Merge branch 'master' of github.com:nikiroo/gofetch
[gofetch.git] / test / expected / SLASHDOT / 0102636958
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1 COMPUTER CHIPS ARE STILL 'MADE IN USA' (AXIOS.COM) \r
2\r
3 Thursday September 06, 2018 @11:30PM (msmash)\r
4 from the how-about-that dept.\r
5\r
c715ea02 6 o Reference: 0102636958\r
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7 o News link: https://news.slashdot.org/story/18/09/06/1558206/computer-chips-are-still-made-in-usa\r
8 o Source link: https://www.axios.com/computer-chips-manufacturing-america--10dcfe13-64f3-4ea9-ad4a-cb189a00429a.html\r
9\r
10\r
11 For all the wishful thinking about manufacturing more laptops\r
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12 and iPhones in the U.S., there is [1]one sector of tech\r
13 manufacturing where America remains a leader: computer chips .\r
14 From a report:\r
15 \r
16 > Some $44 billion worth of semiconductors are exported from\r
17 the U.S. each year, making them America's fourth leading\r
18 manufacturing export after cars, airplanes and refined oil.\r
19 There are roughly 80 wafer fabrication plants (aka fabs) in\r
20 the U.S., spread across 19 states. [...] An even greater share\r
21 of the world's computer chips are designed domestically and\r
22 made overseas by companies including Qualcomm, Apple, Broadcom\r
23 and Nvidia. A bunch of the high-tech gear needed to produce\r
24 chips is also designed and/or made in the U.S.\r
25 \r
26 \r
27 \r
28 [1] https://www.axios.com/computer-chips-manufacturing-america-\r
29 -10dcfe13-64f3-4ea9-ad4a-cb189a00429a.html\r
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30\r
31\r
32 ** \r
33\r
34 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
35 (by bobbied ( 2522392 ))\r
36\r
37 \r
38 Why?\r
39 Politics of course..\r
40\r
41 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
42 (by Alwin Barni ( 5107629 ))\r
43\r
44 \r
45 > Why?\r
46 > Politics of course..\r
47 Could you please expand?\r
48\r
49 ** Re:Why is it "wishful thinking"? (Score:5, Funny)\r
50 (by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ))\r
51\r
52 \r
53 >> Why?\r
54 >> Politics of course..\r
55 > Could you please expand?\r
56 P o l i t i c s o f c o u r s e.\r
57\r
58 ** Re: (Score:2, Funny)\r
59 (by Anonymous Coward)\r
60\r
61 \r
62 >>> Why?\r
63 >>> Politics of course..\r
64 >> Could you please expand?\r
65 > \r
66 > P o l i t i c s o f c o u r s e.\r
67 > \r
68 I'm not sure if I should laugh, or hunt you down and\r
69 smack you upside your head with a 2x4.\r
70\r
71 ** Re: (Score:3)\r
72 (by Highdude702 ( 4456913 ))\r
73\r
74 \r
75 I mean, I thought it was hilarious, and it wasn't\r
76 the name calling garbage you see here too often.\r
77\r
78\r
79\r
80 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
81 (by Alwin Barni ( 5107629 ))\r
82\r
83 \r
84 :-)\r
85 However:\r
86 expand ikspand/\r
87 verb\r
88 verb: expand; 3rd person present: expands; past\r
89 tense: expanded; past participle: expanded; gerund\r
90 or present participle: expanding\r
91 * become or make larger or more extensive\r
92 * give a fuller version or account of.\r
93\r
94 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
95 (by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ))\r
96\r
97 \r
98 > :-)\r
99 > However: expand - verb ...\r
100 > (1) become or make larger or more extensive\r
101 > (2) give a fuller version or account of.\r
102 Yup, I know; I was married to an English teacher\r
103 for 20 years, but using the first definition was\r
104 funnier. :-)\r
105 [1]Remember Sue... [tumblr.com]\r
106 \r
107 \r
108 \r
109 \r
110 [1] http://remembersue.tumblr.com/\r
111\r
112\r
113\r
114\r
115\r
116\r
117 ** Re: Why is it "wishful thinking"? (Score:1)\r
118 (by Anonymous Coward)\r
119\r
120 \r
121 The only reason is automation. Jobs were never going to come\r
122 back from chip manufacturing.\r
123 They have a factory crew for setting up the parts and feeding\r
124 the machines. Pretty cheap, doesn't actually make much money\r
125 for anyone but the corporation running it. It's all\r
