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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Learning
Transcript
00:00music
00:04Yes
00:05generous
00:06I'll change my mind about Karim's safety
00:09Good morning, champ!
00:11I'll change for the safe return
00:13Yes
00:14As you can see
00:15We installed the chip for him
00:16It now contains all the required information.
00:18Where does the doctor work?
00:20Where is he speaking from?
00:21Enki, Arigato, Motsatsu, and Acta
00:25Is there a doctor from him?
00:27What's wrong with feathers? Why is it down at factory settings?
00:30I'll give it a simple update and it will be fine.
00:32It will be the watbuzz
00:34Here you go, it's connected to your phone and the internet.
00:37You can ask him about anything in the world
00:39Okay, beautiful, my dear Karim
00:41The doctor who's treating you, what's his name?
00:43This?
00:44Dr. Ashraf Adel Nazia
00:46Three embezzlement cases in one health department
00:48Shablanja village, Belna district
00:50Excellent work, great
00:52I wanted to check on the grammar issue.
00:54Thank God, the Arabic language is healthy.
00:57Mabrouki Haja
00:58Regardless, Doctor
00:59From this, I understand that he will succeed in the general exams.
01:01Sanwaa Al-Aam?
01:02probability
01:04He's just a bit weak in his writing.
01:06Taif, we need your help, Doctor.
01:08Don't worry, it's broken
01:10And you, Gibbs, aren't you the doctor?
01:12Doctor, I have a question.
01:14Can Karim pick up the Holy Quran broadcast?
01:17And we won't need to install an antenna for it?
01:19Huh?
01:20That's a good question if I wanted to ask her about this feature.
01:22What if we installed an antenna for him?
01:23Would it be better if I wore his clothes?
01:25It is supposed to
01:26Excuse me, but I have another question.
01:27He is connected to dad's phone
01:29If I asked him for a phone number to call, would he answer?
01:32Of course, Madam Dina
01:33Karim calls his father's wife
01:35I am one
01:36Samar Huda Aya
01:39And no longing?
01:40generous
01:41Dina
01:42Arrive by ambulance
01:43Yes
01:45Brothers, I said "Hajir" was wrong.
01:46What is my uncle's business?
01:47Yes
01:48Ibnana is present
01:49And I won't tell you to swallow.
01:50What is funny
01:51In her house
01:52What is funny
01:53Dad
01:54I have the army's training for them, oh
01:56Plan Masht
02:05Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you. Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
02:08My dear friend, the famous phrase that the new oil in the world will be data, and that we are entering fourth-generation warfare, and all these clichés, yes, they have become a reality.
02:17Our Muhammad, you smell the scent of bankruptcy and the collapse of Nokia and the collapse of Kodak, and the closure of Sindbad City and its reasons. Wait, it's still coming with the bankruptcy of Shih.
02:26Does he tell you, my dear, that according to today's statistics, China is the world's factory and the largest exporter of products in the world, with a value of 3 trillion dollars?
02:34The world's largest producer of products, valued at $5 trillion, accounting for 70% of the world's mobile phones and 100% of other products.
02:42This country, according to the numbers, imports more chips than oil. We're in this reality, my friend. Back in 2020, China imported enough oil to power all its factories.
02:53Which is practically the world's factories; the whole world manufactures in China, producing goods for 1.4 billion people there, worth $260 billion.
03:00Do you know how much they imported in chips? 350 billion dollars, my friend. That's an astronomical figure. These chips I'm talking about, my friend, are made of transistors.
03:08Transistors are simply electrical gates. These gates operate the binary language, which allows us to interact with computers to store and process information.
03:18This, my dear, is the most important invention in modern history, if not the most important invention in human history.
03:22These transistors record information and also process it, and the more the chips carrying these transistors develop, the greater the computing power and the more incredible the artificial intelligence becomes.
03:33Let me tell you, my dear, that in the data age, artificial intelligence is far more important than petroleum. Those simple chips, which might be the size of a fingernail, contain billions of transistors.
03:41My dear, billions of dollars are like that, and billions less in the cost of our mobile phones go towards these chips.
03:46The iPhone has approximately 12 chips.
03:48Among them are chips for sound, camera, Bluetooth, connection, Wi-Fi, and battery.
03:53Let me tell you, my friend, that Apple's market value is $3 trillion.
03:56This is the largest company in the world in terms of market capitalization.
03:59Apple, my friend, now has more than 2.5 billion iPhones.
04:02Oh Abu Hamid, they have so many problems now!
04:04But let me surprise you and tell you something you wouldn't expect from Abu Hamid, tell me
04:07Okay, my dear, be patient.
04:08Apple, the world's largest company, doesn't make children like those chips.
04:13Abu Hamid, your information isn't up-to-date, by the way.
04:14Apple designs the processor that runs its operating system.
04:17iOS Shutter, my dear, is very excellent
04:20That's right, my friend. Apple designs this processor, but not in this way.
04:23In other words, my dear, even the largest company in the world couldn't make the processor that powers the most successful phone in the world.
