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  • Did you know that the world is ruled by one company?

  • Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company may not be a household name.

  • But its chips are everywhere.

  • In iPhones, air conditioning units, smart doorbells, computers, cars, F-35 fighter jets,

  • and even NASA's Perseverance Rover that landed on Mars.

  • The reason automakers haven't been making enough cars is because of a shortage of these

  • sophisticated chips that power functions like braking.

  • Semiconductor chips are the newoilin terms of our dependence on them.

  • One company pretty much has a global monopoly.

  • Nestled on the northwest coast of Taiwan, TSMC produces 92% of the most advanced chips

  • in the world.

  • It's one of only two companies that mass produces chips below 10 nanometers, the other

  • being Samsung.

  • Nanometer refers to the length of a transistor - TINY switches 10,000 times thinner than

  • a human hair that control electric currents.

  • One nanometer is equal to one billionth of a meter.

  • The smaller the transistor, the more that can be crammed together.

  • The more transistors you have, the better the chip, and the more powerful your computer

  • will be.

  • When House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan in August 2022, she made it a point to meet

  • with TSMC Chairman Mark Liu - a sign of just how important the company is.

  • Beijing spent weeks telling Pelosi not to go to Taiwan, an island that Chinese President

  • Xi Jinping believes is a breakaway province and has threatened to invade.

  • In light of Pelosi's visit, Beijing sanctioned Taiwan by suspending imports of citrus fruits

  • and fish.

  • Of course, Beijing did NOT ban Taiwanese semiconductors because it relies on them like everyone else.

  • Semiconductors have become a key part of the tech rivalry between the U.S. and China.

  • There are concerns that an invasion of Taiwan by China could choke off the supply of these

  • cutting-edge chips to the rest of the world and give Beijing control of this essential

  • technology.

  • So, how did Taiwan Semiconductor become so dominant?

  • The fundamental technology was actually invented in America and gave Silicon Valley its name

  • - as most chips are created with silicon.

  • In the nineties, the U.S. manufactured a third of the world's chips.

  • Today?

  • None of the advanced chips is made in the USA.

  • Companies like Intel used to build and design chips in-house.

  • But beginning in the 1980s, American firms started to struggle against competition from

  • Japanese companies, so they outsourced some parts of their business that were draining

  • their profits, including the expensive factories that produce semiconductor chips.

  • Morris Chang noticed this trend and took advantage of it.

  • He was born in China and in 1949, he moved to the States where he eventually earned a

  • Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Stanford.

  • He spent 25 years rising through the ranks of Texas Instruments before the Taiwanese

  • government offered him a chance to develop its semiconductor industry.

  • Chang realized that there was a great opportunity to create a new company focused solely on

  • making chips that could supply all needs.

  • In 1987, TSMC was born.

  • Chang initially priced the chips at a loss to capture a larger market share in the hopes

  • that costs would eventually be reduced enough to generate a profit.

  • His strategy paid off, big time.

  • The world's largest tech companies all rely on TSMC: Apple, Intel, Qualcomm, AMD, Nvidia,

  • Chinese tech giant Huawei, and Tesla.

  • Manufacturing semiconductor chips that are the size of a fingernail is crazy difficult.

  • Each tiny chip is packed with as many as 50 billion transistors.

  • The process begins by cutting silicon wafers - thin slices of semiconductors that kind

  • of look like shiny mirrors - into individual chips.

  • Employees must wear protective gear when handling them.

  • If even a speck of dust falls onto a wafer, the entire batch risks being ruined.

  • The chips are made by etching tiny patterns across the wafer, layer upon layer.

  • To create the layers, the wafer is coated with a light-sensitive chemical.

  • It's kind of like layering a cake, except in this case the cake has 75 layers and takes

  • three months to make.

  • The layers are connected by copper wires that carry electrical power.

  • The entire process is daunting and TSMC has the undisputed edge.

  • But things are getting complicated as it finds itself caught in the middle of a tug of war

  • between the two superpowers.

  • In August, President Biden signed the CHIPS Act into law which bans companies that receive

  • American subsidies from manufacturing sophisticated chips for China, any that are below 28 nanometers.

  • Washington is offering $52 billion in subsidies to encourage manufacturers like TSMC to build

  • semiconductors plants in the U.S.

  • One is scheduled to open in Arizona in 2024, which TSMC previewed on its LinkedIn page.

  • But it will still represent only a small sliver of global chip production.

  • At the same time, Chinese chip innovation is growing by leaps and bounds.

  • In 2020, Chinese firms were still struggling to get below 40 nanometers.

  • Today, leading Chinese chip company SMIC is said to have successfully made a 7-nanometer

  • chip.

  • Researchers at a firm called TechInsights say the chip was made for crypto mining.

  • China has made it a strategic priority to boost its domestic semiconductor industry,

  • showering Chinese chip firms with incentives, including exempting them from paying corporate

  • income tax for ten years if they make the most sophisticated chips.

  • Still, for now, Taiwan Semiconductor is the most important chip manufacturer in the world.

  • It's producing chips that are 2 nanometers smaller than China and vows to start manufacturing

  • ultra-advanced 2-nanometer chips by 2025.

  • That means your iPhone would last four days without needing a charge.

  • China needs TSMC just as much as the United States does.

  • As geopolitical tensions rise, Taiwan Semiconductors' importance on the world stage may be the island's

  • greatest protection against any possible invasion.

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  • I initially joined Skillshare more than a year ago to learn how to make better thumbnails

  • for my videos.

  • And then I happened to stumble upon another one of Polymatter's classes on how to make

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  • There's something for everyone no matter your interests.

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  • Thanks for watching.

  • For Newsthink, I'm Cindy Pom.

Did you know that the world is ruled by one company?

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Why the U.S. is So Interested in Taiwan

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    Allen Chi に公開 2022 年 08 月 21 日
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