Crisps
Dijital Lyrics


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Figura Hertelendi tigris Figura fly Az ég a limit Gieroy Sprite Ku…


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Most interesting comment from YouTube:

John Jacob JinglehimerSchmidt

I've been watching alot of videos on or about AMSL lately, and it seems that a really important piece of information about how lithography is done is not present. But I think it would give the lay person the understanding of why lithography is so difficult.

1. There's explanations on how many transistors, ok ... I think that the avg layperson if they've seen a couple videos about semiconductor mfg'ing has a decent knowledge about how there are billions of transistors on todays cpu type chips.
2. Many people just don't have any idea of what a reticle looks like, that it's one whole chip width and has 1 layer and that it's large.
3. Many people have seen how small a chip is on a wafer but not how big that reticle is. That in order to print that reticle image onto the wafer it has to be "STEPPED" down to actual size. That the issue with stepping is that the wave length of light determines the ultimate limit you can print at. Now my rudimentary knowledge is that 1/2 the used wave length is the limit an image can be stepped down.

It's this limit that ASML is working hard to break through. Heck I've only not been in the industry for 8 years and back then I hadn't heard about immersion, water, lithography or what ever it's called. At the time I got out Intel was still trying to find a High K dialectric so that they could be made thinner.

I think that if more videos included why it was visible, UV, DUV, immersion, and now EUV steppers they'd have a greater appreciation of the hurdles ASML works to overcome.


Just my $0.02



All comments from YouTube:

Jeroen Bouwens

The incredible level of accuracy these machines achieve cannot be overstated. Saying it's "like hitting a coin on earth from the moon with a laser" is a nice analogy and to get an idea of the engineering challenges involved, consider this: If your laser on the moon moves a microdegree (one-millionth of a degree), you will miss your coin by 10 meters. Not only do ASML's machines hit this coin, they do it over and over again, 24/7, millions of times a day, with people walking around, trucks driving by outside, changing temperatures etc. At that scale and level of accuracy EVERYTHING influences your machine. That is ASML's real technical achievement.

lo2740

@Dimitry Gorno Melikov yeah ok, you must be a kid

jsmdnq

This is a bit of an overstatement. While it is accurate any errors are easily discarded due to mass production. Also, a laser having to travel to the moon is vastly different than one having to travel a few meters.

While it is a technical challenge the physics and mathematics are actually rather simple. It is a progressive technology that, in fact, the military funded(and hence tax payers) and yet suits take all the protects. Virtually all advancements is simply progressive optimization. These things didn't happen overnight and literally hundreds of millions if not billions of humans are involved(but only a few benefit from it tremendously).

guydreamr

@Dimitry Gorno Melikov "lmao" My sentiments precisely

Dimitry Gorno Melikov

@guydreamr lmao

guydreamr

@Dimitry Gorno Melikov What makes you think you have the right to take someone's property without their consent? The right to one's inventions is called a "patent," which encourages more discoveries by granted people exclusive rights to their work. Their work product is their property, so if it was invented in our country and the patent was granted in our country, yes it is ours. You want the technology, develop it yourself, pure and simple. Typical authoritarian mindset, whose governments by their very nature suppresses critical thinking and technological development. No wonder why you want to steal from the West, you can produce nothing original on your own.

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Guitarmeggedon IT

I work doing engineering drawings for installing these machines in chip factories. They are incredible. Hats off to the scientists and engineers building them!

transformer stuff

@Tony V seems you mistundertand.

Tony V

@transformer stuff that's my point, the world doesn't go hungry without fancy fruits from the Netherlands but millions go hungry without grains from Ukraine.

transformer stuff

@Tony V The Netherlands plays an important role in the trade of fresh fruit and vegetables. The country is responsible for a fifth of all fresh fruit and vegetables imported into Europe

Belgium produces 150kg of vegetables per capita. In the Netherlands, it's 300kg, excluding more than 200kg of onions. In both countries, apples and pears are the main fruits. In total, Belgium produces 620.000kg of fruit annually, and the Netherlands, 760.000kg. Per inhabitant, that's 55 and 45kg, respectively.

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