04:30The iPhone isn't just that; no other company, not even any company in the world's largest economy, could do it.
04:34Not in America, nor in China, nor in Japan, nor in the Middle East, nor in Africa, nor in all of Europe.
04:4092% of the production of advanced chips found in iPhones or F-35 aircraft
04:47There's only one place in the world that can do it.
04:50One company in one building in the most expensive factory in the world and in the most tense place in this criminal
04:56Taiwan Island, a company called TSMC
04:59Think about it, my dear, back in 2020 there was a virus known as the Coronavirus
05:02This coronavirus is dangerous at 100 nanometers; at TSMC, transistors are being produced that are half the size of the coronavirus.
05:10Today we have a company where a very ordinary person works.
05:13Not only does it create transistors smaller than a virus, but it creates them with unparalleled efficiency.
05:20It contains 11 billion transistors, my friend, in just one iPhone and the iPhone 12.
05:25My dear, I sense that you feel this is normal.
05:27He was telling you, my dear, that we've been around for 60 years, but the volume of the batch has grown to a young age.
05:31It had 4 transistors, so we jumped from 4 to 11 billion.
05:35Dear friend, you've been following this program for a long time, so you're surely familiar with Noor's Law.
05:39That is, we as humans are capable of multiplying the number of transistors.
05:41The idea is that when Mr. Moore came up with Noor's law
05:44It was expected that it would last 10 years.
05:46But Noor made a mistake, and the law continued for more than half a century.
05:49What happened, my dear, in this field, let it develop at this speed, they deserve your expertise.
05:53My dear, the best achievements of humanity today are the responsibility of only about 10 companies in the world.
05:58ZDSMC today produces 53% of the world's total atom production.
06:03It also produces 92% of advanced mesh
06:06And 44% of the drum memory chips are made by just two companies in South Korea, and only one company, my friend.
06:12It is responsible for 100% of the production of devices that work for modern networks.
06:18Do you see, my friend, what I'm talking about? An organization of 13 countries that controls only 40% of the world's oil.
06:23You have companies like Mish Dol that control more than that of the world's youth.
06:27And I tell you again, my dear, that the view that the tool is the new oil is not only now a proven fact
06:32This is a fact that has been around for so long and so many events that it has become a cliché.
06:36The transistor was invented in 1947.
06:39Which might be the most important invention in history
06:41This discovery earned three scientists the Nobel Prize in Physics.
06:43When you take a Nobel Prize, my dear, you take money.
06:45But you don't necessarily have to be rich
06:47That's why, my dear William Shockley, he's one of those three who lied.
06:49His friends used to tell him that this was seriously not nice
06:51He doesn't want his name, but he wants it in the physical review.
06:53I also want to be in the Wall Street Journal
06:55I won't go to the cashier's office, the one with the scientific method.
06:57I want to bring her father-in-law and build a platform
06:58Mohammed Al-Alam, the physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics
07:00I want a platform
07:01Talasa, my dear, the Nobel Prize says you're a genius.
07:03But you don't talk much about your morals and management skills.
07:06The truth, my dear, is that Shockley was a genius, but a terrible manager.
07:09This led to 8 employees of his, whose professions required resignation, resigning in 1957.
07:13It is founded by another company called Verd Sheel
07:15Why am I telling this story?
07:16Because these, my dear, are the ones who made my silicone hands
07:17What we know today is silicone in Bali
07:19The eight countries include Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore
07:21Those who come after will make Intel
07:23Eugene Clennell, who owns one of the largest PC companies in the world
07:26This is for the companies that listen to the startup.
07:28The important thing is before those eight do anything else
07:30They run the company, Fred Child.
07:31And they succeed in creating what is called an integrated circuit.
07:35Or what is known today as potato chips
07:37This is a silicone semiconductor piece.
07:39It has several transistors.
07:40That's good, Abu Hamid, two lines
07:41Indeed, my dear, they are two halves and two artists
07:44But they're not involved in the business yet.
07:46At this time, who would buy this thing we've made?
07:48The truth is, my dear, they won't look much.
07:49Because if they had listened to the sound
07:51By pouring, three days after the company was founded
07:54They would have found the answer
07:55First industrial order in history
07:57Sputnik
07:57Sputnik, my dear, orbits the Earth at speeds reaching 18,000 miles per hour.
08:02Who is aware of this matter?
08:03America's enemy is a worm
08:04Soviet Union
08:05Not only that
08:06In the four years, worms
08:07The Soviet Union will produce Yuri Gagarin.
08:08First human in outer space
08:10Of course, when the Americans heard the story
08:12He drove me crazy
08:13They said, "Oh, our Waxes!"
08:14Oh, the shame we have in front of the National Assembly!
08:15Oh, our Waxes, in front of the United Kingdom
08:17and the French Republic
08:18German Demokate
08:19And popular Sin
08:20That's how we are in America
08:21We lost a very important spot
08:23In our war with the Soviet Union
08:24Soviet Union
08:25He still has a scientific advantage over us.
