TSMC founder Morris Chang on the evolution of the semiconductor industry

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

Комментарии • 340

  • @noddy12387
    @noddy12387 Год назад +317

    Dont forget he's 92 years old now

  • @phoso1
    @phoso1 Год назад +238

    Most people don't understand how important this man is to the world. 🙏 Thank God for Dr. Morris Chang

  • @dinarwali386
    @dinarwali386 11 месяцев назад +112

    Dr. Morris Change deserves a Nobel Prize, surely. The kind of impact he has is second to none. Period.

    • @albertlee8342
      @albertlee8342 10 месяцев назад +5

      Morris was born at the same generation of Charles Kao worked at ITT., who was Nobel Prize winner at the light signal transmissions by Fiber Optics.

    • @SAhellenLily
      @SAhellenLily 10 месяцев назад

      Agree😊

  • @bankfinanzas6348
    @bankfinanzas6348 10 месяцев назад +39

    Ing. Morris Chang is incredible Greetings from Peru 🇵🇪 everyone

  • @javed876
    @javed876 8 месяцев назад +46

    Love his humor and his stamina.

  • @TECHNIACS
    @TECHNIACS 11 месяцев назад +88

    Took too long for them to give him a standing ovation ...crowd should be roaring and cheering...the man is an ICON. It doesn't get any better. I believe God works through people like him to change the course of humanity. The world is indebted to innovators like you Dr. Morris Chang. THANK YOU!

    • @清心-e9v
      @清心-e9v 11 месяцев назад +2

      很快全世界會再認識一個台灣人,他的成就不亞於張忠謀蔡英文,將會造福全世界

    • @Tony_bobo
      @Tony_bobo 9 месяцев назад

      @@清心-e9v Jensen Huang? Lisa Su?

    • @henrylee8510
      @henrylee8510 7 месяцев назад

      Sure God made it possible. One of the best Jokes I've heard. All good things are attributed to God, when a child dies it's never because of this fantasy of God. Companies are successful due to hard work and luck of human ingenuity, not this idiotic idea of a deity.

    • @TECHNIACS
      @TECHNIACS 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@henrylee8510 Good for you that you know it ALL. I don't. I still believe in things (translation: I don't know) and therefore, I keep learning, exploring, asking questions. Maybe one day, I'll know it ALL too. Patience. ;)

  • @csgod100
    @csgod100 Год назад +86

    I am truly inspired! I'm proud to have been born in Taiwan and am currently studying in the United States.

  • @marcusaurelius6607
    @marcusaurelius6607 Год назад +110

    most of your laptops, smartphones, dishwashers, internet and digital telephony were largely enabled by the efforts of this man.
    deepest respect.

  • @sairamgupta8691
    @sairamgupta8691 11 месяцев назад +25

    Listening to Morris Chang sir after reading chip war
    👏🏽🙌🏽🧿

    • @Paretozen
      @Paretozen 10 месяцев назад +1

      Listening to Morris Chang after I read the introduction of chip war. Nice primer it seems.

  • @JeremyDWilliamsOfficial
    @JeremyDWilliamsOfficial Год назад +50

    We owe a very great debt of gratitude to Dr. Chang. More,, much more, than most realize!! Thank you Dr. Chang for all your hard work and dedication to make our world a better place!!

  • @jamess.2491
    @jamess.2491 Год назад +86

    It was a pleasure to see this talk in-person, having the opportunity to hear from people like Mr. Chang and Pat Gelsinger really makes me proud to be an MIT alum. Also, to anyone else in the Cambridge area you can sign up for these events completely free, even if you're not part of the MIT community.

  • @devbites77
    @devbites77 10 месяцев назад +2

    An honor to listen to this incredible man.

  • @janet_dreamland
    @janet_dreamland Год назад +42

    this was simply amazing. thank you MIT. Dr. Chang spoke so intelligently and fluidly, and in English even as he's older now.

  • @Gatecrasher1
    @Gatecrasher1 10 месяцев назад +4

    A man who was waaaaaaaaaaay ahead of the curve

  • @jadecarson5081
    @jadecarson5081 7 месяцев назад +111

    Intel and AMD will definitely have their share of the market. TSMC is at max capacity and investing in other semiconductor companies will be an absolute power move, I keep increasing my shares manageably. Different chips are good at different things and Nvidia has been very specialised, which leaves other aspects of Al open.

