Absent from this history is Thomson's Mostek acquisition in Nov 1985. While Mostek's DRAM business was flaming out, its SRAM and speciality products added a nice revenue stream to Thomson. Even more valuable was Mostek's patent portfolio. Upon the Thomson/SGS merger, SGS immediately shut down the DRAM business. Over the next couple of years SGS Thomson netted over $450M in license revenue from the Mostek patents. An important patent area was Mostek's pioneering work on ion implantation which SGS Thomson leveraged not only for the license revenue but also for its own internal use. I know this story well as I was an application engineer for Mostek from 1980 to Oct 1985 when UTC laid off most of us in preparation for the sale to Thomson.
With the race for DRAM density very violent at that times, how did SGS justify shutting down the DRAM activities? MK4164's were literally everywhere a dram chip was needed.
@@MichalKobuszewski Mostek's unit costs were much higher than the Japanese manufacturers for 64K DRAMs and we were losing money on each sale. The high costs resulted from a strategic decision Mostek made to produce the 64K with a process and design able to scale to 256K while the Japanese produced their 64K using a process first used to produce 16K devices. Unfortunately, Mostek's decision delayed the 64K market entry long enough that they fell behind the learning curve as prices fell from around $3.50 to $0.35 in 18 months. And to make matters worse, their 256K yield was never really up to production quality and that's why UTC closed us down in Oct 1985.
@@gdavids57 Thank you, it's really an honour to be able to ask someone so close to the matter. It seems like a sound decision that unfortunately turned out to involve higher risk than anticipated. It must have been extremely difficult to stay profitable and simultaneously advance the bleeding edge of technology. One of SESCOSEM's planar-epitaxial manufacturing lines has allegedly ended up licensed out to Poland, kickstarting the coutry's abilities to manufacture somewhat modern semiconductors. Poland really struggled to keep up for various reasons - one of the leading semiconductor plants has been constructed next to the tram line, where it has turned out that vibration does not (surprise!) help in photolitography!
@@MichalKobuszewski "It must have been extremely difficult to stay profitable and simultaneously advance the bleeding edge of technology." Well, there's a reason why there are so few companies in the field these days.
Holy Moly. I will never get over how it is these companies can lose sooooo much money, and eventually eek out a small profit, then become huge. It boggles the mind. These histories are just fascinating.
But always remember these starrups give Good Money to its managers and employees projectants whereas established corporations give little Money to its employees and export income to tax paradise
Hey bro are part of design or back office of STm in India ? Do you have any idea about ? What happened with sTM and foxxcon deal in India ? After vendanta go with applied materials semiconductor ?
ST design office in Istanbul was one of the few (and best) places to work if you graduated in microelectronics related areas in early 2000s Turkey. Many of my friends had their first work experiences there. ST moved that office under ST-Ericsson (a child company of both) which was doomed from from the start. In mid-2010s they crashed and burned and later got sold to Ericsson.
The best translation for "Societe Generale" from Italian to English (and the same with Societe Anonyme from French and Spanish) is "company". So they literally called it "Semiconductor Company".
Oh man, I would never have thought my home town would get a mention on THIS channel !!! 9:02 GREAT PRONUNCIATION TOO. I cycled past this factory my entire childhood, great to finally know what was happening in there!
ST Crolles is a real treat, every day I would watch paragliders sailing down from the mountain behind the fab. I'd also really appreciate if more cafeterias started offering little charcuterie plates
What a hell of work you must have put into this historical research. Not forgetting the 'Ndrangheta and Mafia threat to every public figures in Italy in the 80's.
ST was known for their collaboration with Tesla on battery chips, made in Catania in Pistorio's home island... I remember my visit there in 2018 and I knew they were brewing something...
Thanks for documenting this story! I love ST, their MCU's are my favorite ARM processors. Great support from the demo software suite to the Nucleo devboards.
