size
"The number of people predicting the death of the people predicting the death of Moore's Law doubles every two years."
- Johnny Sins
@@wcodelyoko Not innately, but in this context it is. No?
These scientists and engineers are the unsung heroes of our times! Mega respect to you guys, thanks for pushing humanity forward.
And great job with this documentary!
Somewhere, there’s an 8 year old watching this video and he’s beyond fascinated with this technology. He’ll end up pursing physics, engineering and the new iPhone 30 will be scheduled to release years from now.
If apple has an iphone. It wont be called an iphone in that kids future. It will be some implated or wearable tech with a totally different name.
That's pretty far away I'd say
Why iPhone? That's the real question
@@dewigesrek5651 because he's brainwashed by media and thinks that Apple still is the best. Innovative yes, best no.
Sir Wavy I’m pretty sure if he’s watching this video and he’s fascinated by technology’, it would can be safe to assume that he wouldn’t think that Apple is still the best. Anyone who knows ANYTHING about electronics or technology to some degree that is interested in watching videos like these know otherwise.
2045: can u imagine that in 2019 it was the size of a school bus!!
It'll probably be about the size of a refrigerator by then, and the chips will be microscopic.
Slappy they already are microscopic. You need a microscope to see the “streets” probably be closer to atomic or cellular sized
@@Waluigi164 The chips themselves will be microscopic, not just the transistors on them.
By that time people will wonder what a "school bus" is.
Quantum bro.
And here i am changing my phone’s angle for better internet speed
You're holding it wrong.
And I thought I was clever looping my cars keyfob over my head!
angle? dumbass it's the height that matters; Along with how close the tower is and how many obstacles are in the way
naynay sploogle r/woooosh
lol, ...here I am holding the plug-in just right so my phone will charge correctly 😔
"ASML is the most important tech company that you've never heard of" Isn't that the truest statement ever
This statement isn’t true. Moore’s Law is only being challenged in classical chip making but the next frontier is actually Quantum. Moore’s Law effectively resets on the Quantum Computer platform which is levels of multitudes more capable than classical computer systems. Sure much of our tech won’t run on Quantum yet but this is hardly the next frontier. 💯💯
@@danielcepeda4313 He wasn't talking about Moore's Law. ASML is literally the only company in the world that can manufacture CPUs. That ASML machine you've seen is sold to Intel and TSMC.
@@SimonYells I know that. What I’m saying is that these lithography machines which attempt to push beyond Moore’s Law by crunching more transistors onto silicon integrated circuits are not the future of Moore’s Law. Currently we’re at over 2,000 qubits in D-Wave systems which means their quantum transistor count on their CPU has essentially reset. Billions of bits on a classic CPU only 2,000 qubits on a QCPU but theirs a catch. Put that QCPU in superposition and we now have a 2,000 qubits to the power of 2,000. It’s mind boggling and easily the next frontier! 💯💯
@@SimonYells My mistake ASML isn’t trying to push beyond Moore’s Law, they’re trying to continue Moore’s Law even tho sooner or later it’s coming to an end. How many more transistors can they fit on those chips? Beats me but regardless the next frontier in Moore’s Law which is what I meant from the start is Quantum. 💯💯
@@danielcepeda4313 Thank you for the content dump which had absolutely nothing to do with what the original comment said
3:01 Me looking at my food in the microwave at 2 AM
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA :D
Loool
you should never cook your food in the microwave. Unless you want cancer of course. But its been proven that any type of radiation will cause cancer. Microwaves, 5G, cell phones, cell phone towers, wifi. All very dangerous. Most you cant avoid, but you can avoid not microwaving your food lol.
@@BxrHavik It's non-ionizing radiation. They aren't powerful enough to damage DNA. A helpful tip is to look at a wavelength chart, the shorter it is, the more high energy it is, meaning the less damage they can do. You start getting to ionizing radiation near the end of ultraviolet and off to gamma rays. Generally visible light and anything to the left of it is safe.
TLDR: If microwaves and infrared cause cancer, then visible light does too, so therefore there's no point.
@@BxrHavik ok boomer
2000 years later on history channel
Modern astronaut theorist say aliens help create these chips lol
IT WAS THE ALIENS!