    • @mondimlotshwa3958
      @mondimlotshwa3958 7 месяцев назад

      This is the type of in-depth detail on the semiconductor market that investors need, also the right moment to focus on the rewarding AI manifesto.

    • @jadecarson5081
      @jadecarson5081 7 месяцев назад

      certainly, i had bought NVDA shares at $300, $475 cheap b4 the 10 for 1 split and with huge interest I keep adding, i’m currently doings the same for PLTR and AMD constructively. Best possible way to get ahead, is participating behind top experienced performers.

    • @donnahensley2459
      @donnahensley2459 7 месяцев назад

      How much of their stock do you own? Seems like a lot of your investment is riding on this

    • @davegustavo4726
      @davegustavo4726 7 месяцев назад

      You are buying a company to own it and not a piece of paper, The market is a zero-sum game (2 sides), Know what you are buying not just out of trend interest.

    • @DoughRollers-tb5li
      @DoughRollers-tb5li 7 месяцев назад

      Amazingly, people are starting to get the uniqueness of Palantir.

  • @dideroteffect
    @dideroteffect Год назад +60

    Most important part starts at 36:00. What made Taiwan particularly suited to making advanced chips.

    • @huangjacqueline9581
      @huangjacqueline9581 11 месяцев назад +7

      Japanese working culture in Taiwan is one crucial point.

    • @nexusyang4832
      @nexusyang4832 10 месяцев назад +1

      And a lot of young thriving livers.

  • @crlin1220
    @crlin1220 Год назад +84

    Behind the experience curve theory of the TSMC, one element rarely mentioned is the innovations/patents that were generated thorough the company's experience curve and its R&D. The annual R&D budget of the TSMC is more than 5 billion US dollars. TSMC has more than 68000 patents globally in the semiconductor manufacturing technology. These things are continuously keeping the TSMC at the leading edge of manufacturing the most advanced chips in the world. No other company can surpass it. It is ignorant for some people to think that the success of the TSMC in Taiwan depends merely on the better exercise in logistics execution.

  • @黃淑媛-d7d
    @黃淑媛-d7d Год назад +15

    We always respect and thanks for Morris to bulid such great company TSMC.

  • @irgggg34
    @irgggg34 11 месяцев назад +10

    Fantastic video. Thank you for sharing it on the internet to all of us not at MIT

  • @777jones
    @777jones Год назад +28

    Fantastic. What an influential and consequential man.

  • @foremarke
    @foremarke Год назад +82

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 🎤 *Dr. Morris Chang, founder of TSMC, speaks at MIT's Manufacturing Distinguished Speaker Series.*
    02:07 🌍 *Morris Chang's ties to MIT and his educational background.*
    03:50 💡 *Morris Chang's pivotal role in founding TSMC in 1987, transforming the semiconductor industry.*
    05:40 🏢 *Impact of Morris Chang's contributions, including the renovation of MIT's Building E52.*
    06:21 🚀 *Topics Morris Chang will cover: TSMC's chip production, technology advancements, and US investments.*
    07:49 🤔 *Morris Chang reflects on his time at MIT, emphasizing the influence of failures on his life.*
    10:25 🕰️ *Overview of semiconductor history: transistors, integrated circuits, and the impact of Gordon Moore's Law.*
    13:16 🌐 *Pervasiveness of chips in various industries from defense to smartphones and cars.*
    19:57 📈 *Gordon Moore's prediction of the doubling of transistors every 1.5 to 2 years and its impact on chip development.*
    26:09 🔄 *Shift from manufacturing-focused to architecture and design in chip technology.*
    31:28 🌐 *Rise of Taiwan and South Korea in chip manufacturing over the past three decades.*
    34:50 🔄 *Introduction of TSMC's innovative Foundry business model, breaking from traditional integrated device manufacturing (IDM).*
    36:27 🎓 *TSMC's success in Taiwan is attributed to well-trained technicians and operators from trade schools, distinct from elite education institutions like MIT.*
    39:35 🔄 *Low turnover rates among operators in Japan and Taiwan contribute to manufacturing stability, contrasting with higher turnover in Texas during Morris Chang's experience.*
    43:13 🚄 *Geographic concentration of facilities in Taiwan, connected by high-speed trains, allows over a thousand engineers to work in cities away from their home base, promoting effective operations.*
    45:41 🔧 *TSMC's ecosystem involves three decades of building upstream and downstream partnerships, with major semiconductor equipment manufacturers and packaging/testing companies in Taiwan.*
    46:39 🌍 *The susceptibility of a country to chip manufacturing relates to its economic development status; Taiwan's advantages mirror what the US enjoyed in the 50s and 60s, but Morris Chang predicts a shift to other countries like India or Vietnam in the future.*
    48:24 💹 *The traditional economic model of free market, free trade, and globalization for chips is changing, with potential implications for efficiency and resilience in the chip industry. National security considerations may override economic models.*
    Made with HARPA AI