08:26In the Cold War
08:27When the Americans feel that they are in danger
08:29And behind the Soviet Union
08:30President Kennedy
08:31He declares that America is the Soviet Union.
08:33You'll be the first person to know about it.
08:35And here, dear Faird Shine Company
08:37She finds her most important work
08:38USA
08:40And whoever gets angry will ride the rocket and crack it
08:42Hey my dear, the talk about the deal
08:44She had two ambitions
08:46First, she transformed the company
08:47From just starting
08:48Its sales amounted to $500,000
08:50For its founder, Al-Malaqa
08:51It has more than a thousand employees
08:52Its sales exceeded twenty-one million dollars.
08:54Secondly, the company took a catch
08:56One of the most important events in human history
08:58Human anguish over the matter
09:00This will create trust.
09:01And there's money in it, so the company isn't just shutting down.
09:03On military research and services, but
09:04In fact, it begins to focus on selling its products.
09:07For the general public
09:08But for the government
09:09I left one by one
09:10They began rejecting contracts for the US military.
09:12Tani at the beginning of the periods
09:13Take 95% of the chips they produce
09:15You go to the army
09:16That, my dear, was an extremely reckless decision at the time.
09:18But with time, the wisdom behind it began to emerge.
09:20When computers began to spread
09:22This is a huge gamble
09:23Because what will make this technology exist and spread
09:26And distinguished by its ability to produce with great efficiency
09:28My dear, my bet is on the consumer and the market.
09:30It's one of the biggest bets
09:32For transistors and chip companies
09:34Because that's what will make this technology complementary and distinctive.
09:37And a capacity that produces with great efficiency
09:39She is your mortal enemy, my dear
09:41Isra'i Muhammad
09:42I told you
09:42Capitalism, my dear
09:43Capitalism, my dear, has a large stake in transistors.
09:46How will we know this?
09:47We'll find out when we see what communism says.
09:50Honestly, my dear, the Soviet Union always amazes me.
09:53I think its scientific staff would have been better managed.
09:55Science remained a completely different place.
09:57Not necessarily the best
09:58Because this is a very strong, rhyming look
09:59When needs are met, things go better.
10:00Disrespect this speech and know that it's wrong.
10:02But it certainly remained a different place.
10:04Alexander Sorkin
10:05President of the Soviet Radio Electronics Company
10:07He was trying to convince Nikita Khrushchev
10:09Imitation Nikita Thatta TV
10:10It was Bemyad
10:11The size of a cigarette box
10:13Imagine the Makita, that we might one day
10:15We operate a television station based on the principle of a cigarette ring.
10:17Mushtab and Hamid Mobile
10:18Yes, my dear, that's why I'm telling you
10:20The Soviets had a vision for the needs
10:21We couldn't imagine it
10:22The Soviets also had a vision for Silicon Valley.
10:25Before there was a Silicon Valley
10:26Which was later named after this name
10:281971
10:29Indeed, my dear
10:29Two KGB spies
10:31Convince another person that he needs to build an entire city.
10:34For semiconductors
10:35Semiconductor
10:35And indeed they worked on that area
10:37In Zelongrad
10:38A city designed to be a scientific paradise
10:40There is no doubt that the Soviets were being robbed by the Americans.
10:43Just like they obtained and stole the design of the nuclear bomb.
10:45But there is no doubt that they had extremely important scientists.
10:47In 2000, the Nobel Prize went to two
10:49The first one is Jack Kilby of Texas Insromons
10:52The one who played an important role in the chip's work
10:53The one with more than one transistor
10:55Because this was a major scientific achievement
10:56He was also accompanied by a Russian scientist named Zoris Alferov
10:58My prayers were for them, and they had contributions in the art of shaving.
11:01And these people were the first humans to go into space.
11:04These are cool people, they're not waiting for a like from you
11:05But the leaders insisted they would send spies to steal the chips.
11:08Without having a systematic research process
11:11This is certainly a good thing, that there is no concept of capitalist companies.
11:14Those who want to earn money should create products and sell them.
11:16I didn't find you with money, so I tried to convince you that you should have money.
11:18To buy more
11:20You will buy it in the end
11:21All of this helps in developing the industry.
11:23Capitalism has enabled Americans to produce and improve many chips.
11:26So she dealt with many of these segments and started getting involved in more things.
11:30The chips are no longer found only in weapons.
11:32There is no space travel that countries use.
11:33Chips after Japan entered this industry
11:36You start getting involved in everything
11:38John Bardeen, my dear, is one of the rarest people in the world.
11:41Those who have won two Nobel Prizes in science, my dear
11:44One of these prizes, take it with your chocolate on the transistor
11:47He says
11:47I've never seen this many camera flashes in my life.
11:52Where is this, my dear? In Japan.
11:54When Bardeen went to Japan, he discovered that he was a star and that the Sa'afians were flocking to him.
11:57Okay, the problem, Abu Ahmed, is that the man didn't leave, sir.
11:59Japan is known for its love of electronics.