Haha so true. They told us that Roswell gave us radar and fibre optics...😂
We had tech before the iceage... then we got fucked... and it became a Legend.
James Paquette even this explanation is mind blowing
Well YEAH!!!!
It’s pretty kick ass that he can say “We had to look at the basic plasma physics” so casually.
tommy aronson damn having a bad day?
@tommy aronson excuse me brainlet, but what nonsense are you spewing?
tommy aronson if you understood it so well why didn’t you invent this shit in the 80’s dumbass?
@tommy aronson Einstein invented General Relativity, not plasma physics...
He means basic as in fundamental not as in easy
I simply have no words for how insane that is. Except that it's insane.
This just made me realize the baffling range of humans - highly knowledgeable, creative people to dumbest, laziest kind
The second kind ends up in Congress.
@Douglas Waugh Why worship either one?
@Douglas WaughUh! Don't be stupid, that's the false dichotomy fallacy. I don't "worship" anything.
@Douglas Waugh Clearly those are not your own words. Somebody indoctrinated you from an early age.
@Douglas Waugh god is dead. we hit him with a fighter jet.
Always finish these videos feeling humbled; as I’m reminded that I’m not half as clever as I think I am!
Try watching PBS Space Time. The videos are amazing and interesting, but certainly next level.
Good. Now tell that to Donald Trump.
Knowing that make you more than twice as wise.
Same here.
@@osamabinladen824 this kind of tech is not being done in any socialistic country. Capitalism and greed is drives the people who asked these people to do their absolutely amazing work.
"We change the world one step at a time"
This man understands! 💎
Titans Tracks I think it demonstrates a fact about science that people misunderstand. Science doesn’t progress by random serendipity. People think there are big leaps and breakthroughs that suddenly shift things forward. And while that does happen, the majority of progress is made in continuous small steps through diligent efforts of hard working scientist over years. Even the flashier eureka moments often have years of work applied after the realization
Ur final message?
This is my field of study in college; Micro-electromechanical manufacturing. I absolutely loved the trick with the water
I love how they're like "you can't have water around a computer"... My water-cooled PC doesn't exist.
@@bubahanks2712 They meant controlling the water particles in such a delicate environment. At least that’s what I got out of it.
so then you could probably teach me to rewind my vcr huh? when can i expect you to come by?
As an undergraduate electrical engineer, I'm in love, so much so that I cried when the machines' internals were shown. Wonderful video and thank you.
I admire your passion
What is it taught to you right now...
@@lordpochinki2112 some stuff about Coloumbs Law, how energy transmits at a distance
@@xXxserenityxXx ok man.
You need to get laid dude
Electron living on chip: "This is how my city was built."
And what about minority carriers ?
lol
Ekon Grafik they form the poles of this city
Ekon Grafik they dont technically exist... do they?
Time to buy some stock in ASML.
Yes
Agreed. Good luck brother!
Expensive stock
wick get your money up then lol
@@siejehyeysbdkwl it's not worth it , new technology but tech market is extremely volatile
The fact that I’m an electrical engineer major and I can only understand like 50% of this stuff is alarming
This is the stuff that is not classified, You should see the classified projects ... Grape 8 ....
my friend who graduated with an EE degree specializing in controls said he didn't get anything in his first job. I think it's actually common
@Kerim Haurdic a classified airforce/ darpa research and testing program. Some say anti gravity particle research based on Tesla generators.
SDF i think falls under a microelectronics engineering degree, with a lot of courses in chem and physics.
@@its5pm yeah, weed gives you the same feeling
I love this new style of short documentary. Good stuff!
It's not a documentary.. It's an advertisement.. Big difference!
That's because people's attention span is getting smaller and smaller. Thanks internet!
*Meanwhile me:*
Still trying to figure out how to uninstall McAfee
Oh man me to i jast deleted all program files and still works
😂😂😂
Bro most under rated comment ever😂😂😂
Easy peasy
..
I uninstalled it with control panel....its was gone...
