I'm not agreeing with you at all - just to be clear.Ok thanks for agreeing with me.
It's 100% the problem of the executive leadership of TMG.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I'm not agreeing with you at all - just to be clear.Ok thanks for agreeing with me.
It's 100% the problem of the executive leadership of TMG.
Thats the name of the game nowadays, you design your own stuff still but have TSMC fabricate it ~ amd, intel, apple, qualcom, mediatek, broadcom
Your response vastly oversimplifies the issues and Ignorant at best.
I'm not agreeing with you at all - just to be clear.
euv - engineering problem. not exec or management like have repeated over and over. you're just wrong.So please, indulge us on why you think TMG has failed. The biggest blunder (which was made at the exec level) was probably EUV.
Are you seriously linking me an article where they get the name of the person and their position within the company wrong?euv - engineering problem. not exec or management like have repeated over and over. you're just wrong.
"Although Intel is now running EUV at volume for technology development, Intel's engineers are still struggling to use it in the manufacturing of cutting-edge chips at scale."
"view on 10nm is that brilliant engineers took a risk, and now they're retracing their steps and getting it right".
Hardly, Samsung, Intel and TSMC had issues with EUV but its the standard way to go.The decision to go ahead without EUV on 10nm was 100% management. It was arguably the single biggest decision that sealed the fate of Intel 10nm.
https://www.gigabyte.com/Server-Motherboard/MP30-AR0-rev-11#ovThe fact that new consoles just came out means that you won't move gaming away from x86 for the next 7 years at least. And I'll believe it when I see it for a socketed ARM processor that pairs with a motherboard allowing for PCIe expansion slots that performs on par or better with an x86 solution.