12:01The child there is well-known, meaning he's about seven years old and is trying to reconcile with death through adaptation.
12:04Dear Kenan, this is today
12:05But at this time
12:06You had a country scarred by a second world war
12:09He took two nuclear bombs
12:11The people there are poor, they can't even eat
12:13Tuttle still doesn't visit the plumber
12:14After the war, my dear, there were Turks from the American occupation office in Japan.
12:18A strong Japan is more important than a weak Japan.
12:20So, Abu Ahmed, after all these battles and commotion...
12:22We want Japan to be strong too.
12:23What you can hit them
12:24You were like this when you started thinking
12:26You will find that you need it in this region of the world
12:28Strong
12:29Especially since you are a communist in this region
12:31All around you
12:32Look here and you'll find China is communist.
12:34Look here and you'll find the Communist Party's leadership union.
12:36the important
12:36Scientific research leads Japan
12:38And a young man reads it by his name
12:40Akio Morita
12:40He senses the value of Bardeen's research
12:42In the field of transistors, great
12:44And the company is so small
12:45You might know her as Sony
12:47Sony Abu Ahmed knew her
12:48The Plastichan thing
12:48When it appears, you know the machine is working.
12:50Dear Arbok, don't burn me with Morita.
12:52Sony at that time
12:53She makes two very sexy products
12:54The first one is the Tab Recorder
12:55Registered means
12:56It also makes transistor radios
12:58The gift that the Japanese president of Al-Mazraq
13:00He dedicated it to French President Charles de Gaulle.
13:021962
13:03As a source of pride for Japanese industry
13:05The truth, my dear
13:05At this moment
13:07The Japanese don't make chips
13:08They don't make these chips.
13:10Countries that obtain them from American companies
13:12The one whose production was very large
13:13And I want to sell
13:14And they use it
13:15In that they work on electronic products
13:18It depends on these chips
13:20Not only that, but I stay up cheaper
13:21But also with higher efficiency
13:23This is because at that time labor was considered a license in Japan.
13:25We see many inventions coming out of Japan
13:27We see something like a calculator
13:28What Charles' company is doing
13:29And he's breaking records
13:31Poor electronics in Japan
13:32It grows up within 20 years
13:33From $600 million
13:34$60 billion
13:36The truth is that with time
13:37Asya'a begins to play an important role
13:39Because it is cheaper
13:40In Hong Kong
13:40The worker's hourly rate is 25 cents.
13:42This is 10 times less than the American worker.
13:45In Taiwan, 19 years
13:46In Malaysia, 15 years
13:47In Singapore, 11 years
13:49In South Korea
13:50We'll need it in about 10 years.
13:52American Sharqiyat suddenly found
13:54The cheapest ones are produced in Asia.
13:55The American consumer found it cheaper to buy from Asia
13:58America has already helped Japan; it remains strong.
14:00She hadn't considered the consequences
14:02Unfortunately, those who attended the wedding
14:03He needs to know how to spend it
14:04Japan was a Rizley bogeyman
14:12Higher quality
14:13And people want it
14:14I don't know, my dear, how old you are now.
14:15But before there were mobile phones and iPods
14:17There was an invention called the Walkman
14:19A small, perforated box
14:21Look at it
14:21Your headphones might have problems
14:23And a stone-clad
14:23It was playing music from a distance.
14:27A song-like
14:28But you could hear
14:29The music you want
14:31alone in the street
14:32Wow
14:33Siryas Abu Hamad
14:34The company that made this Walkman was not American.
14:37This Walkman was made by a Japanese company called Sony.
14:39I made it in 1979
14:41It sold over 385 million units.
14:45Three of them, my dear, were bought by a child in Sudan, I know him well.
14:47Here, my dear, American companies began to feel the pressure.
14:50She started to get scared
14:51It began to raise charges against Japanese companies.
14:52The FBI is arresting people who steal information for Japanese companies.
14:56Companies like Hitachi and Mitsubishi
14:57As some American companies say, this is happening in China now.
15:00Something else that was driving American companies crazy
15:02The Japanese government was supporting this industry.
15:04It's amazing how their labor isn't just cheap
15:06Loans from banks are also cheap
15:08And by the way, my dear, we're talking about the eighties.
15:10In America, the interest rate reached 21%
15:13Normally this figure should be 2-3-4%
15:16But 21 is a large number.
15:17In Japan, the press remained different.
15:19The people were saving a lot
15:21The banks were full of money and wanted to get it out by any means.
15:23Bank interest rates were low
15:25Therefore, companies were thinking, "Why don't we borrow?"
15:27What a cheap loan
15:28Even if we are losing
15:30Banks will lend even when they are losing money
15:32Because there's a lot of money in the bank that we want to withdraw.
15:34All of this was being done by companies hoping
15:35It makes its own people go bankrupt
15:37As long as it sells at cheaper prices
15:39The availability of cheap money with low interest rates
15:40The Japanese were able to spend on scientific research.
15:4360% more than American companies
15:45Here, my dear, we begin to see a very dangerous transformation.