Find the uninstall applications in your windows, find mcafee and delete from there
I love how I pretended I understand the whole video
relatable
They’re speaking English but I understand nothing
I am a material science graduate even i could not understand 50% of it
@@abutaha4977 Thanks for making feel less stupid
I'm a mechatronics engineer and i found it difficult to understand EUVL from the video as well, so do not despair. But read some papers about it and it's not too complex when you break it up. Have a read if you're intrigued: aip.scitation.org/doi/full/10.1063/1.4863412
Thank you guys, I am a Software Engineer at ASML and I can say that we are proud to push the envelope of technology to the next level! #WeAreASML
All of the stupid people in our world almost make me forget about all of the geniuses in our world.
Samuel A that’s so true Father of Mooncake
It's nice to know a stupid person like you who can't even pay attention to the way they type is looking towards intelligence. Maybe you might get smart enough to not capitalize some letters and use proper punctuation.
Zabieru McCloud I mean he didnt say he wasnt stupid so i dont know whats the problem. Im not capitalising or punctuating cuz im not bothered and no one really cares about it wxcept a few people online :)
@@kendaswagger7958 Well yes I realize some people will eat with their hands when they have utensils next to them or some people will will wipe their ass with socks lol...
Yes I know people are stupid lmfao!
@infernovoid I'm one of those people who believes most people are stupid... If you believe (in general) what he did was intentional... What do I think you are?
9:08 "The tiniest particle could kill a wafer pattern."
_shows a wafer disc covered in dust_
HAHAHA
Nice one :)
I think he meant in the process of creating the pattern.
It is most likely in a protective container of some sort. The worker's finger is touching the surface, which would otherwise completely destroy the wafer pattern.
good we have such a smart ones in comments under a joke xD
*Spends an hour suiting up to go into a clean room*
*sneezes*
Made me laugh
And farts.
I wonder if the next step in clean rooms is VR
@Walter Duckworth So what are you supposed to do then?
@Walter Duckworth😂
I worked at Intel for a bit, it's every bit as insanely high tech and interesting as this describes, and then some. That is the most amazing place I've ever been inside of. Literally every technology we have as humans is brought to bear inside a fab.
And the wafers really do look like little rainbow cities under microscopes of sufficient strength. It's very , very cool.
I work for ASML, THIS IS COOL AS HELL TO SEE ON RUclips!
Send me one of these machines...
Not that I would know a damn thing about it.
Why don't we hear about this more often? Be proud man!
ASML would make Turning have a massive hard on, if he was around today.
How much do the pay to drive their trucks?
Ghani Chishty often you don’t hear about the biggest and most important companies in the world because they don’t need to advertise directly to the general population. Instead these companies work in hidden projects for the government or are in contracts with other big companies.
I remember a few SuperBowls ago one of the commercials was about CISCO you know the giant of networks equipment and cloud computing, lots of people were confused and saying they never heard of the company. I was laughing
If advance A.I ever hear:
" humans are the only contaminants for the machinery.."
We a screwed.
How did 10 people like this
@@snowball3219 👍
We are only a vessel for technology
@@snowball3219 100 more people later…
They will find it out on their own
Hardware: can do millions of calculations and processes in a second.
Software: "I have decided that I want to die."
what are you talking about? the hardware can't do it without the software
@@xybersurfer he's saying software quality is going down I believe
@@deprilula28 but an ass software can't run a complicated task without crashing or getting bugs in it
@@xybersurfer this guy doesn't have a clue what's wrong 🤣
HAL 9000 dislikes this
I remember Paul Otelini of intel saying that 5nm was about the absolute limit of moore's law. Crazy to see how far we have pushed it. I wonder where we will hit a true wall. Quantum physics is incredibly hard to overcome but we have continued to push. Gordon Moore would be proud.
We still haven't really reached that. Also when you see nanometers written on CPU box is basically just brand name, not technical spec, because different semiconductor components are different size and often marketable number is often the lowest one or very optimistic.
I am a musician (with a curious mind for all things that feed that need), this story is a glorious example of human ingenuity, perseverance to innovate and express ones creative thoughts.
Thank goodness we're all made differently. Bravo to you Physicists, Scientists, geeky or not...well you know who you are...cheers!!!
Read the story of the mathematician who solved fermat's last theorem (math).
Such an inspiring story.
woo hoo. i was a horrible student. all i do now for free time is sit at home and learn math, nature, and physics. i too am a musician.
@@holdmybeer Many really smart people were bad students sometimes in their lives. Never too late :)
@@holdmybeer hey how'd you know I was a bad student?
