CHIPS
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wrote on 9 Aug 2022, 16:42 last edited by
The CHIPS Act of 2022 has just been signed into law by Joe Biden.
Linked below is the Senate’s summary of what’s in the CHIPS Act:
https://www.commerce.senate.gov/services/files/592E23A5-B56F-48AE-B4C1-493822686BCB
The CHIPS Act aims to expand and improve American manufacturing of semiconductors. This is strategically important and good for the USA.
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wrote on 9 Aug 2022, 16:43 last edited by
My favorite American chip maker Micron is down several percent on the day because Micron stock is an asshole.
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wrote on 10 Aug 2022, 02:20 last edited by
Seems like to got pretty good support from both sides. That is good to see.
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wrote on 10 Aug 2022, 17:18 last edited by
Just an observation ... these couple of days LinkedIn has been showing in my news feed many photos of industry big wigs taken at the White House celebrating the signing of the CHIPS Act.
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wrote on 10 Aug 2022, 18:03 last edited by
anyone else hate pringles?
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anyone else hate pringles?
wrote on 10 Aug 2022, 18:11 last edited by -
anyone else hate pringles?
wrote on 10 Aug 2022, 19:47 last edited by -
wrote on 10 Aug 2022, 19:55 last edited by
Don't hate 'em, but they're the tail-end charlie of the potato chip line for me.
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wrote on 10 Aug 2022, 20:36 last edited by
Pringles : potato chips :: Bugles : corn chips
All four have their place.
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wrote on 11 Aug 2022, 01:01 last edited by
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wrote on 11 Aug 2022, 01:08 last edited by
I recently learned the actor in the right is Chris Pine’s father.
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wrote on 11 Aug 2022, 01:15 last edited by Catseye3 8 Nov 2022, 02:22
I remember CHiPS. That's the show that taught me how really, really boring wholesome could be.
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I remember CHiPS. That's the show that taught me how really, really boring wholesome could be.
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wrote on 11 Aug 2022, 12:45 last edited by
It's a good idea to be independent with regard to key industries. Or at least only rely on "friendly" countries. I wish we had a similar strategy of independence, but I'm not sure we learned our lesson from the Russian gas fiasco.
When the shit hits the fan with regard to Taiwan it's too late.
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wrote on 11 Aug 2022, 14:35 last edited by
I think the biggest challenge will be to make sure that we have the designers, engineers, and technicians to operate these new plant.s
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I think the biggest challenge will be to make sure that we have the designers, engineers, and technicians to operate these new plant.s
wrote on 11 Aug 2022, 14:50 last edited byThe USA have close to 13 times the population of Taiwan. For sure we have the headcount to do what Taiwan does. It comes down to attitude of the population -- a lot more people and the political system have to value STEM more highly than they do now.
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wrote on 11 Aug 2022, 17:30 last edited by
It's a capitalist economy.
Get the damn CRT and federal government out of the schools, wave money around and/or offer training at the corporate level and your problems will solve themselves as far as worker quality is concerned.
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It's a capitalist economy.
Get the damn CRT and federal government out of the schools, wave money around and/or offer training at the corporate level and your problems will solve themselves as far as worker quality is concerned.
wrote on 11 Aug 2022, 20:43 last edited byGet the damn CRT and federal government out of the schools, wave money around and/or offer training at the corporate level and your problems will solve themselves as far as worker quality is concerned.
You cannot even get your fact straight. CRT has never been in public schools, and the schools get to decide whether they want the federal government it them. Many schools make the wrong choices themselves, choosing quackery instead of science -- e.g., the "intelligent design" movement with the religious lot objecting to teaching the theory of evolution. That's the sort of anti-science shenanigans that will while your biology and medical sciences back for a generation.