126 "unskilled" and low pay...setting up all those machines,\r
127 getting material dimensions in spec and running the machine\r
128 is just considered general labor.\r
129\r
130\r
131 ** Re: (Score:3)\r
132 (by YuppieScum ( 1096 ))\r
133\r
134 \r
135 > If the US leads in chip manufacture, why can't it be\r
136 > competitive in putting the pieces together?\r
137 Because most of the CPU silicon used in the commonest devices\r
138 - phones and laptops - is fabbed in Asia.\r
139 \r
140 Because most of the parts - like screens, RAM and flash\r
141 storage - are also made in Asia, so it's cheaper to bolt it\r
142 all together in a location closest to the source of the most\r
143 parts.\r
144 \r
145 Because final assembly of something like an iPhone is a\r
146 manual process that requires the dexterity of nimble fingers.\r
147 It's not quite the same as bolting doors onto a Chevvy.\r
148\r
149\r
150 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
151 (by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ))\r
152\r
153 \r
154 Because it hardly has any of the pieces right now - it would\r
155 be a massive effort to put all the supply chains in place for\r
156 the various electronics components needed for a whole\r
157 computer when the US currently makes little more than chips.\r
158 Currently those supply chains are in Asia (which also has the\r
159 advantages of cheap labor and lax environmental laws). I'd\r
160 compare it to going from just making engine blocks to making\r
161 a whole car, but that underplays the difficulty too much.\r
162\r
163\r
164 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
165 (by AHuxley ( 892839 ))\r
166\r
167 \r
168 Re "why can't it be competitive in putting the pieces\r
169 together?"\r
170 Think back to the 1970 and 1980's when the CPU thing needed\r
171 new production lines and was no longer low yield skilled lab\r
172 work.\r
173 Non first world nations part pay their workers in food,\r
174 dormitories. Their introduction to work is free as its part\r
175 of the nations free "education".\r
176 Tax reductions and industrial export support then further\r
177 supports the electronics brand in the poor nation.\r
178 No unions. Lots of pollution.\r
179 \r
180 The big brands moved to ver\r
181\r
182\r
183 ** But for how long? (Score:2)\r
184 (by DMJC ( 682799 ))\r
185\r
186 \r
187 Sure they still do, but China is beginning to manufacture X86\r
188 CPUs directly. It's only a matter of time until they catch up\r
189 and crush Intel and AMD through undercutting, and throwing money\r
190 at the problem. [1]https://www.tomshardware.com/n...\r
191 [tomshardware.com]\r
192 \r
193 \r
194 \r
195 \r
196 [1]\r
197 https://www.tomshardware.com/news/china-zen-x86-processor-dryhan-\r
198 a,37417.html\r
199\r
200 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
201 (by Dallas May ( 4891515 ))\r
202\r
203 \r
204 In the long run, yes. Probably not really soon. There are\r
205 plenty of significant advances happening that space right\r
206 now. They might market to the far low end PCs, but they\r
207 aren't the market AMD and Intel really want anyway.\r
208\r
209\r
210 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
211 (by jon3k ( 691256 ))\r
212\r
213 \r
214 By then (10-20 years, if they're lucky) the desktop will be\r
215 commoditized and mobile (ie laptops) mostly replaced with\r
216 ARM. All the growth is in the server market and China is a\r
217 long, long way from producing an X86 CPU that can compete\r
218 with Intel Xeons. Who knows what the landscape will look like\r
219 by then.\r
220\r
221 ** Re: But for how long? (Score:2)\r
222 (by adolf ( 21054 ))\r
223\r
224 \r
225 This will also be the year of Linux on the desktop!\r
226\r
227 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
228 (by tsa ( 15680 ))\r
229\r
230 \r
231 Yeah, paradise is near!\r
232\r
233 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
234 (by adolf ( 21054 ))\r
235\r
236 \r
237 We're on the home stretch, boys!\r
238\r
239\r
240\r
241\r
242\r
