Germany Carl Zeiss, heart of Dutch ASML Lithography Equipment.

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Vichysoy

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Registered Member
You can't just assert this and move on. Demonstrate why it's unrealistic for China to have a 100% internal semiconductor sector when it's already represented in all parts of the supply chain, it's just that not all of it's equipment is at the cutting edge.
yes , again !
5021803_china_tech_vs_world_1.jpg
 

ZeEa5KPul

Colonel
Registered Member
Saying "not all of it is cutting edge" is an understatement. Actually, if my research is correct, NONE of it is cutting edge. It is still in the catchup phase.
Your research is incorrect. AMEC's etchers are already at the cutting edge and are used by TSMC. The US gave up its export ban on etching machines in 2015 in tacit admission of that fact - no point banning them if they can make them for themselves, might as well try and sell them some of ours.

We'll find that many similar bans will be revoked in the coming years for exactly the same reason.
 

manqiangrexue

Brigadier
Every country has a public policy they feed their people and an internal policy for themselves. Xi cant be seen to publically back off on MIC2025 the same way Trump has to at least appear hard on China to placate his base esp being election year. Trump is an actor, he been in showbiz his whole life and knows how to play the part.

Im not suggesting US isnt going all out on China, but I am raising possibility that Chinese gov secretly made some concessions be it unilateral or otherwise and hence why the lackluster preparedness, seems like they are intentionally slowing down in this area for whatever bigger picture motives and reasons unbeknowest to us the public at the moment
None of that makes any logical sense! Firstly, why would you make concessions to someone who continues to go all out on you? The whole point of concessions is to ease your opponent's attack. Secondly, "lackluster preparedness" is obviously because the lithography/semiconductor fields are ones that build on decades of experience and knowledge! Given that China reacted to the ban in the time that it did, and today, we see the swift improvements coming out of SMEE, SMIC, etc..., who can call that lackluster? I don't think any country has ever improved this fast before in these areas!
Well there are alot of information out there in google but if you are not in the industry you will not know which information is useful and nor you able to understand. The top level management need have clear idea of overall picture. Huawei is mostly system not a semiconductor company therefore lacking expertise and overall understanding in certain areas
You really severely underestimate the kind of people that Huawei can hire. Any time you present something with publicly-known facts, the level of your presentation is for novices, not industry experts. Huawei owns Hisilicon, which designs the Kirin chips. These people are designing top end chips (something that tidalwave has never claimed to be able to do) and don't even know how to do online searches on their own field?
Huawei underestimated the severity of US crackdown as Ren zhengfei said they kind of prepared for this but was surprised by the extent and severity by US effort. Huawei prepared well on chip design but failed at its OS and chip manufacturing. Its HMS has very limited software at the beginning and Huawei phones are not selling good overseas. They should have launched HMS long time ago to build up more apps and customer base oversea.
And like tidalwave said, huawei should have gone into chip manufacturing long time ago because the geopolitical risk.
Tidalwave has no idea what Huawei is prepared to do. When he made that suggestion, he didn't know where Huawei was on its black projects. Taking up an endeavor before you are technologically ready is a waste of time and your results can easily be obsolete long before they are ready. He's simply making too many assumptions about what they can and cannot do and calling one of the world's most successful companies incompetent for not listening to a nobody like him and that's just delusional.
You actually found them on google or you just saying that?

replied there.
Found some, obviously didn't look through everything he posted. Go on, bring something up and see if we can find it. It's obviously not primary research he's sharing.
 

SPOOPYSKELETON

Junior Member
Registered Member
Your research is incorrect. AMEC's etchers are already at the cutting edge and are used by TSMC. The US gave up its export ban on etching machines in 2015 in tacit admission of that fact - no point banning them if they can make them for themselves, might as well try and sell them some of ours.

We'll find that many similar bans will be revoked in the coming years for exactly the same reason.

Interesting. Doesn't that give China leverage over TSMC then?
 

Canuck place

New Member
Registered Member
I'm am also sad that @tidalwave was banned. He put on a lot of technical posts on this forum. I wonder if the ban was temporary? Maybe it can be reversed?

I would agree wholeheartedly with above posts. We need to try and look at china's success and failure from objective POV. I really want China to succeed, but I agree they seem very inexperienced at global PR. And they really need to better anticipate moves by the US and mix in more diplomacy.

I do hope we can have @tidalwave back.
 

ZeEa5KPul

Colonel
Registered Member
Interesting. Doesn't that give China leverage over TSMC then?
No, because while AMEC's etchers are cutting edge, they don't have a monopoly on them. Other companies make similar products. This is how I think this whole thing will ultimately shake itself out: there will be two distinct complete supply chains - one centred in China and another dispersed throughout the West.
 