Worked with many a Olivetti 386 and 486 back in the day, specifically while migrating older business computing solutions from a DR-Multiuser DOS based serial console solution to a Novell Netware 3.12 File Server based solution, and this was in fact the first network I fully deployed and configured on my own, from server to the clients. (Invoicing and Stocks being the main use of these systems) The network was running atop IPX/SPX at the time, TCP/IP was implemented after the whole system was upgraded, starting with the server wich was replaced with a Pentium 2 450 running Windows NT4 Server and the clients upgraded to Windows 95 (lots of money spent on the clients due to the 95 requirements, something that was not needed when moving to Novell Netware)
I've vistited ST fab in Catania back in 2018, and it felt like another world compared to everything else around it. Now I know where this diamond comes from, and I'm even prouder as a Sicilian to know Pistorio's story
This is a great channel. Asianometry drives the point home in these vids, that the development of technology is always contingent on the people and circumstances that give rise to it.
In the 1980 spinoff of Thomson-Houston & Co beside Alsthom ( yes it lost a h since ) for the heavy industry you also had Alcatel that got spinned off for the Telecom domain. ( it's a really simplified version, it's way more complex than that, but going deeper into the rabbit hole of the Nationalizations and following spinoffs is headache worthy... even for a French )
In 2000 ST Microelectronics bought Nortel Networks semiconductor manufacturing Fab in Ottawa, Canada in a deal to fabricate all of the semiconductors used by Nortel however with the Dot Com bubble ST closed the Ottawa FAB within 1 year after transferring NT’s technology to ST Europe. Only a few key employees found jobs in 1 of 2 ST sites in the US however by 2007 ST closed their Fabs in Carrollton, Texas and Phoenix, Arizona resulting in evacuation from North America.
Interesting. I have a SGS-made Z80 CPU in my ZX Spectrum computer, so I recently looked the company up online. Thanks for providing much more depth to their history.
I worked a few years in 2010's at the saint egreve site, which was never part of stmicro, as it was the main army supplier in electronique. This site was part of atmel, then e2v and now teledyne, and still sell some mixed signal ic for spatial and military. Some of the older worker were regretting the good old days of 4000 workers doing little work for the army, but this was unsustainable and when 8 was there only 400 workers left.
As I just visited the TI plant in Freising i would appreciate a deep dive into the history there. Its quite a special plant build into a former office building.
9:05 when mentioning Grenoble always useful to remember that’s the site of the French military academy, and where all the defence r&d funding goes by default in France. It really does create a little European parallel to Orange county California in France, with that nexus of military investment and commercialisation, with skills development that feeds into the private sector.
One of my advisers at INRIA Rhones Alpes used to call Grenoble: The Alpine Silicon Valley. If I could rewind time I would stay there instead of moving to IRISA.
Love for ST! Always wanted to look into them. 😊 Not making fun of your pronunciation until we meet and you can laugh at my attempts to pronounce some Taiwanese names. 😅
It's reassuring that a company can make integrated circuits while paying people a fair wage. I think we should move away from the slave mentality of the far east and produce what we need under civilised conditions. Hopefully the populations of Korea and China will regain a sense of personal worth and force change
I really enjoyed this ultra-geeky story with so many twists and turns. Pretty exotic for Americans not accustomed to European style interventionism, I imagine. Ano ther similarly baroque story would be the rise and fall of Elf, the French national oil company, created by government bashing all the small national companies together. Later the government did the same for pharmacy, creating Elf-Sanofi and finally united the countries "biotechnology" companies under Sanofi Bio-industries. Quaintly, biotechnology turned out to be food additives, like gelatin, pectin and carrageenan, which is how I wound up working for a giant oil company in Europe's first seaweed processing factory, lost in the Normandy marshes. The fall of Elf seemed unthinkable at the time, yet their CEO wound up in jail, listening to the cries of his fellow prisoners. Another wild ride.
Thanks for the video. Had a horrible time dealing with ST during the 2021/2022 shortages. Guessing they burnt quite a few bridges during this time. 😢 it will be interesting how much competition they are faced with coming out of this phase.