243 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
244 (by AHuxley ( 892839 ))\r
245\r
246 \r
247 As long as the NRO needs hand crafted space CPU products.\r
248\r
249\r
250 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
251 (by CaffeinatedBacon ( 5363221 ))\r
252\r
253 \r
254 But who will people trust to make their CPU's. Intel with\r
255 their "management engine" and AMD etc all with the same is\r
256 already freaking enough people out.\r
257 Who is going to want a Chinese CPU with who knows what\r
258 running on it that you will never be able to see, has access\r
259 to everything, and can do anything it wants to "your\r
260 computer" and "your data".\r
261 Most countries would probably just ban them like they are\r
262 [1]doing for 5G telecom equipment already. [nytimes.com]\r
263 \r
264 \r
265 \r
266 \r
267 [1]\r
268 https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/23/technology/huawei-banned-a-\r
269 ustralia-5g.html\r
270\r
271\r
272 ** Yeah, but . . . (Score:5, Interesting)\r
273 (by dtmos ( 447842 ) *)\r
274\r
275 \r
276 . . . computer chips with state-of-the-art lithography soon all\r
277 will be manufactured overseas. Specifically, they will be made\r
278 by exactly two companies, [1]Samsung [samsungfoundry.com] and\r
279 [2]TSMC [tsmc.com], with GlobalFoundries' recent announcement\r
280 that it is [3]stopping development of its 7nm process\r
281 [anandtech.com]. GF operated the old IBM facility in Fishkill,\r
282 NY, and AFAIK was the last company offering state-of-the-art\r
283 foundry services with a fab in the US.\r
284 Intel is still in business, of course, and even has a [4]foundry\r
285 business [intel.com], but it cannot seem to successfully operate\r
286 it -- substantially all of its wafer starts are chips of its own\r
287 design. With the capital cost of each new-generation fab\r
288 reaching $20 billion, it's only a matter of time until Intel --\r
289 which has only its internal product base of chip designs to fill\r
290 its fabs, while Samsung and TSMC make chips for the entire\r
291 industry -- can no longer afford the move to the next\r
292 generation.\r
293 If the rest of the semiconductor industry (or the US DoD) wants\r
294 high-performance computer chips, there's now nowhere to go\r
295 except Samsung and TSMC. It will be interesting to see what\r
296 politicians do when they realize that the best digital chips can\r
297 no longer be manufactured in the US. The choice seems to be\r
298 either (1) have our economy -- everything from cell phones to\r
299 missiles -- dependent on chips manufactured overseas, or (2)\r
300 subsidize Intel's foundry business and the semiconductor\r
301 equipment manufacturers to the tune of tens of $billions, just\r
302 to keep a US source of high-performance semiconductors.\r
303 \r
304 \r
305 \r
306 \r
307 [1] https://www.samsungfoundry.com/foundry/homepage.do\r
308 [2] http://www.tsmc.com/english/default.htm\r
309 [3]\r
310 https://www.anandtech.com/show/13277/globalfoundries-stops-all-7-\r
311 nm-development\r
312 [4] https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/foundry/overview.html\r
313\r
314 ** \r
315\r
316 ** Re: (Score:3)\r
317 (by Dallas May ( 4891515 ))\r
318\r
319 \r
320 The same reason they haven't produced a car yet. They\r
321 could, but they don't want to. They have good deals with\r
322 their current suppliers, so why make that investment?\r
323\r
324 ** The normal Transition of economies (Score:2)\r
325 (by aberglas ( 991072 ))\r
326\r
327 \r
328 1. Primary production\r
329 2. Manufacturing\r
330 3. Services\r
331 Services will keep things going fine. Lawyers, tax\r
332 accountants, retail and beauty consultants. That is\r
333 where the growth will come from.\r
334\r
335\r
336\r
337\r
338 ** \r
339\r
340 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
341 (by nateman1352 ( 971364 ))\r
342\r
343 \r
344 TI doesn't have state-of-the-art lithography for digital.\r
345 They gave up on the Moore's Law race 10 years ago after\r
346 they reached 45nm. TI realized during the development of\r
