| > Reminder EUV is basically a "tiny" ass effort You illustrate a fundamental lack of understanding. 9 women can't produce a single baby in one month. That's just not how it works. I think you really don't appreciate how utterly ridiculous the implementation details of the smaller lithography processes are. It wasn't merely limited to the west, it was limited to a single company. > VS west has "easier" M/HREE tree to rebuild on paper but lack both talent #s, and state capacity to execute. Wrong. The west currently lacks investors willing to shift focus to that extent and the state lacks the willingness to divert resources and step in themselves. > It's a mass scale industrial mobilization problem that west is uniquely not well equipped to deal with. It's not that the west is unable. We don't currently have sufficient motivation to overcome the political barriers that prevent speed. I agree that retooling for that would take many years due to the scale of the physical infrastructure involved, and in practice will likely take multiple decades due to lack of urgency. Where I disagree is the comparison with EUV. |
Lack of willingness/urgency is just loser talk for last of system capacity, i.e. overcome political barriers, especially when it's been highlighted how strategic important it is to hammer out separate REE chain. Important to distinguish between unwillingness and simple inability. Easy to strong arm TW to TSMC Arizona for leading edge goals, but can't strong arm PRC to transfer M/HREE tech.
Note I didn't say M/HREE was "easier" than EUV in technical sense. I said in terms of execution, i.e. overcoming barriers, PRC is simply going to have easier working with EUV engineering problem than west with M/HREE engineering, massive infra, domestic politics problem. So it's going to be slow going, in terms of execution time.