    • @David_Lloyd-Jones
      @David_Lloyd-Jones Год назад +5

      a.) Indexes like this are a service to the community. Well done and thank you.
      b.) This is a particularly good one of the genre, written and edited with wit and discernment.

    • @foremarke
      @foremarke Год назад +4

      kind words David@@David_Lloyd-Jones, but this Harpa AI chrome extension does make these summaries really easy (i'm not an employee/ambassador) but it has been really helpful.
      All the best

  • @jack831171
    @jack831171 Год назад +31

    The greatest tech giant of our era. Proud to be a Taiwanese as Morris Chang !!

    • @beibei1986
      @beibei1986 Год назад +1

      很可惜,他自己說他自己不是台灣人。他不是回到台灣,而是來到台灣。

    • @user-sblvchanel6
      @user-sblvchanel6 Год назад +8

      @@beibei1986並沒有,他在竹科那麽久,從沒說過這種話,他是說他從美國回到台灣,而不是來到台灣。

    • @user-sblvchanel6
      @user-sblvchanel6 Год назад +5

      Yes, he’s Taiwanese.

    • @yanglee1404
      @yanglee1404 11 месяцев назад +1

      He was a Chinese mainlander, later an American immigrated from China, and a Taiwanese after around 55.
      He is now a Taiwanese.

    • @云起-p4m
      @云起-p4m 10 месяцев назад

      他祖籍浙江,國籍美國,工作在台灣,但不是台灣人,謝謝。在血統上,他是中國人。要知道,台灣人血統上并不是中國人。台灣人的祖先是南島人和日本人。

  • @AIvolution8
    @AIvolution8 Год назад +18

    Dr. Morris Chang is a living god. I'm so grateful for his dedication to creating the beautiful digital world we live in today.

  • @chandramouliramachandran4217
    @chandramouliramachandran4217 9 месяцев назад +4

    We welcome Mr. Morris Chang to India, the growing country. We have younger generation with dedication to work.

  • @sharon5114
    @sharon5114 11 месяцев назад +5

    great video, thank you for documenting this moment of Dr.Morris.

  • @ddbbel5654
    @ddbbel5654 8 месяцев назад +2

    such a respectable industrial leader Morris Chang🤩👍👍👍

  • @rriqueno
    @rriqueno 6 месяцев назад +1

    The world as we know it at this moment wouldn’t be posible without TSMC. Thanks Morris.

  • @jessehepburn
    @jessehepburn Год назад +7

    Great talk. Right on time.

  • @lain11644
    @lain11644 Год назад +38

    Still sharper than most at 92

    • @yummy77777
      @yummy77777 11 месяцев назад +1

      He's a genius

  • @wohola
    @wohola Год назад +540

    Morris Chang is arguably the most important living person on earth. He is even more important than Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Jensen Huang and Sam Altman, because all of those founders who are developing the most advanced AI rely on TSMC's most advanced chip manufacturing.

    • @peter0702
      @peter0702 Год назад +38

      I argue Bill Gates, almost all TSMC engineers use Windows.

    • @etarurui
      @etarurui Год назад +61

      no they use Linux
      arguably ASML is as important

    • @s0kulite
      @s0kulite Год назад

      @@peter0702windows won’t exist in the state today if TSMC didn’t build chips that can run them

    • @Lalalalalelo
      @Lalalalalelo Год назад +11

      i argue....i argue....