Were you one too??
Physicist here, thank you for being different with your cool music and stuff.
“It’s about the size of a school bus”
I swear to god, its the 1950s all over again
eventually that giant machine will be in your pocket.
@@Omar-em7rl its not a fuckin computer you dumbass
You bettter listen again at about 06:00 ...
@George Usually gets worse when I think about how stupid people are despite having access to the entirety of human knowledge.
@@p00pie .
All of this amazing innovation and brilliant engineering just so I can swipe left while taking a dump... perfect!
Underrated comment.
Lol😊😊😊😅🤣
Billions can swipe while they wipe, not just you :D
Hats off to you guys! The video graphics for demonstrating how that laser travels & hits the droplet with perfect accuracy was awesome. I actually understood what you guys were trying to tell us. Many thanks for sharing it publicly. And like Mike said - It's encouraging!
Amazing video, something I didn't expected to find as a regular upload. I hold EUV lithography very close to my heart, I'm currently a PhD student at the Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, but as an undergraduate at this same university I conducted research and published a conference paper on photoresist for use in Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography. Nice to see such relevant and personally interesting work.
@Marc Jackson It's from an annual SPIE conference in 2018. doi: 10.1117/12.2316333 Mostly a study on the chemistry of a class of potential EUV photoresist.
@@JacobNSitterly damn bruh. Hope you do well with that nano stuff
Cool story bro. No really, no sarcasm, cool story 😎
You sound like a IEEE member
Chip manufacturers: Our technology pushes physics to the next level!
Quantum tunneling: I'm gonna end this man's whole career, hold my leptons.
Human: we gonna destroy you
Sad thing quantum tunneling was thought up by Eisenstein
@@yeetyeet8025 That's not true. And why would that be sadly...?
You might be thinking about quantum entanglement.
@Bernd DasBrot Quantum tunneling is used in many non-quantum computer technologies. From the STM scanners used by these microchip companies to lots of technologies like flash memory, etc.
Quantum tunneling is in many ways what makes it hard to build a quantum computer.
And why do you say quantum computers can't do shit...?
@@yeetyeet8025 sad? "Horry compensation Batman"
they will be about this small
Not smaller than plank scale
A pixel is larger tho
@@januaryramadhan7765 no shit
It says "read more" ... that's pretty large.
I c wut u did thur🤪
Lets remember that computers we have on our desks today, also used to be the size of a school bus couple of decades ago.
Let’s remember phones that we have in our pants today used to be the size of bricks a couple decades ago 👖
pretty soon we will have chip creating technology that fits in our pocket
@@plexos8915 Or it will stay the size of schoolbuses and make much more efficient chips
Let's also remember that if the average rate of improvement during the 1990's had continued until today, the 50% per year clock speed improvement and ~30% power increase would have gotten us 5 THz processors, still single core, with a 15 kW TDP. It really hasn't been this smooth exponential increase in performance. The 90's were pretty magical, especially for real-time applications like games. Since then, parallel tasks like graphics have improved greatly while framerates and overall complexity of games have stagnated. Multicore CPUs are a mixed blessing, to use more cores, work is split over multiple frames, so framerates are improved, but there is more latency and now you need ~144 FPS just to feel like 60 FPS used to. The big gains have been in graphics, throughput computing and power consumption.
@@plexos8915 I’m sure the chips will be implanted on us and the computer will just be part of us and help us solve more complex problems
2025: Still don't have money to upgrade from my 2009 Laptop
@Shawn Michael I need a sugar mommy at this point.
ZImpresive an SSD from micro center starts from 16.99$ lol
@@ZImpresive Buy a Smart Box with 4 Gb of RAM, develop stuff in android. They cost roughly 30 bucks. You could try earn those essy
lol by 2025 we are back to stoneage due to the result of the WW3 that is coming in like 2 yrs
Bro I pull $100k and I just keep resoldering the parts on my 2004 Toshiba.
Imagine showing this stuff to people just 70 years ago.
Baghuul and showing it will people in 70 years. They’ll be like “awww the machine was as big as a school bus. That’s cute. Now I can 3D print chips at home with my phone and a toaster sized tool.”
Imagine if you can see 100 years in future.