ST has a very broad portfolio, this made managing the supply chains that more difficult. One of our products, with no immediate part to port the application to, had to be canceled.
Would the shortages have been better with NXP, particularly Kinetis? I'll never know because so much of the stuff we deal with is stm32, decided over the previous decade.
@@ChiefBridgeFuser Probably not. ST is quite ethical. Other companies are much more short term stock price driven and therefore will be much more ruthless when allocating capacity during shortages
Been a fan of ST Micro for decades. When I was searching for the best uC some 2 decades ago STM was the top performer. Arduino was so last Century, and I couldn't figure what the excitement was.
The ST MCUs are literally everywhere and with many Chinese companies make near identical clones under their own brand as they are so widley used so easy to get a piece of the pie with some clones.
To be honest, I do make fun of a lot of your pronunciations to myself when you do these videos. I don't ever point them out because they aren't a big deal and just remind me how you aren't a native speaker and clearly read more technical english than you hear (which is particularly unusual and praiseworthy today)
Also note the location: a small town next to Grenoble where the Mayor at the time bought the agricultural land for more than 10 times their price, because he had the idea of creating a small industrial zone.. .In 2024 the Local taxes levied have made the inhabitants rich ,who hire their children... at the Town Hall... A "capitalism in collusion with the state" which generates "socialism"...
I love your mini docs there awesome always look forward to watching a new release. However can offer a shit sandwich 😂 as a native english speaker can i be rude and help you ? Niche is pronounced nee- shh. Once again awesome mini docs keep it up your content is spot on no one on here produces content like yours you have carved out a real niche 😂👍 oww as an added note your english is amazing i cant speak any other languages its very impressive your totally fluent. English is full of tricks with pronunciation the Americans get it wrong all the time especially the word niche, so dont be tough on your self 😂
For Indians who thinking foxxcon back off ! They didn't they just changed partner company they Chosen this company as there partner in india ! If u saw semicon summit in India when foxxcon CEO came he talked about that they didnt drop the plan of semi fab plant ! They were finding partner after that they give news that they are partnering with STmicroelectronics ! And at Same time ex Indian partner Vedanta partnered with Applied materials semiconductor ! For there own !
So this guy needs an armored car to protect him from terrorists then proceeds to do mass firings in his company, some of which were the poorest and uneducated in the country. I'm sure that didn't help with the terrorist issue in Italy which I wasn't even aware even existed
if you ever need to know how to pronounce French words or translate technical stuff hmu, i will gladly help you! Also brandt was not thought of as an arms dealer, it had a huge consumer market and massive factories
Also know that International Rectifier either had or sub contracted manufacture in Italy at least in the mid 1980's.I wonder how this fits in with the companies in the vid. ( I have a pile of stud mount 40 Amp / 1,000 Volt diodes with IR Italy markings ) .
Still constantly impressed at the speed with which you manage to put out these high-quality, well-researched mini-docs.
Beware of those Asians. Then again, everyone should have one:)
Absent from this history is Thomson's Mostek acquisition in Nov 1985. While Mostek's DRAM business was flaming out, its SRAM and speciality products added a nice revenue stream to Thomson. Even more valuable was Mostek's patent portfolio. Upon the Thomson/SGS merger, SGS immediately shut down the DRAM business. Over the next couple of years SGS Thomson netted over $450M in license revenue from the Mostek patents. An important patent area was Mostek's pioneering work on ion implantation which SGS Thomson leveraged not only for the license revenue but also for its own internal use. I know this story well as I was an application engineer for Mostek from 1980 to Oct 1985 when UTC laid off most of us in preparation for the sale to Thomson.
With the race for DRAM density very violent at that times, how did SGS justify shutting down the DRAM activities? MK4164's were literally everywhere a dram chip was needed.