15:47Intel
15:48One of the pioneers of the potato chip industry
15:50The company that made the drums
15:52Which is the one whose memory is like a resemblance
15:53At that moment I felt it would be released in this market
15:55From 83% to 1.5%
15:58For 1.5%
15:59Japanese companies are starting to excel
16:01Pioneer in this industry
16:02Intel
16:03The Japanese kept working
16:04Chips are better and cheaper than the Americans
16:10Therefore, the devices remained with the Japanese.
16:13And the one who makes devices for the Japanese
16:15And here, my dear, something strange happens.
16:17In the stronghold of capitalism
16:18and stronghold of the free market
16:19America
16:20Think, my dear, about the October War of 1973
16:24When the Gulf states cut off oil to the West
16:26Here's what America told you
16:27God, God
16:28Trade is sweet, and capitalism is like sesame seeds and everything else.
16:30But we pray for the Prophet
16:32If we rely on other countries
16:33These other countries could at any moment
16:35Get lost and leave us
16:36Just like the Gulf countries did
16:37They told them there was no oil.
16:38This is almost the same thing that happened with the Japanese.
16:40The Japanese in 1986
16:42They beat America to the punch in the production of chips.
16:45And on the last exercises
16:46The Japanese have started working
16:4770% of the world's lithography equipment
16:50This, my dear, is the equipment that drills into the silicone.
16:52transistor
16:53Dear Econology
16:54It was invented by Americans
16:55In an American military laboratory
16:57Japanese 70%
16:58And America 21%
17:00But here the situation can no longer be ignored.
17:02American capitalist companies in Silicon Valley
17:05She'll go to the government in Washington and tell them
17:07Please enter
17:09Burfafur, his government, is internal.
17:11Have you heard of Leebyung-chul, my dear?
17:13They didn't know him, Abu Hamid. It's clear he's not an important person.
17:15Dear sir, this man is practically found in every home.
17:17Oh, you ignorant founder of the Korean company Samsung
17:19God, leave Hamid alone, I didn't know he was your friend.
17:21Of course, my dear, I don't need to tell you that it's the South Korea of ​​yesteryear.
17:24Not the South Korea of ​​today.
17:25Rahmi is a phrase for a young woman that can be said about anything.
17:27It's still the old stuff, it's still the current stuff
17:28The old hands are ugly, and the new ones are ugly too.
17:30What is there in the world like now?
17:32What is it that appears to you in memories that resembles you?
17:47Soviet favoritism
17:48Inside the loss of the year 1060
17:50It was approximately $80 per year.
17:52Why are you being so mean?
17:53This man, with the help of the government
17:54He will put South Korea
17:56On the map of the most important product known to mankind
17:58Why would he succeed in convincing a country?
18:00Its main products are agricultural products.
18:03What time is it?
18:03So, call it four hundred million dollars.
18:05Here are the eyes of the Americans
18:06In revenge against the Japanese
18:08You're going to Korea
18:09The campaign is cheaper in Korea than in Japan.
18:11They also have investments
18:12This makes Americans think
18:13As long as the production cost is outside, it's better.
18:15Let's, as advanced Americans
18:17Sitting in the air conditioning
18:18We focus on our research and theoretical designs
18:21And we are related to others
18:21The factory or plant descends
18:23He is the one who makes
18:24We're done with Farhada's load.
18:25And the noise of Makan and the scarcity
18:26Dear, this turning point is very important.
18:28Over time, Korea will begin to develop further.
18:30And the competition between it and Japan
18:31She'll start to get fierce
18:32I'm not going to burn you
18:33But over time, only two Korean companies remained.
18:35Which are Samsung and SK Hynix
18:36Countries that, over time
18:37Mahardah means
18:38They will dominate the memory chip industry.
18:40Here, Americans print the famous saying
18:42An enemy of an enemy remains my friend.
18:44America and Taiwan
18:45Signing agreements from 1955
18:48Allies
18:49But, my dear, as you know
18:50America got a bit humiliated
18:51In the Vietnam War
18:52Text, my dear, Hollywood massins
18:53Vietnam was cut off
18:54naturally
18:55You as a Taiwanese state
18:56You have a very strong ally
18:58Its name is the United States of America
18:59I was humiliated
19:00Natural technical
19:01When your ally
19:02Abu advanced weapons
19:04economic power
19:05WhatsApp
19:06A few Vietnamese kids are watching it.
19:08They're being humiliated like this
19:09The group says Fit Con
19:10Amal will work with Adawiya of China
19:11any?
19:12Also, America's withdrawal from Vietnam
19:14The Taiwanese are very afraid
19:15Let them realize
19:15It's him, guys
19:16We need to remain very important to America
19:18Especially since America too
19:19Aid to the allies of Halasawi was cut off
19:21The most important need
19:22Communist China
19:23The one next to us
19:24By creating the idea that we, as Taiwanese, are her followers
19:26And he still conducted a nuclear test in 1964
19:31Oh God, Taiwan will be lost to the Taiwanese.