They would take their box of cigarettes, lsd, manual transmissions, turquoise rings, and record players then storm off all whilst calling you millenial trash
They are. 70 year old are still alive (no, not me) I was an 80's kid. All of this technology is so mindblowing it's hard to even put into words.
Ballsweat McGee 😅😅
Almost sounds like they’re describing alien technology.
Coldern Ice what do you mean by that
It's alien to me, that's for sure
Google:
us20060071122
You should watch a video on how practical quantum computers work, that would blow your mind.
While it's not quite a more complicated product. The abuse of physics is much worse
@@patrickbodine6010 "The basis for this invention is an event, referring to FIG. 1, occurring on May 2, 2004, in which the inventor (“he”) personally experienced a full-body teleportation while walking to the bus stop (A) along a road (B) that runs perpendicular to the nearby commercial airport runways where planes are landing." ... PATENT STATUS: Abandoned
If you're watching this video without complaining about understanding the physics you are a gift to humanity. Thanks for sharing this video @Seeker. We might not understanding everything but we're glad technology has advanced to the point we have enough fans.
These guys are making all of this and I can't even pass my physics test.
It took tens of years for them. Just keep trying and you'll do it ;)
Just gonna put it out here that I’m studying for my physics mid term right now aaaand somehow ended up here on YT watching this...
@@daayemshehzad and im studying for another paper as well :)
How's That App? Some of the best innovators in the fields of physics failed basic school tests early on, you can do it bud :)
Everything humankind has ever accomplished was due to countless years of study, attempting and perfecting
to think 100 years ago we couldnt even fathom what a microchip was, 100 years from now there will be technology we cant even imagine right now.
Deep.
There already is. We are kept roughly 100 years behind in understanding which is why Tesla's "incorrect" formulas were recently declared as correct all along. Do you think that was accidental? Along with a Navy patent for am inertia-negating saucer based on his work? And scalar waves transmitters? Because the OAA said his dozens to trunks of notes and prototypes had "no scientific value"? ;)
I'm still waiting when photonics will finally start gaining some traction.
@@BattousaiHBr That's already reality.
@@VndNvwYvvSvv i mean substituting silicon electronic chips, not just in the telecom industry.
My kids in 50 years: “dad my quantum entangled micron bruh fridge is not radiated yet, I wanna make a 0.1x0.2 nanochip for my teleportation watch”
Comedy
You mean grand grand kids?
its either that or
"dad we gotta drink dirtwater again, the water that the government sent us got radiatet again"
Bruh
"Son, I told you not to entangle those until I paid the singularity bill and changed it's spin. You'll have to limit your teleportations this week and stop looking at social media from anti-Earth."
I’m starting work at lam research on Monday. I’ll be an engineer tech working on their etching and deposition equipment. I’m so hyped!
So how's it going? Do u have a prior job experience? BS or MS? Have a lot to ask you
Tell us how it's going?
Lam sauce
Annnnd get got fired
Sounds extremely boring.
This is so far away from my scope of understanding, it literally feels like magic. I am awestruck at what we've collectively accomplished.
Karen, is that you?
Not just "we", "collectively" too.
i'd say the not geniuses who delivered food to the geniuses are also part of the progress
my mind was floating away until she said "Bunny Suits are required"
It's a common term, they're also used in hospitals and many other places
lol same I was in awe and less focused on narration until I hear bunny suits.
"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants" - Isaac Newton
"I’ve never seen a homeless guy with a bottle of Gatorade." - George Carlin
"I like pepperoni nipples" -definately me
,,E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E'' - Robert Makłowicz
Sometimes I think - me
@IanFromCalifornia I don't think Steve said that, but I also wouldn't be surprised. Both him and Bill are arrogant thieves.
I have started my PhD in this field and my professor suggested me this video along with other such videos which are gems, as it narrates about what is presently going in the industry.
Nothing more beautiful than this stuff...
nothing and women
@@rafqueraf 😂
My girlfriend and my friend's mom are beautiful.
Space. period.
@@sasmitvaidyaThere's a paradox when using the word "nothing" in this way. "Nothing more beautiful than this stuff...
" Can mean an affirmation or a negation at same time. A negative affirmation or an affirmative negation.
Wow. These machines are absolutely stunning. The engineers and scientists who bring them to life are amazing.