    • @theYoutubeHandle
      @theYoutubeHandle Год назад +63

      nope, farmers are the most important because all these founders need to eat food.

  • @willberry6434
    @willberry6434 Год назад +13

    Still so so sharp

  • @olutayodurodola5891
    @olutayodurodola5891 Год назад +29

    A Very wise presentation from Dr Chang, he delivered a lecture on multiple subjects in less than an hour. 🎉🎉❤

  • @高騰許
    @高騰許 11 месяцев назад +6

    Morris awesome!!!

  • @Policies2040
    @Policies2040 11 месяцев назад +3

    ❤❤really pioneer for this century

  • @sanjayprasad3005
    @sanjayprasad3005 Месяц назад

    Morris Chang is a great personality.He had awesome stamina even at the age of 92.He is hopeful about India as the future manufacturinh hub of Chips.That is great!!😊😀

  • @Hamzairshad5
    @Hamzairshad5 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for adding subtitles

  • @sctsou1558
    @sctsou1558 Год назад +8

    I like that the thing Dr Chang would have liked to do over again at MIT was to simply study harder!

  • @josepedrosantiagosilva9625
    @josepedrosantiagosilva9625 16 дней назад +1

    Sharp mind.

  • @iiigraghu
    @iiigraghu 9 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent Presentation 💐

  • @janeznovak7589
    @janeznovak7589 10 месяцев назад +4

    A Chinese American Morris Chang did whole round. Used his top industry knowledge, connections in USA to build semiconductors in Taiwan. And now TSMC builds fab in USA.
    From British education in Hong Kong to PhD in states. Fully integration in USA with rich career. As retired guy he moved to Taiwan in 80s to start another career - as business guy and made it big. This guy is megastar

    • @張杰-j7p
      @張杰-j7p 8 месяцев назад

      Even if you deliberately strengthen the connection with the word China and downplay the country Taiwan, nothing will change. Go back and climax inside the high walls, poor Chinese, (TSMC is the TSMC of the world, not you Chinese)

  • @giralorz7908
    @giralorz7908 Год назад +4

    Thank you ❤

  • @melodiawang598
    @melodiawang598 Год назад +27

    台灣以張忠謀為榮❤❤

  • @Satheesh100
    @Satheesh100 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you Sir..Thank you MIT

  • @jaitanmartini1478
    @jaitanmartini1478 Год назад +8

    Legend!

  • @kellyklingbeil5802
    @kellyklingbeil5802 Год назад +5

    Jack Kilby and Robert Noyce were the ones who invented the first Microchip in 1959 with Texas Instruments.

  • @lawrenceyan8543
    @lawrenceyan8543 10 месяцев назад +6

    THAT IS A HEALTHY 92 YEAR OLD MAN

  • @健中黃-h3t
    @健中黃-h3t Год назад +7

    我會一起,跟台灣人,走到,未來。

  • @danieljakic9320
    @danieljakic9320 7 месяцев назад

    Fantastic, so inspirational

  • @lisizecha9759
    @lisizecha9759 Год назад +1

    Amazing story and amazing personality.
    Ripping apart 1000 families kind of puts a stain on it

  • @binmarcy
    @binmarcy 5 месяцев назад

    He according to me is most definitely the Architect of the Modern Digital Age.

  • @csvegso
    @csvegso Месяц назад

    I would have listened to him for hours.

  • @qemmm11
    @qemmm11 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks 😊
    Hope that i were at TSMC

  • @coincrazy3563
    @coincrazy3563 Месяц назад

    great presenter

  • @명마블라디미르
    @명마블라디미르 Год назад +22

    창 회장님이 하신말씀중 세계1위 반도체 공장이 곧 세계1위 국방디펜스 이다 최고의 반도체 공장이 파괴 되거나 멈추는 걸 그 어떤 나라도 원치 않는다.

    • @hgghfhbnj8505
      @hgghfhbnj8505 Год назад

      但我如果是中國共產黨政府,我要取得優勢的話將南韓與台灣一起都用核彈毀滅是個選項

  • @leeo8149
    @leeo8149 9 месяцев назад +4

    MIT should’ve just interviewed him instead of having him stand and do this presentation at 92. Come on MIT!

