It’s important for Germany and the EU too.
Curious how they will understand and adapt to German work ethics and laws.
They will just outsource the actual manufacturing to Easter European countries with atrocious labor laws.
I hope I’m not right.
Yeah, the May issue of Wired magazine had a lengthy portrayal of TSMC as a company and their work ethic apparently made it very difficult to bring in American employees of TSMC to the HQ in Taiwan. Considering EU labor laws and German work-life balance priorities, not sure how well this can go 😅
thanks for pointing that out, interesting insights in that article, but wow that was the worst piece of writing I had to endure in a long time. It’s amazing how you can say so little with so much text.
Yeeeaaaahhhhh, I usually enjoy Virginia Heffernan’s writing, but this piece was something else. Too dreamy and poetic for most of it. Like, I get that you metaphorically stared God in the face considering the nano-tech going on in TSMC’s fabs and that you want to convey a sense of absolute awe… but it gets tiring really fast
Is chip production labor intensive? My guess would be that the labor is negligible, compared to the cost for machines, knowhow etc.
Yes, it is. Of course a lot of things are automated, but the amount of effort needed to run a fan efficiently is just insane.
Here’s a video about the exactly same discussion, just with regards to the US
I guess it makes sense for them to diversify their plant locations given the uncertainties around Taiwan/China relations. Germany also has quite a lot of know-how in microfabrication and there’s already a non-insignificant cluster of companies in the sector. I guess that’s why Intel decided to go there and it makes sense for TSMC to do so at some point. In any case, we’re talking over a 10+ years horizon.
I just don’t want us to forget about Taiwan in the process. That chip dependency does seem to bring them a fair bit of safety guarantees.
That would be great