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Page 28 - Craig Barrett News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

The Chip Shortage Keeps Getting Worse Why Can t We Just Make More?

Shortages of semiconductors are battering automakers and tech giants, raising alarm bells from Washington to Brussels to Beijing. The crunch has raised a fundamental question for policymakers, customers and investors: Why can’t we just make more chips? There is both a simple answer and a complicated one. The simple version is that making chips is incredibly difficult and getting tougher. “It’s not rocket science it’s much more difficult,” goes one of the industry’s inside jokes. The more complicated answer is that it takes years to build semiconductor fabrication facilities and billions of dollars and even then the economics are so brutal that you can lose out if your manufacturing expertise is a fraction behind the competition. Former Intel Corp. boss Craig Barrett called his company’s microprocessors the most complicated devices ever made by man.

Silicon s Finest Irish at Stanford

Silicon’s Finest Irish at Stanford Patricia Harty, Editor-in-Chief of Irish America magazine; John Gilmore, COO of Sling Media and ITLG member; Niall O Dowd founder of Irish America Magazine a href= https://irishamerica.com/archives/2008-archive/june-july-2008/ >June / July 2008 SILICON Valley has long been the birthplace of great innovation. Companies such as Google, Apple, Hewlett Packard and Intel all began their journeys to greatness here, and the world was changed forever. Now comes a new Irish organization that could change the way the world sees Irish America and Ireland. With Irish America acting as co-host, The Irish Technology Leadership Group (ITLG) held their first event at Stanford University in the dining room of the graduate business school on Thursday, March 26.

Helping new scientists bloom: Biologist using orchid research to inspire students to pursue STEM

 E-Mail IMAGE: WVU Assistant Professor of Biology Craig Barrett is working to cultivate a bumper crop of young scientists through the study of wild orchids - and the fungi they eat. view more  Credit: Craig Barrett A West Virginia University biologist is working to cultivate a bumper crop of young scientists through the study of wild orchids - and the fungi they eat. As WVU s latest National Science Foundation CAREER Award recipient, Assistant Professor of Biology Craig Barrett is teaming up with teachers in rural West Virginia high schools to develop student-led research projects. The projects will culminate in lesson plans accessible to high school students and teachers across the U.S., with an emphasis on closing the STEM skills and interest gap in the Mountain State.

WiMAX? Dead with no known users : Linux tips code in the recycle bin

WiMAX? Dead with no known users : Linux tips code in the recycle bin
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