    • @aureliusfeynman485
      @aureliusfeynman485 5 месяцев назад

      I do not know for certain, but I wouldn't assume M. Chang did not strongly insist on doing his presentation as he sees fit. It's almost unthinkable that they wouldn't offer any accomodations, I'm leaning towards the explanation of a driven and proud 90 years old Taiwanese man that built a colossal company, who insisted on doing this talk in person and standing 😂

  • @bagaspramanaputrafadhila5921
    @bagaspramanaputrafadhila5921 Год назад +7

    This is so inspiring!!!!! Thank you!

  • @Jdvc-yd5tx
    @Jdvc-yd5tx 6 месяцев назад

    I like his scarf. 😎

  • @martinpetrov7475
    @martinpetrov7475 7 месяцев назад

    Good luck, my fella

  • @alyciawang2892
    @alyciawang2892 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you

  • @陳鈞鼎
    @陳鈞鼎 Год назад +3

    台灣是我的世界🌎

  • @Alice8000
    @Alice8000 10 месяцев назад

    This guy is 92 now! wow.

  • @陳鈞鼎
    @陳鈞鼎 Год назад +3

    改變摩爾定律😊

  • @abhishekvanenooru2869
    @abhishekvanenooru2869 11 месяцев назад +2

    WATCH AT 1.75X

  • @conscience580
    @conscience580 Год назад +77

    It seems that the "free market" if you will found its home in the willing engineers of Taiwan willing to stay in dormitories, and work like regimented soldiers, in a highly disciplined environment. I did not observe in Dr. Chang's presentation, one bit of technology that TSMC invented. It is simply an exercise in logistics execution, that TSMC and the surrounding suppliers have created. What is difficult to recreate isn't the technical expertise for EUV, but the cultural mindet and personal sacrifices that enables the well-oiled machine of EUV production, that requires Americans to put, if not corporate profits, then perhaps national goals at the altar, something Americans haven't done since the moon landing.

    • @martineseverri5160
      @martineseverri5160 Год назад +13

      I worked for tsmc for 3 years, 1.5 years in tainan fab18, 1.5 years in phoenix. This comment hits the nail on the head. TSMC is a master of copying and pasting by means of an authoritarian culture. Employees will just do what they are told. As a young Venezuelan engineer I was excited to see innovation in tsmc factories but didnt find a drop of it. Without the innovation of free thought fueled by non-authoritarian cultures there would be no tsmc.

    • @chenhsu3581
      @chenhsu3581 Год назад +10

      As a Taiwanese, I don’t think building TSMC fabs in the US is a good idea. Americans should do more interesting things and let someone else do the hard work…

    • @martineseverri5160
      @martineseverri5160 Год назад +5

      @@chenhsu3581 I will always admire Taiwanese work ethic, but I am curious why Taiwanese don’t also want to do the interesting work? Maybe it’s as simple as work culture, like personal gratification comes in the form of doing what you ‘should’ not what you want. I will never understand that! Haha much love nonetheless.

    • @user-fq3pw6kh9o
      @user-fq3pw6kh9o Год назад +7

      ​@@chenhsu3581 USA government is helping India to replace Taiwan for doing these hard work as Taiwan is at the risk of having a war soon

    • @chenhsu3581
      @chenhsu3581 Год назад

      @@martineseverri5160Actually, we do. That’s why so many Taiwanese top students apply to US graduate schools every year. But there are still many students decide to stay. I think the reason is that boring works are stable, while interesting works are sometimes risky. In the US, people are more adventurous and willing to offer chances for young people to do something different, so the risk is compensated by the enormous opportunities. In Taiwan, we do not have that luxury, so most of our top students end up in big companies like TSMC.