347 WinRT that building CPUs requires very expensive fabs and\r
348 if you are not an x86 supplier then your only option is to\r
349 make ARM chips, which is a race to the bottom with very\r
350 thin margins. TI realized they can make more money\r
351 building mixed signal designs on older process.\r
352\r
353\r
354\r
355 ** Re:Yeah, but . . . (Score:4, Insightful)\r
356 (by Graymalkin ( 13732 ) *)\r
357\r
358 \r
359 State of the art lithography is not a synonym for\r
360 high-performance computer chips. In fact for a lot of uses,\r
361 DoD included, state of the art lithography is nowhere in the\r
362 requirements. Hardened chips on robust/insulated substrates\r
363 is more important in many uses than smaller die traces.\r
364\r
365\r
366 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
367 (by KalvinB ( 205500 ))\r
368\r
369 \r
370 They'll be subsidized under issues of national security if\r
371 they're really needed by the government. The government\r
372 generally doesn't run bleeding edge technology so the chips\r
373 that can be produced in the US will be plenty sufficient for\r
374 government needs. If the government ever needs a $20 billion\r
375 plant, they'll cut a check under the national defense budget.\r
376 We've been comfortable with foreign made chips for decades in\r
377 the consumer market. Unless there is a severe national\r
378 security issue that won't change.\r
379\r
380\r
381 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
382 (by nateman1352 ( 971364 ))\r
383\r
384 \r
385 Intel has the same fundamental problem with foundry that AMD\r
386 had 10 years ago. Every 3rd party company does not trust\r
387 Intel to prioritize their products over Intel's own products.\r
388 Intel will always build their own products on the latest\r
389 process node first. If you fab with Intel then your wafers\r
390 will always get 2nd priority over Intel's own wafers. The\r
391 only way that is not the case is if you are such a huge\r
392 customer that your contract requires Intel to construct an\r
393 entire new factory just for you. Then you h\r
394\r
395\r
396 ** Poor writing in TFA (Score:5, Informative)\r
397 (by whoever57 ( 658626 ))\r
398\r
399 \r
400 "An even greater share of the world's computer chips are\r
401 designed domestically and made overseas by companies including\r
402 Qualcomm, Apple, Broadcom and Nvidia."\r
403 This reads as though Qualcomm, Apple, Broadcom and Nvidia are\r
404 making chips. What would be clear and accurate is:\r
405 "An even greater share of the world's computer chips are\r
406 designed domestically by companies including Qualcomm, Apple,\r
407 Broadcom and Nvidia and made overseas."\r
408\r
409 ** Still somewhat misleading... (Score:4, Informative)\r
410 (by YuppieScum ( 1096 ))\r
411\r
412 \r
413 Don't forget, a hefty chunk of Qualcomm's - and pretty much\r
414 all of Apple's - designs are not original, but instead are\r
415 based on IP from ARM, a British company (although recently\r
416 bought out by SoftBank).\r
417 \r
418 In fact, Broadcom and Nvidia are also licencees of ARM IP as\r
419 well, but less of their overall product range derives from\r
420 it.\r
421\r
422\r
423 ** Are you sure? (Score:3, Interesting)\r
424 (by Gabest ( 852807 ))\r
425\r
426 \r
427 TSMC and Samsung are the leaders in chip making. And second\r
428 class Intel and AMD both have shady Middle-East ties from Israel\r
429 and Dubai.\r
430\r
431 ** 13% market share is not good (Score:4, Interesting)\r
432 (by Goldsmith ( 561202 ))\r
433\r
434 \r
435 This is a crazy article. At the end, it meekly points out that\r
436 the US has a 13% market share in chip production. Given that the\r
437 US started this industry, leads in design in this space, leads\r
438 in capital available for high tech industry, and that the US\r
439 accounts for 15% to 18% of global GDP, a 13% market share in\r
440 chip production is very poor performance. This is below what you\r
441 might expect for a simple commodity that depends only on\r
442 domestic market size and way below what you'd expect for this\r
443 industry.\r
444\r
445\r