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31They went against standard philosophy -> Standard philosophy is you always have multiple vendors.
ASML went entirely against this, instead they found the best supplier in the world for each one of their critical components, and they signed an exclusivity deal with each one.
So ASML couldn't buy from anyone else, and the company couldn't sell to anyone else.
So China is still trying to catch up, because they are not able to buy ANY of the parts of the stepper.
@cjd so you still claim you don't know anything? Is this stupid coincidence?
It's from the video I linked. ^^
> So good books, they have to be old, the author usually has a hyphenated name...
@cjd if I were to advise young people, I'd just tell them to get their hands dirty. Learn welding or something else that's actually useful. I'd also tell them that this "you can be whatever you want to be, just take a loan and go study" stuff is pure nonsense. But I'm a known misogynist and a drunk, so what do I know ;)
> Sixty years ago they had no electives, and the whole program was synchronized, so if you learned Fourier transform in math, then in the next week, the physics teacher was using it.
> It was a bunch of German professors who just recreated the same curriculum they had in Berlin.
> And they taught fundamentals, because if you teach the vacuum tube, then the transistor comes along, that's not useful. But fundamentals don't change through your life.
That's good advice just on account of the fact that universities are no longer teaching anything useful as they did 60 years ago.
@cjd I'm kinda thing that it's a good advice just because a welder makes 50k a year on average in the States, while your average master of arts in the liberal studies is unemployed and lives on food stamps ;)
Well, the ASML photolithography stuff doesn't seem to be going obsolete any time soon.
Heh no.
t. Toyota
> basically broke and china is gonna buy them up
Loolll
They have technology that nobody else is able to reproduce and everyone (in the world) somehow uses. Not only is it "impossible" that they can go broke, but it's also impossible that the US and EU will ever allow that technology to be sent to China.
> Well, my dad was a writer, so there's no way I could have the genes for that
> If you're not thinking about what you're working on in the shower, then you're in the wrong field
And ASML will never go to China, it'll be treated like a nuclear secret.
Solved problem in theory, you just need to make a mirror that is smooth to within 1 atom. So China can probably make one, but while they're making it, ASML is going to be working on the next order of magnitude of scale... Especially if they have to build everything themselves while ASML has tied up all of the US and European component providers...
Yeah but that's like China vs. The World, which is a really miserable competition for China...
@cjd tbh, i would be fine with cpus from 15 years ago if they were open design and cheap. bit sad the loongson or how they were called went nowhere.
I think there's some open source RISC-V Verilog out there...
> Of the 100 most important inventions in the world, most of them are crowded between the years of 1850 and 1920.
@cjd I may have missed it, but I didn't see the the single most important invention of all time: air conditioning.
@cjd Sitting on the toilet, too.
Yea, saying cell phones and birth control are more important than refrigeration tells you something about the people who compiled the list...
What is the significance of 632 nanometers?
Also yes to any comments about collecting books, though I would push the date a little further back to the 1920's and 30's for the cut off.
I've seen otherwise excellent grammar textbooks from the 60's that are chock-a-block with race communism.
Hmm interesting... It sounds like an optical wavelength, I'd never seen any of their stuff before, I'm just familiar with Dan Gelbart.