19:33Here in Taiwan, I realized
19:34It should be of utmost importance to America.
19:36To obtain this protection
19:38One of the important ministers in Taiwan
19:39He will be one of the brightest minds
19:42Semiconductor industry
19:43Maurice Chang
19:43So that he can say to him, "Ya sata" (a term of respect for a woman).
19:44We need you
19:45Take my body, my heart, and all the government support you want.
19:48But please
19:49Let's be important in the chip industry
19:51No, my dear friend
19:51Maurice Chang is a genius with this idea.
19:54Try it with Texas Instruments
19:56In America before
19:57But nobody took it seriously
19:58Including Jordan Moore
19:59Moore's Law
20:00When he said to him
20:01You, my son, have many wonderful ideas.
20:02But this idea of ​​yours
20:04Not one of them
20:04My dear, I am not the dearest to you in this world.
20:05But this is one of the greatest ideas of the last century.
20:07Right, Hamidna Alish, I mean
20:08Could you tell me about the idea?
20:09Despite the fact that there was no offense, I mean
20:10I was telling you, my dear
20:11I'm blind, I castrated them all
20:12Because we rely on you
20:12And I'll say what I want to say.
20:13Okay, Ba'amish, no problem, let's get into the main episode now.
20:15And we know what Maurice Alshang did
20:17Oh, present, Yasi
20:18This idea
20:18The same idea as Gutenberg
20:191440
20:21Ah, thank you. That clarifies things for me now.
20:23Excellent, great
20:23Let me, my dear, simply explain the idea of ​​Mauritshang to you
20:26My dear uncle, you have a writer
20:27His craft and skill in writing
20:29But he releases a novel every year.
20:31It is impossible, my dear, to control the narratives of his stories.
20:33This is the place of the large printing press.
20:35To follow one novel per year
20:37No matter how much he sells prints, he will lose money.
20:39This is where the need for a publishing house becomes apparent.
20:41A place that specializes in and excels in printing.
20:44He contracts with more than one writer
20:46If each of them wrote a novel a year
20:48He appreciates the profits from many novels
20:51Expenses are spent on the large, expensive printing press.
20:54Here, both the publisher and the author benefit.
20:56Each party is preoccupied with what they are very good at.
20:59The writer, through his writing, composition, and ideas
21:01The publisher's office provided the equipment, premises, and staff.
21:04This is a well-known idea in the world of economics, my friend.
21:06By the Economies of Scale
21:07Sometimes, my dear
21:08Production of one hundred thousand lead pains
21:10It would be much cheaper for you than producing a hundred lead bullets.
21:13This is the brilliant idea that Morris realized.
21:15This is what Morris Chang, in cooperation with the Taiwanese government, wants to do.
21:19In this case, there are companies that will only handle the chip design.
21:22For Shast, the design is like Apple and Nvidia.
21:25Countries create different designs for diverse purposes.
21:27These designs are executed by a single company.
21:29Morris Chang Company
21:30Which is known today as TSMC
21:33Second largest company in Asia
21:34After Saudi Aramco
21:35Of course, this was a brilliant invention.
21:37The Taiwanese government will be very pleased with the idea.
21:39It will finance 48% of the project
21:41Taiwanese businessmen will be asked to provide this information.
21:43If they invest in the company
21:45They will receive $58 million in funding.
21:48Technology consulting from Philips
21:51In exchange for a 27% share
21:52Remember, my dear, Philips and its share
21:54Control with control you highlight
21:56The important thing, my dear, is that the company DTSMC
21:58I will achieve a historic accomplishment
21:59Because it is very simply
22:00You will be able to work with anyone
22:01Because she's not competing with anyone
22:03When Intel tried to do the same thing
22:05In the end, it remains
22:06Estimating the publication or printing press
22:07Or a potato chip production company
22:09She didn't get many customers
22:10for him?
22:10Because Intel breathes life into chip design.
22:14So I'm not going to walk into a company that breathes my heart out in design.
22:16And I'll tell her, please
22:17Make me or bring me my chips
22:20How am I going to deal with them?
22:21When I make my chips
22:22And we go down to the market in front of each other
22:24They might put ghee in it.
22:25That's why
22:26For example, a company like AMD
22:27The one who had a productive arm
22:29Which they call fabs
22:30Sandha Fabs means
22:31The one who was its president says
22:32Real Men Have Fabz
22:33It means real men
22:35They are the ones who have the laboratories that produce their dissections.
22:37The sales department was forced to discontinue its production activities.
22:40Mubadala Company
22:41One of the investment arms in the Emirates
22:43The one who manages a fortune worth $360 billion
22:46Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed also dances it
22:48President of the UAE
22:49And its CEO
22:50Khaled Al-Mubarak
22:51This is my dear friend, Pep Guardiola, and so on.
22:53brain and muscles
22:54The important thing is that they didn't take these tips.
22:55They transformed it into a new company.
22:56Its name is Global Foundry
22:57American flu
22:58Visit these companies
22:59Let's call them production or printing companies.