@@MichalKobuszewski Mostek's unit costs were much higher than the Japanese manufacturers for 64K DRAMs and we were losing money on each sale. The high costs resulted from a strategic decision Mostek made to produce the 64K with a process and design able to scale to 256K while the Japanese produced their 64K using a process first used to produce 16K devices. Unfortunately, Mostek's decision delayed the 64K market entry long enough that they fell behind the learning curve as prices fell from around $3.50 to $0.35 in 18 months. And to make matters worse, their 256K yield was never really up to production quality and that's why UTC closed us down in Oct 1985.
@@gdavids57 Thank you, it's really an honour to be able to ask someone so close to the matter. It seems like a sound decision that unfortunately turned out to involve higher risk than anticipated. It must have been extremely difficult to stay profitable and simultaneously advance the bleeding edge of technology.
One of SESCOSEM's planar-epitaxial manufacturing lines has allegedly ended up licensed out to Poland, kickstarting the coutry's abilities to manufacture somewhat modern semiconductors. Poland really struggled to keep up for various reasons - one of the leading semiconductor plants has been constructed next to the tram line, where it has turned out that vibration does not (surprise!) help in photolitography!
Yeah, I should have mentioned it. But the video was already stretching long. I will perhaps give Mostek its own video one day.
@@MichalKobuszewski "It must have been extremely difficult to stay profitable and simultaneously advance the bleeding edge of technology."
Well, there's a reason why there are so few companies in the field these days.
Dude Asianometry's work ethic and his quality of content is off the charts...the stuff he makes is timeless
Holy Moly. I will never get over how it is these companies can lose sooooo much money, and eventually eek out a small profit, then become huge. It boggles the mind. These histories are just fascinating.
Lots of hard work and a desire to make it happen.
also the same reason why olivetti didnt make it lmao
And without Chapter 11 😜
Persistence, and bankruptcy.
Its a win win.
But always remember these starrups give Good Money to its managers and employees projectants whereas established corporations give little Money to its employees and export income to tax paradise
Just a little correction, in this context, "società" translates to "company", not "society". Good video.
Si, e vero! 😊
Also true for the French "société "
Pasquale has often been quoted as some sort of legend by the oldheads at ST. I had no idea why.
Now I do. Thank you
-an Indian ST employee
Hey bro are part of design or back office of STm in India ? Do you have any idea about ? What happened with sTM and foxxcon deal in India ? After vendanta go with applied materials semiconductor ?
@@svanimation8969 i unfortunately have no idea..
ST design office in Istanbul was one of the few (and best) places to work if you graduated in microelectronics related areas in early 2000s Turkey. Many of my friends had their first work experiences there.
ST moved that office under ST-Ericsson (a child company of both) which was doomed from from the start.
In mid-2010s they crashed and burned and later got sold to Ericsson.
The best translation for "Societe Generale" from Italian to English (and the same with Societe Anonyme from French and Spanish) is "company". So they literally called it "Semiconductor Company".
Your videos are always like attending the classes of a favorite teacher. Thanks!
Oh man, I would never have thought my home town would get a mention on THIS channel !!! 9:02 GREAT PRONUNCIATION TOO.
I cycled past this factory my entire childhood, great to finally know what was happening in there!
ST Crolles is a real treat, every day I would watch paragliders sailing down from the mountain behind the fab. I'd also really appreciate if more cafeterias started offering little charcuterie plates
What a hell of work you must have put into this historical research. Not forgetting the 'Ndrangheta and Mafia threat to every public figures in Italy in the 80's.
Indeed. Amazing that Pasquale did not get a bomb explode under his car, like Judge Falcone.
Mafia eats up other peoples hard work. It seems to serve no proper purpose in society. It's just leeching.
The Starlink base station seems to be a full STM design, from the teardown that I saw. Interesting company.
ST was known for their collaboration with Tesla on battery chips, made in Catania in Pistorio's home island...
I remember my visit there in 2018 and I knew they were brewing something...
Thanks for documenting this story!
I love ST, their MCU's are my favorite ARM processors. Great support from the demo software suite to the Nucleo devboards.