SoupDumplings

Junior Member
Registered Member
The Chinese semicon strategy should have a Diplomatic wing working in concert with it. It should be looking for opportunities to make the weakest members of the cartel defect.

The Chinese strategy also needs to recognize that it is still on the periphery of the world, and change its mindset to match. Since the primary conflict is "center" vs "periphery", and since no change is possible for anyone on the periphery until the center is weakened, it follows that all movements, nations., and ideologies on the periphery have common cause. The objective is disintegration anything that speeds that process along should be considered.
I fully agree. China is still by far the largest importer of semiconductors, and it should leverage that. It should immediately try to get together with the chip manufacturers that lost to giants like TSMC. I'm sure there were many companies that tried and failed to join the semiconductor market. Especially in Europe and Japan. What happened to their engineers? They need to be brought together and coordinated, similar to how Huawei coordinates its foreign researchers.

Huawei also has a massive R&D department with top tier researchers from around the world. It should have more experience scouting and incentivising foreign scientists than most other chinese companies, who work mostly domestically and would struggle with the culture shock of working with foreigners.

Furthermore, before the ban comes into effect in August, it must also do its best to work together with the companies that currently provide its chips. Don't forget, they also want to sell chips to Huawei, and probably helped find loopholes in the old ban. They may be able to help again.

Lastly, this is a bit off topic, I feel like China should play nice with the EU. If China wants to develop its own chips in a reasonable amount of time, they will need ASML. So don't piss off the EU and the Dutch.
 

Canuck place

New Member
Registered Member
I fully agree. China is still by far the largest importer of semiconductors, and it should leverage that. It should immediately try to get together with the chip manufacturers that lost to giants like TSMC. I'm sure there were many companies that tried and failed to join the semiconductor market. Especially in Europe and Japan. What happened to their engineers? They need to be brought together and coordinated, similar to how Huawei coordinates its foreign researchers.

Huawei also has a massive R&D department with top tier researchers from around the world. It should have more experience scouting and incentivising foreign scientists than most other chinese companies, who work mostly domestically and would struggle with the culture shock of working with foreigners.

Furthermore, before the ban comes into effect in August, it must also do its best to work together with the companies that currently provide its chips. Don't forget, they also want to sell chips to Huawei, and probably helped find loopholes in the old ban. They may be able to help again.

Lastly, this is a bit off topic, I feel like China should play nice with the EU. If China wants to develop its own chips in a reasonable amount of time, they will need ASML. So don't piss off the EU and the Dutch.
I totally agree. China needs to be strategic. The EU is biased against China but they hate trump admin a lot as well. China needs to be very cordial to EU, especially after this coronovirus pandemic when the US showed it's true colors. and who knows, maybe the EU is strong enough to go against US hegemony.

Btw, I just found this. Anyone know more about it?

Sounds great but building it by researchers and putting it into use can have a substantial delay, if it ever happens as all.
 

adiru

Junior Member
Registered Member
None of that makes any logical sense! Firstly, why would you make concessions to someone who continues to go all out on you? The whole point of concessions is to ease your opponent's attack. Secondly, "lackluster preparedness" is obviously because the lithography/semiconductor fields are ones that build on decades of experience and knowledge! Given that China reacted to the ban in the time that it did, and today, we see the swift improvements coming out of SMEE, SMIC, etc..., who can call that lackluster? I don't think any country has ever improved this fast before in these areas!

You really severely underestimate the kind of people that Huawei can hire. Any time you present something with publicly-known facts, the level of your presentation is for novices, not industry experts. Huawei owns Hisilicon, which designs the Kirin chips. These people are designing top end chips (something that tidalwave has never claimed to be able to do) and don't even know how to do online searches on their own field?

Tidalwave has no idea what Huawei is prepared to do. When he made that suggestion, he didn't know where Huawei was on its black projects. Taking up an endeavor before you are technologically ready is a waste of time and your results can easily be obsolete long before they are ready. He's simply making too many assumptions about what they can and cannot do and calling one of the world's most successful companies incompetent for not listening to a nobody like him and that's just delusional.

Found some, obviously didn't look through everything he posted. Go on, bring something up and see if we can find it. It's obviously not primary research he's sharing.
What swift SMEE and SMIC improvement you talking about?

How do you know Hisilicon can and cannnot do?
Its logic chip design not particular semiconductor manufacturing. Why are you assuming things?

Like i said huawei prepared well on logic chip design but not on OS and chip manufacturing.

There are public knowledge on. for example, waste treatment. does it means huawei have people know
that field?
 
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