  • @hudsonvan4322
    @hudsonvan4322 Год назад +4

    台灣讚

  • @陳鈞鼎
    @陳鈞鼎 Год назад +3

    路還要走更遠😊

  • @健中黃-h3t
    @健中黃-h3t Год назад +6

    台灣人,是我的,親友與夥伴。

    • @ChiKwongchow-r6v
      @ChiKwongchow-r6v 9 месяцев назад

      他出生於香港,在英國接受教育,在美國工作,選擇在臺灣退休。
      他從來都不是臺灣人....
      他是中國人。

    • @jylai1109
      @jylai1109 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@ChiKwongchow-r6v 他是台灣人因為中華民國在台灣,他有兩個國籍

    • @林光秀-n9z
      @林光秀-n9z 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@ChiKwongchow-r6v你連什麼是國籍都不懂就在這裡胡說八道

    • @ChiKwongchow-r6v
      @ChiKwongchow-r6v 7 месяцев назад

      @@林光秀-n9z
      什麼公民身份?幾乎所有美國人都是移民。
      USA =. United States of America.
      Taiwan =. Republic of China.
      Taiwan = a rural area of China.

    • @林光秀-n9z
      @林光秀-n9z 7 месяцев назад

      @@ChiKwongchow-r6v 我講幾個重點就好,美國獨立戰爭後建立了US,然後你再去看一下美國憲法裡面對於公民的定義,張忠謀其實算是美國人

  • @健中黃-h3t
    @健中黃-h3t Год назад +3

    台灣人,最可愛。

  • @ismailnyeyusof3520
    @ismailnyeyusof3520 Год назад +7

    A combination of really smart people working in a democracy coupled with loyal workers in a less than democratic system, though importantly with some freedom to be comfortable, equals technological progress. The loyal operators were key and they can still be found even in advanced economies so a structure to nurture them and provide a comfortable life for them will pay dividends. In the future, humanoid robots will be critical at the operator, and eventually, technicians level.

  • @MrStan0630
    @MrStan0630 Год назад +8

    Is it really necessary to have someone introduce the Introducer, who gives a long winded speech to introduce the person that everyone came to hear?

  • @Benjamin_w2025
    @Benjamin_w2025 Год назад +2

    Morris Chang

  • @jerrinmathewgeorgeieee7866
    @jerrinmathewgeorgeieee7866 7 месяцев назад

    Is it possible to get the presentation used in this talk?

  • @BTS-pk4zx
    @BTS-pk4zx Год назад +13

    Taiwan NO.1 🇹🇼

  • @STEM671
    @STEM671 Год назад +4

    MULTILAYERED GRAPHINE CRYSTAL : REPLACEABLE VINES MADE FROM HYBRID MATERIALS : REPLACEABLE GI TRACT 18:01

    • @STEM671
      @STEM671 Год назад

      AMBER : SEMI SOLID FRAGRANCE COSMÄTICS FROM THE GASTROINTESTINE TRACT 2012

    • @STEM671
      @STEM671 Год назад

      DESIRED BIO UND HYBRID VERSIONS 2007

    • @STEM671
      @STEM671 Год назад

      11/DEC/2023

    • @DonG-1949
      @DonG-1949 Год назад

      ASSIMILATE

  • @fern8580
    @fern8580 9 месяцев назад

    They all wallowed in "chips" with closed systems, proprietary systems, while an "IF THEN ELSE" chip, accessible to everyone, would have allowed a decentralized industry, accessible to the local electrician.
    Outside the USA, this man would have been arrested for theft of know-how and transmission of information abroad (any information sent to Taiwan, Singapore, etc. ends in China)
    Yes I'm bitter? yes I'm jealous? This gentleman is truly above all of us!

  • @brendankolar1370
    @brendankolar1370 Год назад +4

    He said he gave a talk the next day about education in asian societies, does anyone have any idea who he may have given it to and whether it may be anywhere online? Sounded interesting

  • @fc85697301
    @fc85697301 Год назад +4

    創立當時的政府真的是全力扶持、水電優惠+稅金減免+補助

  • @merlinf2869
    @merlinf2869 Год назад +16

    Correction. Dr. Morris Chang is not the founder of TSMC. He is engaged(from Texus instruments then)with a few others to start the TSMCproject initiated by the guomingdang government in taiwan then as a way, among others, of economic development. Needless to say nobody would have known then that TSMC would become the best producer, credit of Dr. Morris Chang.

    • @InspectorA-r2e
      @InspectorA-r2e Год назад +1

      So government planning worked because it was based on the industrial policy of martial law.