Thats it, at this point i understand about this as much as my dog, maybe even less.
Hey Mr Slav, looking for content?
hey mr slav
Why isn't your comment verified??!
@@justicewarrior9187* channel verified
don't underestimate the vast knowledge of the dog
I'm still proud of my baking soda volcano.
99.9% of students: Ok teacher, that's all fine but what's the point of studying all this???
Teacher: Well, you will pass the exam with flying colours!
0.1% students: Quietly making the future.
Well , students go to school to learn abt stuff , asking what is the point is a legitimate question imo ...
This was a triumph!
I'm making a note here:
"huge success!!"
It's hard to overstate
My satisfaction.
Aperture science:
We do what me must
Because we can.
@Захар Саяпин Still alive.
Still alive.
@Захар Саяпин hey leave some lyrics for the rest of us :P
For the good of all of us
Except the ones who are dead :c
*Moore's Law:I am the king here*
*Nanotechnology: Laughs in atoms*
It would be Quantum Mechanics
*Quantum mechanics: laughs in quantum tunneling*
@@FunBotan cries and laughs at the same time
Plank legh :"shut up"
Those are Quanthumtechnology. Ex: Quanthum computer.
Edited: nvm... 2people alr mentioned it
That purple light
...is making me wondering if my eye sight might take a hit after I'm done watching this incredible backstory about the gap between people who design those purple lights and people like me who is so broke that I still haven't made up my mind between fixing my car's window or the back of my phone's screen
People like you who contribute to the economy are the reason things like this are posible
No , the taxes of the average citizen are put into the military and other stupid stuff , for example , only 2.3% of America’s total budget is given to NASA , meaning that most of the money is put into things other than science .
@@shukrantpatil nobody talked about public funding of science in the US, these kind of advances come from the improvement of products that are consumed by a lot of people, that's what the person above you meant.
10% comments: "This is amazing!"
20% comments: "Guess I'm dumb :( "
70% comments: "ThErMaL PaStE On BaCk oF CPU!"
15% monke
70% of people do not realize that is not thermal paste applicator, but a probe that allows checking for defects.
@@aaronjackson1143 2:08 clearly a syringe with a paste
Love the fact that I get to see this advanced form of lithography in my lifetime
Wow, these guys are amazing, so clever, we take our devices for granted but you don't realise the technical genius that creates the machinery behind end product.
"Takes 20 trucks and 3 planes to ship just one of them...."
Still the planes and the truck is cheaper than the machine.
Interesting way to look at it. Thx
I think an EUV scanner is about $175 Million. A Boeing 747-8 freighter is at least twice that.
@@agz163 well.. that is just for the unit?
@@agz163 Uhhh...but I don't think they'd need to *buy* the airplane. They'd rent it from airline companies.
And in a decade or so it fits in device in pocket...
Yet a monitor stand cost more than my phone
With apple, your paying for the brand.
There is more metal in your stand than ur fone? 😂
@@ogpogtane7244 there is less chips and technology carefully constructed by a precise machine in a piece of metal?
This is nothing new. It's marketing 101 for high end brands. Make something ridiculously expensive that no one will buy. This just maintains the illusion that this brand is higher end than all others. Then people associate everything they sell as 'luxury' and 'high end'. It's mainly to convince all the vain wealthy people and the one's who have to show they spent money, to keep buying their brand.
Fun fact, that stand is extremely inefficiently made. They start with a giant block of aluminum and mill it down instead of casting the general shape and finishing it. When made that way, the $1000 price tag becomes almost reasonable. But you still have to ask why as there are better ways of making extremely sturdy stands. I guess Apple can't get enough of that free marketing of people complaining about it.
This made me realize how much of an idiot i am compared to the people doing real intellectual work
Saad Raza Exactly. I feel kinda stupid now. 😹
Humans are interdependent so don't feel bad about this. Even these people will indirectly need you, me and other regular people so they can keep doing their work.
calamorta That’s right. 👌🏼
fr, I've never felt so unaccomplished to be in medical school
@@calamorta nah, not really. Crushing majority of this planet is useless and we only need maybe a couple dozens of millions for subsisting most of our modern life style and industries, while being able to severely reduce our poisonous enviromental emissions and failing systems due to useless people overpopulating.