Worked with many a Olivetti 386 and 486 back in the day, specifically while migrating older business computing solutions from a DR-Multiuser DOS based serial console solution to a Novell Netware 3.12 File Server based solution, and this was in fact the first network I fully deployed and configured on my own, from server to the clients. (Invoicing and Stocks being the main use of these systems) The network was running atop IPX/SPX at the time, TCP/IP was implemented after the whole system was upgraded, starting with the server wich was replaced with a Pentium 2 450 running Windows NT4 Server and the clients upgraded to Windows 95 (lots of money spent on the clients due to the 95 requirements, something that was not needed when moving to Novell Netware)
I've vistited ST fab in Catania back in 2018, and it felt like another world compared to everything else around it.
Now I know where this diamond comes from, and I'm even prouder as a Sicilian to know Pistorio's story
That was a really great history lesson - Thanks for presenting it so clearly. Love your work!
This is a great channel. Asianometry drives the point home in these vids, that the development of technology is always contingent on the people and circumstances that give rise to it.
In the 1980 spinoff of Thomson-Houston & Co beside Alsthom ( yes it lost a h since ) for the heavy industry you also had Alcatel that got spinned off for the Telecom domain.
( it's a really simplified version, it's way more complex than that, but going deeper into the rabbit hole of the Nationalizations and following spinoffs is headache worthy... even for a French )
In 2000 ST Microelectronics bought Nortel Networks semiconductor manufacturing Fab in Ottawa, Canada in a deal to fabricate all of the semiconductors used by Nortel however with the Dot Com bubble ST closed the Ottawa FAB within 1 year after transferring NT’s technology to ST Europe. Only a few key employees found jobs in 1 of 2 ST sites in the US however by 2007 ST closed their Fabs in Carrollton, Texas and Phoenix, Arizona resulting in evacuation from North America.
Interesting. I have a SGS-made Z80 CPU in my ZX Spectrum computer, so I recently looked the company up online. Thanks for providing much more depth to their history.
Same here for my Amstrad CPCs and nice to know more about the history of SGS as Wikipedia was not of much help.
Thank you for having put this together. Excellent job.
Remember to give your Italian transistors full voltage, once in a while. It's called Italian Tuneup. 🏎 Broom!!!😅
I worked a few years in 2010's at the saint egreve site, which was never part of stmicro, as it was the main army supplier in electronique. This site was part of atmel, then e2v and now teledyne, and still sell some mixed signal ic for spatial and military. Some of the older worker were regretting the good old days of 4000 workers doing little work for the army, but this was unsustainable and when 8 was there only 400 workers left.
As I just visited the TI plant in Freising i would appreciate a deep dive into the history there. Its quite a special plant build into a former office building.
Last year I visited their Rousset facility for an engineering meeting. That facility is equally as impressive as the beautiful surrounding landscape.
9:05 when mentioning Grenoble always useful to remember that’s the site of the French military academy, and where all the defence r&d funding goes by default in France. It really does create a little European parallel to Orange county California in France, with that nexus of military investment and commercialisation, with skills development that feeds into the private sector.
One of my advisers at INRIA Rhones Alpes used to call Grenoble: The Alpine Silicon Valley. If I could rewind time I would stay there instead of moving to IRISA.
Wtf are you talking about? 😂
When we develop products, almost 90% of it would be from STM from regulators, analog front ends, to MCUs, op amps..
Thanks
That was a complex one, I'm impressed, I thought I knew Thomson; but I learned a lot! Thanks
Thanks. This was highly instructive.
"Whew!" @ 12:14 doesn't state it enough.
Love for ST! Always wanted to look into them. 😊
Not making fun of your pronunciation until we meet and you can laugh at my attempts to pronounce some Taiwanese names. 😅
Nobody will blame Asianometry for butchering some "European words" as he is not a native speaker of "European".
Your channel is top shelf! Thank You!
I honestly had no clue who this company was before other than their name is on the STM32F446 chip on the board of my 3D printer.
