tooLongInEDA
Moderator
I think you're in danger of losing the plot here using phrases like "TSMC and its customers want to kill Intel".I don't think they know it. I do believe the TSMC + its customers want to kill Intel. When TSMC held its event in Dec 2022, CEOs of Apple, AMD, Nvidia, ASML all shown up. Has anyone shown up during Intel's Arizona opening or Ohio's. I don't think any ever participated, not even ASML. All these competitors know how a mighty Intel could potentially disrupt their business model, and they don't want to give it a second life.
And the government don't really care about taxpayers' money, in fact no one does. And you won't either because everyone know there are even more money that have been distributed to Israel, Taiwan, and Ukrine for the past decades and more. People don't give a shit over how it's spent, otherwise the government would've listened years ago.
And based on the governments' actions. Intel plan on spending 100B in US, 90B in Europe before the most recent fiasco. There hasn't been much of government support, and let's face it. Intel was awarded with 8B. TSMC and Samsung both get 6B each. But what is their scale of investment? Samsung, sure it does spend a good amount.
But for TSMC, and let's be critical. It's not the best technology at that time these fabs are operational, nor does it have the same level of planned investments (65 billion vs Intel's 100 billion.) The government subsidy are not proportional to how the investment is.
With intel's original plan as follows
So I don't think anyone on this forum can blame Pat Gelsinger for his talking. US government literally stabs him at the back. The only thing I would to blame is that he trust this country too much.
TSMC is simply trying to run a successful business. As are its competitors. Amongst other things, they're probably far too busy wrapped up in dealing with their own problems and customers. Staing focused is a critical component of success here.
Aside from that, I don't buy into all this techno-nationalism. The semiconductor industry has always been a global one based on global networks and specialisation. That's not going to fundamentally change.
As for the US govt stabbing Pat Gelsinger in the back. How so ? They've offered him [intel=] $10bns of subsidies. Pretty much as he asked for. If he can't later meet the qualification criteria, that's on him.
Intel's problems are 95% of their own making.[/intel]