It's a harsh thing to say but most of the people around will never do anything noteworthy in their life aside from wasting resources and fart gasses.
That being said, the best and brightest sometimes grow in the greatest of needs. If everything was already good and easy due to less pressure from a stable healthy population we might not have pushed to advance as much. Who knows.
6:06 "The most important Tech companie you've never heard of."
Lol
I cannot comprehend these beautiful human accomplishments.
just wait until graphene becomes affordable enough to make silicon look like an 8 track tape
Graphene as a substance is already pretty cheap. What graphene technology are you talking about that will make silicon obsolete?
@@gorgolyt I was under the impression that graphene (in it's one atom thick lattice arrangement) has not been able to be manufactured inexpensively enough to warrant it's full potential....that the "race" for graphene hasn't been met quite yet. Sure carbon is altogether cheap as hell but the process for manufacture just hasn't caught up enough to make it affordable. Forgive me if I've mistaken.
graphene is so 20 years ago.
@@blackoakmushrooms From what I've gathered, it's not that graphene is too expensive to manufacture, but that the manufacturing processes aren't able to create large enough sheets which are defect free, and single atom defects can disrupt all the properties that make graphene so great.
@@blackoakmushrooms For Graphene there is really only one arrangement of the atoms possible, any other arrangement from the carbon atoms is per definition not Graphene. Graphene can only be called Graphene if the atoms are arranged in such way that the carbon atoms form a one dimensional sheet of carbon atoms. That means that the sheet can be only one single atom thick. That is THE definition from Graphene. There are some composite materials, but those materials are strictly seen no longer Graphene because the combined materials have different specifications from the original base materials.
I've had this discussion many times with internet fraud Robert Murray Smith, who claims that he can produce Graphene with his kitchen oven and some other kitchen tools. And he sells his DIY charcoal (so called Graphene) as if it is Graphene on his website, and people are falling for his scam and people actually buy his crap. I have tried to warn people, but my comments get removed, and his group of followers even seem to look at him as if he is a hero.
Secondly, if you search for skeleton ultra capacitors you will notice that Graphene is already in production for commercially available products.
This is inspiring and so mind blowing.
"Its so complex. Theres a lot that can go wrong"
Quantum computers: yes
Quantom computers: 3x5=15
I am a microelectronics engineer, and the perfect combination of precise control of physics and ingenuity is so exciting! I love this topic!
@Giovanni Marrero dude, appreciate people that bring to lifr the technology you used to type this bullshit..
@@unachukwuodera7495 if you look closely, guy has personal issues and is jealous of the person that had better life than them
Since you’re apparently an expert in the subject. Would you agree that these guys are far above everybody else like they claim or just barely ahead maybe at the moment?
"What we are doing with this technology will usher in cheaper products"
Apple: Hold my Iphone 11
Fox
You have to choose between more for the same price. Or...the same for cheaper.
If Intel just kept on making Pentium 1's...not cramming in more transistors...Intel CPU's would be very cheap.
Do you want more? Or do you want cheap?
get your head out of your ass and see that apple is overpriced. Just look at their competitors like pixel 4
It has to be understood as "We increase our profit margin"
@@tylerdurden3722 But it can't be always increasing in price. You see, pentium 1's were expensive when they were lauched their cost was upwards of 600$. By your logic, a i9-9900k would be 2000-3000$. Just because the techniques of manufacturing something improve, it doesn't mean that it will be automatically more expensive. Hell, it can even come out as being cheaper to produce.
Me clicking this video: ah yes Moore's law of course i know that
For a second i asked myself, what does a clothing store have to do with computers Ahaha
This would sound a lot less alien to us if Seeker could get quick interviews from individual employees about their roles in the company. Undoubtedly, there is some general understanding of how the product comes together as a whole, but the video emphasizes this much more then the individual specialties that come together to form a greater whole.
Mechanical engineers, material scientists, programers, physicists and etc all play roles and probably have specialized positions even within those categories.
They explained how they did it.
It is a droplet of metal shot twice to generate a ray and it is like normal photolithography from there.
The problem is making it all work
There's hundreds of steps into making the wafers photo lithography is just one of them.
