Exist50
Exist50 t1_j29imdu wrote
Reply to comment by SplittingHares in TIL Archduchess Mathilde of Austria accidentally set her dress alight and immolated herself while trying to hide a cigarette from her father by Brotherdodge
No, that's outright false. Literally the very first definition off of google:
> electrocute: injure or kill someone by electric shock
Words can have a different meaning than their constituent parts.
Exist50 t1_j20083y wrote
Reply to comment by KimCureAll in Lithuania defense minister is leery that Russia will run out of ammo by KimCureAll
>What's the latest count on Russian casualties? Well over 100K?
Isn't that number coming from Ukraine? Probably not the best source for judging actual casualties.
Exist50 t1_iy0y1xi wrote
Reply to comment by MikeFrench98 in Snake Island defenders freed in prisoner swap with Russia by TheTelegraph
Tell me, why so you think Ukraine declared them dead when they very clearly weren't?
> That's when Ukraine discovered they weren't dead, and announced it officially shortly after, even rejoicing about it
Just like how the Ghost of Kiev became metaphorical only after the fact.
Exist50 t1_iy0xcqo wrote
Reply to comment by MikeFrench98 in Snake Island defenders freed in prisoner swap with Russia by TheTelegraph
>The Ukrainian governement thought they were dead. When they saw they were wrong, they said so and declared they were happy the soldiers were alive.
Lmao, what on earth gave you that idea? They were literally paraded out on Russian TV.
Just like with the recent missile strike in Poland or "Ghost of Kiev", the Ukrainian government is perfectly willing to lie to support the war effort. Russia doesn't have a monopoly on propaganda.
Exist50 t1_iy0lrlu wrote
Reply to comment by AdmirableYouth4208 in Snake Island defenders freed in prisoner swap with Russia by TheTelegraph
Ukraine claimed they had. That was a lie.
Exist50 t1_ixkphs9 wrote
Reply to comment by pimpeachment in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
What I said. Heavily subsidized, and trailing the tech deployed in Taiwan.
Exist50 t1_ixjjl9d wrote
Reply to comment by Stroomschok in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
Yes, thanks for the correction. Though that was a year and a half ago ;).
Article for anyone looking for a source: https://www.politico.eu/article/europe-tech-sovereignty-china-peter-wennink-asml/
Exist50 t1_ixj4dsx wrote
Reply to comment by TunaFishManwich in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
Replace them is inclusive of that.
Exist50 t1_ixik2up wrote
Reply to comment by Admirable_Royal_5119 in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
No, doesn't mean that either. If anything, Dennard scaling died earliest.
Exist50 t1_ixigd9q wrote
Reply to comment by JimMarch in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
From its geographic location alone, the US has had a strategic interest in Taiwan since long before TSMC became the dominant foundry. Nor is TSMC's dominance in that area assured. Not even the most hawkish of pundits seem to think China could realistically invade Taiwan for at least a decade, and that's just considering the logistic feasibility. A decade is an eternity in tech, and TSMC is not so far ahead of Samsung or Intel to be unassailable.
Obviously, yes, if TSMC were to be razed, it would have very significant global economic affects. But people act like it would set the world back 15 years, which is just absurd.
Exist50 t1_ixiaci6 wrote
Reply to comment by JimMarch in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
You pretty much only hear this on Reddit.
Exist50 t1_ixia8z8 wrote
Reply to comment by Stroomschok in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
ASML's CEO himself said he expects it would take China about a decade to replace them.
Exist50 t1_ixhtrwp wrote
Reply to comment by VictorVogel in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
Not the only if you go further up the chain. But regardless, the lithography machine does not make a node alone.
Exist50 t1_ixhtnkj wrote
Reply to comment by slowslownotbad in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
Morris Chang has spoken many times about their issues and dissatisfaction with their Arizona plant. So I think there are more fundamental reasons.
Exist50 t1_ixhtbux wrote
Reply to comment by Capt_morgan72 in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
They are one of several necessary suppliers for a cutting edge fab.
Exist50 t1_ixgq77n wrote
Reply to comment by deja_geek in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
> Except for TSMC has been rapidly setting up offices and fabs outside of Taiwan
Not really. They've been extremely reluctant, and only when very heavily subsidized. Even then, all the latest and greatest is in Taiwan.
Exist50 t1_ixgq37s wrote
Reply to comment by Capt_morgan72 in TSMC Racing to 1nm, Investing $32 Billion for Fab: Report by brohymn80
ASML is not a fab. They make one piece of equipment that fabs use. It's a very important piece, sure, but that's like calling a wheat farmer a baker.
Exist50 t1_iwet8bb wrote
Reply to comment by guynamedjames in TIL about Deaf lifeguard Leroy Colombo, who overcame childhood paralysis through swimming and saved a record-breaking 900+ lives during his career. His swimming talent and use of sight rather than sound to identify drowning swimmers allowed him to save people other lifeguards would have missed. by lemontreelemur
I mean, if we're giving advice, I'm going to go with "Fucking learn how to swim! It might save your life one day!". Think that should about cover it.
Exist50 t1_iubyebv wrote
Reply to comment by nerdguy1138 in Eli5 why do pregnancy testers not have a yes or no indication on the screen instead of the symbols and then matching them? by googleimages69420
IIRC, that guy just replaced the internals with ones that could run Doom, sadly.
Exist50 t1_jd9vzdx wrote
Reply to comment by Gstamsharp in ELI5: Why do English speakers switch Japanese names to have the family name last, but not Korean names? by JorWat
> Americans are just more familiar with both Japanese naming customs and the sound of which names are given vs familial.
Tbh, I don't think it's common knowledge for Americans either. Not rare knowledge, perhaps, but I'd be surprised if that was true for the majority.