The complexity and price of modern chip production is insane.
Hey I'd like to make computer chips. 😋
+You will need a lamp for that. 🤔
-OK how expensive could it be? 🫡
+$150 million for one lamp, take it or leave it! 🤑
😬
It's amazing that the result of this level of technology is available to consumers in the form of for instance smartphones. They really are a modern wonder.
They are basically magic, but as soon as it takes three seconds to load an app we are all like, “this piece of junk!”
Well I'm 61, and once you had to go to the library for information. You had to carry either bulky maps (books), or inconvenient fold outs, If you wanted a map of where you were. If you wanted to use a phone, you'd have to go home and use the landline, or use a phone-booth.
The Smartphone allows you to see the position of GPS satellites above you. And have your position pinpointed in seconds, with detailed maps, that span the world if you want to. And the ability to call is from wherever you are whenever you wish is probably taken for granted by most now.
The camera of a modern budget phone is way better, than when we used film, that was expensive and took time to get developed on paper.
The ability to record good quality movies is total SciFi for a child of the 70's, where 16mm was hot, and most couldn't afford it! Now phones even have stabilization, and way better color reproduction, and better light and resolution, so much better any comparison is laughable. My phone can even take 960 FPS slow motion!
The motion sensors are based on Quantum Dynamics, in itself a crazy high tech solution, that reside in $1 components!
Internet everywhere, and a selection of apps that is the envy of any other system, music and movies available either from storage or the net. Integration of these technologies that were almost impossible before smartphones, like Stellaris, that knows your position, and allows you to just point at the sky, to see what stars are there.
And all these technologies have come together in smartphones mostly since 2007! Only 17 years compared to a lifetime of 61 in my case. 😀
There is nothing currently comparable to smartphones IMO. Not even LLM. And it's available for average consumers.
We have genuine, honest to God miracle super computers, and we use them to look at cats online. God bless our species.
We can look at cats wherever and whenever we want to, and still there are people who are not happy. 😋
I will not be happy until cats can look at us wherever and whenever they want to.
Intel is slowly becoming history. They can't innovate and they can't produce. What can they do well?
If you looked at more than just headlines, you'd know that things are looking up massively for their foundry business.
We're past the 14nm+++++++++, now it's the chip design portion of Intel that's fucking up and causing product delays.
Maybe Arrow Lake will have their chip design business getting back on track, maybe not. But as a foundry, they're doing well at the moment and when they open up their services to others, things are gonna go well for them there. Also helps that the US gov has sunk a lot of money into their foundry efforts.
Bruh💀
You sound like one of the commenters on the xz email list.
They will become the next IBM. Not quite dead, but a small niche company.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
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The original article contains 17 words, the summary contains 17 words. Saved 0%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
At least you sort of tried.
More words than the “article”… negative savings!
Lemmy.world’s Tl;Dr bot is the worst I’ve ever seen on the internet. Wouldn‘t be surprised if it was made by Intel.
I asked Claude 3 opus to summarize –
Intel disclosed deepening operating losses of $7 billion for its foundry business in 2023, a significant increase from the $5.2 billion in losses the previous year. The company's chipmaking revenue also declined by 31% in 2023, leading to a 4.3% drop in Intel's shares after the SEC filing. CEO Pat Gelsinger expects 2024 to be the worst year for operating losses in the chipmaking business, with the goal of breaking even by 2027. Intel's turnaround plan involves investing $100 billion in chip factories across four U.S. states and persuading outside companies to use its manufacturing services.
The complexity and price of modern chip production is insane.
+You will need a lamp for that. 🤔
-OK how expensive could it be? 🫡
+$150 million for one lamp, take it or leave it! 🤑
It's amazing that the result of this level of technology is available to consumers in the form of for instance smartphones. They really are a modern wonder.
They are basically magic, but as soon as it takes three seconds to load an app we are all like, “this piece of junk!”
Well I'm 61, and once you had to go to the library for information. You had to carry either bulky maps (books), or inconvenient fold outs, If you wanted a map of where you were. If you wanted to use a phone, you'd have to go home and use the landline, or use a phone-booth.
The Smartphone allows you to see the position of GPS satellites above you. And have your position pinpointed in seconds, with detailed maps, that span the world if you want to. And the ability to call is from wherever you are whenever you wish is probably taken for granted by most now.
The camera of a modern budget phone is way better, than when we used film, that was expensive and took time to get developed on paper.
The ability to record good quality movies is total SciFi for a child of the 70's, where 16mm was hot, and most couldn't afford it! Now phones even have stabilization, and way better color reproduction, and better light and resolution, so much better any comparison is laughable. My phone can even take 960 FPS slow motion!
The motion sensors are based on Quantum Dynamics, in itself a crazy high tech solution, that reside in $1 components!
Internet everywhere, and a selection of apps that is the envy of any other system, music and movies available either from storage or the net. Integration of these technologies that were almost impossible before smartphones, like Stellaris, that knows your position, and allows you to just point at the sky, to see what stars are there.
And all these technologies have come together in smartphones mostly since 2007! Only 17 years compared to a lifetime of 61 in my case. 😀
There is nothing currently comparable to smartphones IMO. Not even LLM. And it's available for average consumers.
We have genuine, honest to God miracle super computers, and we use them to look at cats online. God bless our species.
We can look at cats wherever and whenever we want to, and still there are people who are not happy. 😋
I will not be happy until cats can look at us wherever and whenever they want to.
also feet pics.
the app is the piece of junk for taking so long to load on an incomprehensibly fast processor
Intel certainly has a history of bad behavior, but I wish them luck with this pivot to chip fabrication.
I have AMD stock, and still I want Intel to be competitive on production, because monopoly is bad for everyone.
They found a spare 25 billion to inject in countries committing Genocide
https://edition.cnn.com/2023/12/26/tech/intel-israel-investment/index.html
Ewww
Intel is slowly becoming history. They can't innovate and they can't produce. What can they do well?
If you looked at more than just headlines, you'd know that things are looking up massively for their foundry business.
We're past the 14nm+++++++++, now it's the chip design portion of Intel that's fucking up and causing product delays.
Maybe Arrow Lake will have their chip design business getting back on track, maybe not. But as a foundry, they're doing well at the moment and when they open up their services to others, things are gonna go well for them there. Also helps that the US gov has sunk a lot of money into their foundry efforts.
Bruh💀
You sound like one of the commenters on the xz email list.
They will become the next IBM. Not quite dead, but a small niche company.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The Technology Roundup newsletter brings the latest news and trends straight to your inbox.
Sign up here.
The original article contains 17 words, the summary contains 17 words. Saved 0%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
At least you sort of tried.
More words than the “article”… negative savings!
Lemmy.world’s Tl;Dr bot is the worst I’ve ever seen on the internet. Wouldn‘t be surprised if it was made by Intel.
I asked Claude 3 opus to summarize –
Intel disclosed deepening operating losses of $7 billion for its foundry business in 2023, a significant increase from the $5.2 billion in losses the previous year. The company's chipmaking revenue also declined by 31% in 2023, leading to a 4.3% drop in Intel's shares after the SEC filing. CEO Pat Gelsinger expects 2024 to be the worst year for operating losses in the chipmaking business, with the goal of breaking even by 2027. Intel's turnaround plan involves investing $100 billion in chip factories across four U.S. states and persuading outside companies to use its manufacturing services.