23:02The correct form is Manufacturing, meaning
23:04Leave some chips there
23:05Its efficiency is not limited by its small size.
23:07But on its design
23:08There are still companies that specialize in design, but
23:10Qualcomm company uniform
23:11According to Dr. Chris Miller
23:13There is no mobile phone in the world
23:15It can work without its chips.
23:17This company designs its chips
23:18But she doesn't do it
23:19TSMC is the one who does it
23:21Nvidia
23:22Which is worth more than a trillion dollars
23:24The one who is attached to it
23:25It started as an important need for graphics
23:26Today it has become important for artificial zakat
23:28It doesn't support most of its components.
23:30TSMC is the one who does it
23:31If it weren't for TSMC, my dear
23:33There wouldn't be many companies today.
23:35Because any company would need billions
23:38To create her fabs
23:40The one that will manufacture its chips
23:41Why should I go to all this trouble?
23:42And I'm still at the beginning
23:44Dear beautiful viewer, let me take you back to the nineties.
23:46Where the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991
23:48And America is relaxed, happy, and forming
23:50The allure of war
23:52Shall we say to you, my dear
23:53Some sources say that
23:54One of the Soviet Union's fabs
23:56Which are the productive crops that we talked about
23:57She kept working as a gaming consultant.
24:00The one in the McDonald's email
24:02My dear, like the other side of fate
24:03Soviet Union technology
24:05It is available for the production of children's toys.
24:07In an American sandwich company
24:09A production line made for a national purpose
24:11Sami's goal
24:12With the best and brightest scientists of the Soviet Union
24:15It remains under the control of an American restaurant chain.
24:17And after we were creating complex technologies
24:20We want to make daisies and rabbits in Lahab Mill
24:22Taman, my dear
24:23In the era of the Soviet Union, it wasn't just the Soviet Union that was suffering.
24:25Japan, which is now an enemy state
24:26As we said
24:27It is entering a massive economic crisis.
24:29The crisis that is crippling the Japanese economy
24:30It includes what is called
24:31Lost Decads
24:32Lost contracts
24:33Directed by Mohammed Khame
24:35Khalil, to tell you, my dear
24:36From 1991 to 2003
24:38Japanese abbreviation
24:39Those who were working, may God bless them
24:40It produces and exports.
24:42Growth was 1%
24:45That's not its annual growth rate, my dear.
24:46That's the growth rate over the entire ten years.
24:49Just 1%
24:49That's my problem, I'll succeed with it.
24:51Do you remember, my dear?
24:52Loans and interest rates are low
24:53The one that Japan didn't have in the first episode
24:54It exploded in the face of the state
24:56Prices collapsed
24:57Oh Abu Ahmed
24:58That's how we are in America, we have a choice.
24:59My dear, this isn't the time for America.
25:00I want you to pay attention
25:01America's largest chipmaker
25:03Intel
25:04Because the situation there is reassuring.
25:07The last exit was quick, and the return was quick.
25:10In 2006 he will appear on stage
25:12Paul Ottolini
25:13Intel CEO in a theatrical gesture
25:15That's how it is, my dear.
25:16And there was still smoke coming out of it.
25:17Wow
25:18Don't say The Undertaker
25:19He looks at the stage
25:20To meet Steve Jobs
25:21An important collaboration begins between them
25:22This, my dear
25:23One of Steve Jobs' theaters
25:24And one of Intel's coups
25:26Come here, my dear
25:27Finally, I gave in to Intel.
25:29It was practically the only large company
25:31Those who don't use Intel's architecture
25:33The one called x86
25:34But my dear, everything changed then.
25:36And it started using Intel.
25:38Steve Jobs, my dear
25:38He won't just agree to work with Intel on computers.
25:41This will also be proposed to Intel.
25:42She's going to make him chips
25:44He had an idea in mind.
25:45This means that he creates a clefon inside a computer.
25:48Television
25:48The one the size of a cigarette pack
25:50The one the Soviets were talking about
25:51This, my dear
25:52She won't accept the chips
25:53He offered to pay
25:54He will reject it
25:54But to imagine that you refuse
25:57Chips is working on the most successful product in human history.
25:59the most profitable product ever
26:01iPhone
26:02Then Apple will go to a very important British company called
26:05R
26:05And from here the civilization will begin
26:07The most important and largest American company for the production of chips
26:10In the same al-Alfnat
26:11Intel was one of the largest companies in the world.
26:13Her bet is on the microprocessor industry for computers.
26:16One of her biggest bets in the nineties was the strong 100s
26:18But little by little
26:19Apple's market value surpasses theirs.
26:21Without using their chips on the iPhone
26:24Little by little, little by little
26:24Facebook
26:25I haven't even completed four years
26:27Its value remained half that of Intel.
26:29Intel Corporation in the year 2000
26:30Its market valuation was approximately $300 billion.
26:33Currently today
26:34Generation of 120 billion dollars
26:36This is one of the most precious times, my dear.