I recently saw a video by PsiQuantum explaining their present process in building optical computers and the founder chose to delay some information on their process. It’s to prevent other counties like China or Russia to gain advantages in tech.
Like any other job i get what your saying, because these are the folks who tell the employees “how to” assemble.
There are way too many steps to explain in a 20 minute video. I work at a semiconductor fab and they had to dedicate an entire week 8am-5pm just to teach us a "brief" overview of the production process.
This video entirely and completely blew my mind! 🤯🤯🤯💥🔥
They have a factory here, I made parts for the waver-transport-system yeaaaars ago.
Massive highgrade aluminium slabs with hundreds of holes to transport the wavers like air hockey!
Never forget that part!
I work at ASML 😊 “The most important company you’ve never heard of”!!
They produce the machines right?
@@birukch7871 Yes we do, we make the machines that companies like Intel, Samsung and tsmc need to make chips.
@@MrWirecase how close is this to being widely deployed?.. a.k.a is when is this company going to peak its profitability?
dang... y'all do your thing. Every single one of you are literally making enabling the humanity to advance further into the future!
Quick question. Does anyone know of any books that details semiconductor manufacturing technology?
The most mind-blowing thing is that only ONE company on earth makes this. How tf does a single company risk so much, invest so much, push the limit so much, and yet doesn't have a single competitor? I mean considering every person on earth relies on this technology you'd expect more interest to catch up. It's lucrative af.
22nm, 14nm, 10nm
Zen 2 - "Am I a joke to you"
How small is it ?
@@chithicc7614 7nm
7nm
@@Reedoxx yea because at the current design under 7 or 8 nm quantum interference is happening, right?
Lord Gospodin at sub 5nm quantum interference occurs. That’s the issue AMD is currently trying to overcome for Zen 4 since Zen 3 is going to be above 5nm or true 7nm.
This is most advanced technology of this century that made all other advance technology possible! It's amazing how all of us hsve access to it in forms of different gadgets like of our phones. We are basically holding piece of most advanced technologies coming together to form this wonderful gadget.
This makes me appreciate the people who put real effort into their passion to innovate and for the betterment of technology and the world. We use these devices every day and take them for granted. I can't imagine where we'd be if it weren't for these brilliant people.
7:53 they didn't blur those screens because they had confidential data or anything
they did it out of shame as they, the largest supplier of photolithography machine, are still using windows 7
When you finally get such a complex system stable, you don't worry about updating the OS, unless absolutely necessary. It's not like the computers are on the internet anyway, so once stable, there is very little need to update them.
It is a common practice in most process heavy industries. It takes time to reprogram all the codes and other things to keep up with windows; so what companies do is they keep updating on the previous softwares and process related codes without worrying about trying to refix them for an updated windows OS.
@@Fkashmhd i don't really think you know what you're talking about
20 years ago, these kind of footages can only be found in sci-fi movies.
Not really. In fact virtually all the technology in a chip fab like this existed 20 years ago, just in somewhat less refined a state, except for the tin microdroplet laser plasma light source.
This was filmed in skyworks about 2 decades ago: ruclips.net/video/0wrsZog8qXg/видео.html
10mintwo Sure, I also got one in my basement, nothing special
10mintwo You're like saying that electric self-driving cars are not that futuristic because batteries already existed 200 years ago and wheels are already more than 3000 years old, except for the AI.
@@misusatriyo Not really, no.
10mintwo i think, it kinda is.
Awesome 👌
Just beyond me how much engineering involved in this. Mind blowing 😲
"Moore's law is an expectation, *not a natural law*..."
#shotsFired @ Ray Kurzweil
=.=? um why? who would disagree with him? if anything is a inside joke that became a name that business rely on because the hole industry needed the flow of new computers.
So yes a expectation, a self fulfilling prophecy.
David Dickey technically could be a natural law, we just don’t know if it is and have no way of proving it but it just continues then we’ll probably just except it as one.
@@sdprz7893 i can tell you a natural law: karens will be karens, your crush doesn't love you, taxes and death are a certain things in life
@@thomas.thomas Sheesh, don't need to be depressing.
@@thomas.thomas Are you giving up on white girls?
2:17 We found Tim Cook’s doppelgänger... in this field, maybe separated at birth!?
And professor X at 5:30