You had me at "alike in dignity". Well played, that bard!
the trick is to get yourself an Italian girlfriend. She will feed you with pasta and teach you the language. 😉
I still call them SGS-Thomson, just to tick people off.
Man that was an inspirational story ...can't believe he stuck through all those loses to see the light at the end of the tunnel ...respect
I am using their STM32 microcontrollers based on ARM technology. This was quite educational to find out about the story of the company.
The intro was epic!!!! Shakespearenometry
Italians dont get offended by wrong pronunciation, BUT beware if you talk about pasta it is a whole different story..
It's reassuring that a company can make integrated circuits while paying people a fair wage. I think we should move away from the slave mentality of the far east and produce what we need under civilised conditions. Hopefully the populations of Korea and China will regain a sense of personal worth and force change
I love these videos but the research in so impressive. Thank you very much.
I really enjoyed this ultra-geeky story with so many twists and turns. Pretty exotic for Americans not accustomed to European style interventionism, I imagine. Ano ther similarly baroque story would be the rise and fall of Elf, the French national oil company, created by government bashing all the small national companies together. Later the government did the same for pharmacy, creating Elf-Sanofi and finally united the countries "biotechnology" companies under Sanofi Bio-industries. Quaintly, biotechnology turned out to be food additives, like gelatin, pectin and carrageenan, which is how I wound up working for a giant oil company in Europe's first seaweed processing factory, lost in the Normandy marshes. The fall of Elf seemed unthinkable at the time, yet their CEO wound up in jail, listening to the cries of his fellow prisoners. Another wild ride.
Thanks for the video. Had a horrible time dealing with ST during the 2021/2022 shortages. Guessing they burnt quite a few bridges during this time. 😢 it will be interesting how much competition they are faced with coming out of this phase.
ST has a very broad portfolio, this made managing the supply chains that more difficult. One of our products, with no immediate part to port the application to, had to be canceled.
What could they have done not to burn bridges when there was a global wide chip shortage affecting every client/industry/market?
You are lucky you did not have to deal with Broadcom. ST were sweet compared to them
Would the shortages have been better with NXP, particularly Kinetis? I'll never know because so much of the stuff we deal with is stm32, decided over the previous decade.
@@ChiefBridgeFuser Probably not. ST is quite ethical. Other companies are much more short term stock price driven and therefore will be much more ruthless when allocating capacity during shortages
I cut my embedded systems devevelopment teeth on the SGS ST-9 in the 90's - pokey 8 bit CPU, but good peripherals/timers/DMA - fun times
Finally, I was hoping for this.
Been a fan of ST Micro for decades. When I was searching for the best uC some 2 decades ago STM was the top performer. Arduino was so last Century, and I couldn't figure what the excitement was.
This is a great history that filled in the background of the name I remember frombearly career (sgs-thompson) through the habit called STM32
That was fascinating, I'll think of it every times I fire one of my STM-powered board, which is everyday ^^
The only thing I've ever come across from STMicroelectronics is their hard drive free-fall sensor found in older Dell laptops.
The ST MCUs are literally everywhere and with many Chinese companies make near identical clones under their own brand as they are so widley used so easy to get a piece of the pie with some clones.
Would be nice to have a video on the partnership between STmicro and Atomera
If it pans out it will be very noteworthy. Otherwise just a flash in the pan.
My first boards with greater than 10k volume used stm chips !
Amazing content as always!
Love French cities' name prononced with Italian accent haha
Ici c'est 🏵️🏵️🏵️
Agrate Brianza 🫰🏼🫰🏼🫰🏼 magnificent brother.
👍🏼😁
can you please make a video about Siemens/Infineon
Infineon or Siemens... good proposition
@@tawalioualao7444 Well Infinon was a spinoff from Siemens so I would include that.
Thank you!
Love your occasional literary flourish.
stm32!!!! Love those chips.
Wish STM32WLxx had a larger flash though, I hate having to deal wit Nordic
I started learning register programming to use some of the small mem chips. The HAL code is super bloated.
Solid content as always.