    • @chickenlin
      @chickenlin Год назад +9

      This is wrong. A more accurate description would be: Li Kwoh-ting, a government politician, tried to build a semiconductor company in Taiwan. He had no idea about the business model, so he invited Morris Chang, who invented the foundry model of TSMC. So, yes, Morris is the founder of TSMC without question. Li Kwoh-ting persuaded the government to support the company; the initial shareholders were: the government (48.3%), Philips (27.5%), and other local companies (24.2%).

    • @donaldharlan3981
      @donaldharlan3981 11 месяцев назад +1

      I own TSMC and Taiwan. Morris Chang only worked at the building construction of the factory in Taiwan. He is only an actor posing as a fake stock.

    • @antasosam8486
      @antasosam8486 10 месяцев назад +1

      So basicaly he contradicts himself. Subsidizing by government was essential?

  • @gottre5352
    @gottre5352 Год назад

    I wonder how come he mentioned Indonesia

  • @MarkLeeip4mark
    @MarkLeeip4mark 7 месяцев назад

    Play it at 1.25 speed. :)

  • @NinjaKirikoJedi
    @NinjaKirikoJedi 10 месяцев назад +1

    MIT and made in Taiwan

  • @FRKS1999
    @FRKS1999 8 месяцев назад

    I love Morris and I am waiting for him to open chain stores for fried chicken and "chips" of course that's what he is good at.

  • @陳鈞鼎
    @陳鈞鼎 Год назад +2

    量子世界會改變人類😊

  • @健中黃-h3t
    @健中黃-h3t Год назад +1

    看見,台灣後人,走到,舞台。

  • @陳鈞鼎
    @陳鈞鼎 Год назад +2

    教育可以改變人

  • @chiawildy563
    @chiawildy563 Месяц назад +1

    38:18 - This is the whole problem with much of the workforce in developed countries. The level of loyalty and commitment to the job is just abysmal and lacking. There is little interest to do beyond what is required in the job description.

  • @TaoArchitectsLtd
    @TaoArchitectsLtd Год назад

    Kenya 🇰🇪

  • @LastLoveSong1029
    @LastLoveSong1029 Год назад +5

    It’s crazy a 114 yrs old man still speak fluently.

    • @DonG-1949
      @DonG-1949 Год назад +2

      actually he is 135 stil going strong

    • @GrindThisGame
      @GrindThisGame 11 месяцев назад

      This comment will seem normal in 20 years.@@DonG-1949

  • @NoelKoutlis
    @NoelKoutlis Год назад +8

    το κράτος της ταϊβαν επένδυσε με αναπτυξιακά προγράμματα στο χώρο της τεχνολογίας από τη δεκαετία του 70. Κρίμα που δεν έγινε κάτι αντίστοιχο στην Ελλάδα που προτίμησε να επενδύσει στον τουρισμό και (αναγκαστικά) στην άμυνα

  • @redmustangredmustang
    @redmustangredmustang 9 месяцев назад

    A lot of these guys like Morris took their knowledge that they learned at American companies or universities they studied and took it back home and look what happened.

  • @陳鈞鼎
    @陳鈞鼎 Год назад

    初衷😊

  • @grape0owl
    @grape0owl Год назад

    Where does Prof. Chemming Hu fit in this narrative? Without the professor's and his group's expertise at early 2000, can tsmc become this success today?

  • @robertprawendowski2850
    @robertprawendowski2850 Год назад +1

  • @varshneydevansh
    @varshneydevansh Год назад +2

    Let's see where India will go with the SC manufacturing

  • @NinjaKirikoJedi
    @NinjaKirikoJedi 10 месяцев назад

    Would be nice if mit let him having phd stayed and not Stanford

  • @hellonihaocomoestas
    @hellonihaocomoestas 7 месяцев назад

    they had a 92 year old man stand and speak for an hour. They didn't think this through

  • @Joey-Pan1898
    @Joey-Pan1898 Год назад +5

    张老着实牛逼👍👍

  • @kubyoindiya3269
    @kubyoindiya3269 Год назад +2

    this guy may not be the best at knowing all of the science facts but he certainly knows about everybody related including who died first or before major discovery 😂

  • @さとんじ
    @さとんじ Год назад +4

    🇹🇼

  • @jyy9624
    @jyy9624 5 месяцев назад

    So many naysayers when this gentleman started his business