7:36 'on which I leaned greatly', as they're things not people.
Amazing story! 🎉😊
The mc68000 in my Amiga500 comes from this company
ST.. Spaghetti Teletype
Oh no
And when Pistorio retired, Carlo Bonzati took over and the first thing he did was close all American Manufacturing Plants in Arizona and Texas.
Met Pistorio once or twice in the mid-80s.
the name of the successor is: Carlo Bozotti !
Can you do the history of S3 graphics?
Thanks for the video
Fascinating, thank you.
To be honest, I do make fun of a lot of your pronunciations to myself when you do these videos. I don't ever point them out because they aren't a big deal and just remind me how you aren't a native speaker and clearly read more technical english than you hear (which is particularly unusual and praiseworthy today)
The only correct pronunciation is REDNECK pronunciation... Because everyone knows the French can't spell LOL Like my name. ha ha
what's the painting used at the start of every video?
Also note the location:
a small town next to Grenoble where the Mayor at the time bought the agricultural land for more than 10 times their price,
because he had the idea of creating a small industrial zone..
.In 2024 the Local taxes levied have made the inhabitants rich ,who hire their children... at the Town Hall...
A "capitalism in collusion with the state" which generates "socialism"...
"because i like pasta" - Asianometry 2024
You do great...
STM my beloved
I love your mini docs there awesome always look forward to watching a new release. However can offer a shit sandwich 😂 as a native english speaker can i be rude and help you ? Niche is pronounced nee- shh. Once again awesome mini docs keep it up your content is spot on no one on here produces content like yours you have carved out a real niche 😂👍 oww as an added note your english is amazing i cant speak any other languages its very impressive your totally fluent. English is full of tricks with pronunciation the Americans get it wrong all the time especially the word niche, so dont be tough on your self 😂
Hello everyone, from St-Egreve ;)
Ok Pistorio seems like a good story
Salute to the wonderful Pasquale Pistorio!
Informative.
I thought Europe Lost Semiconductors
For Indians who thinking foxxcon back off ! They didn't they just changed partner company they Chosen this company as there partner in india ! If u saw semicon summit in India when foxxcon CEO came he talked about that they didnt drop the plan of semi fab plant ! They were finding partner after that they give news that they are partnering with STmicroelectronics ! And at Same time ex Indian partner Vedanta partnered with Applied materials semiconductor ! For there own !
i would argue employment rates are "not unimportant" even absent a "leftist bent"
it's generally understood that unemployment hurts consumer spending
So they went from coding spaghett on their olivett, to coding spaghetti on an STM32.
I'd prefer you apologized for having done that to Shakespeare...
Bravo!
Could you do a video on Nokia ?
i like pasta too. are we long separated brothers?
I fucking love stms chips. One of the greats!
So this guy needs an armored car to protect him from terrorists then proceeds to do mass firings in his company, some of which were the poorest and uneducated in the country. I'm sure that didn't help with the terrorist issue in Italy which I wasn't even aware even existed
Here in catania we are very proud to have one of europe's manufacturing center! Not super high end stuff though.
12:08 TEURS! You make wxceprionally too many videos :)
Hmm 'silicon lovers' sounds like a way to describe Fleshlight owners
that e in silicone makes all the difference in the world
Ironic that 90% of the encoded audio of this video I can hear is from a cheap unbalanced Chinese fan ..
Atomera 🎉
Your videos are golden, don't bother about pronunciation!
if you ever need to know how to pronounce French words or translate technical stuff hmu, i will gladly help you! Also brandt was not thought of as an arms dealer, it had a huge consumer market and massive factories
Also know that International Rectifier either had or sub contracted manufacture in Italy at least in the mid 1980's.I wonder how this fits in with the companies in the vid. ( I have a pile of stud mount 40 Amp / 1,000 Volt diodes with IR Italy markings ) .
Wake up babe Asianometry just dropped a new video
What an amazing man. After retirement, took up humanitarian causes instead of building a super yacht.