26:37The place where the word "laqa" is used in history
26:39Intel refused to enter the mobile phone market.
26:41Nvidia
26:42Those who are interested in the field of graphics
26:43It does what is called
26:45This means you can calculate more than one thing at the same time.
26:48Instead of forming one party after another
26:49Nvidia only designs chips.
26:51Intel designs
26:52And then Fabs
26:53Nvidia Company
26:54Its value exceeds one trillion dollars
26:56Intel is approximately one-tenth of that number
26:58Intel is worth one hundred billion dollars
26:59Nvidia is worth one trillion dollars
27:01So what happens, my dear?
27:02Intel is starting to weaken over time.
27:03And companies like TSMC and Samsung are starting
27:05They are the ones leading the potato chip industry.
27:08If you thought about it, my dear
27:09You'll find this is a major political problem for America.
27:11Because one of the companies in Taiwan
27:13China side
27:14And the second one is in South Korea
27:15The one next to North Korea
27:17Those who are conducting our intestinal tests
27:20Think about what I told you about Philips, my dear.
27:23And I told you, do you think her percentage is 27%?
27:26It is Philips D Azizi
27:27It's not just that it has 27%
27:28From TSMC
27:29Which is the largest producer
27:31The chips in the world
27:32She also had a small company in the Netherlands.
27:35In a village called Edehofen
27:37This company has a spin-off.
27:38I became independent from them
27:39That's a field where one can be alone with oneself.
27:41Let him be with himself.
27:42This company is called ASML
27:44This is dear to me
27:45The most impressive company
27:47All night
27:48Dear TSMC Company
27:49Shan works for chips.
27:50I need someone to find a lithographer's location.
27:52This is the machine that prints transistors.
27:54on the silicone wall
27:55This machine is made by a company called
27:58This is one of humanity's most complex creations.
28:01Of course, my dear, we know you're tired right now.
28:02Your brain doesn't have room for any more information.
28:05But Jaswat
28:05I'll tell you some information
28:06You're the first, my dear
28:07You were doing what you were doing
28:09On four transistors
28:10Over time
28:10The transistors started to get smaller and smaller and smaller and smaller and smaller
28:13Until our uncle Clanthro
28:14Or maybe the issue has become very minor for you.
28:16To the point that you might need
28:18Duke uses
28:19To trace your transistors on the silicon wall
28:22How will you do this?
28:22A source for the Duke
28:24Mask answers
28:24And she controls the duke through this source.
28:26The Duke fears
28:27It will interact with our silicone wall.
28:29We can follow very small transistors
28:32Of course, this is a fantasy plate
28:33Just to show you
28:34We use the dugout in the lithography process.
28:36Duke
28:36Using the Haas shape from the lithographic method
28:38It allowed us to do things hundreds of nanometers in size
28:42Sean, you still understand.
28:43The bacterial cell is about 1000 nanometers.
28:45Do you see why we're doing this, dear?
28:46Over time
28:46Lithography companies were able to use ultraviolet light.
28:49With a wavelength of up to 193 nanometers
28:52To approximate the size of the virus
28:53Companies stop at this point
28:54No, of course it will continue to shrink
28:56Companies believe we can achieve a specific wavelength of ultraviolet radiation.
28:5913.5 nanometers
29:01That means approximately four buttons next to each other
29:03Of course, my dear, to do something like that
29:04You won't download Molybus again
29:05She tells him she wants an ultraviolet lamp
29:07And from the Zay Bouhamad Al-Shatadi, you get D-rays
29:08My dear, the idea is to follow your tin cans or tin.
29:10The laser hits it twice
29:12Once, to equalize these balls
29:14The second time, to make its temperature reach half a million degrees Celsius
29:18Oh Abu Hamid, half a million degrees Celsius is worse than tea.
29:21My dear, the matter is a bit more complex than that.
29:22Half a million degrees Celsius means blacker than the sun.
29:24Darker than the sun, several times over.
29:26The process of counting these small fig balls
29:28Each one is then struck by the laser twice.
29:31It works with a complication
29:32This process happens fifty thousand times
29:34Oh, fifty thousand times, Abu Hamid, that's a lot in life!
29:3650,000 times per second
29:38Honestly, my dear, I don't want to bore you with details.
29:39Thank you, Abu Hamid
29:40Of course, to make a laser like this
29:41They won't get it from Molebistan.
29:43They went to a company specializing in laser manufacturing.
29:45Her name is Tram
29:46This company developed laser technology for them in ten years.
29:48Each laser, my dear, contains 457,329 pieces.
29:54That's the laser, that's all.
29:57We fall and sit at home
29:58No, of course not, those X-rays you had done
29:59Because guiding her requires a woman.
30:01And here they went to a company called Zeiss
30:03The problem is that when you have radiation with a wavelength
30:0513.5 nanometers
30:07It can absorb anything, even air.
30:08Fazai does something that reflects, not absorbs.
30:10So, my dear, don't get that.
30:11But Zeiss will succeed because it does
30:14The smoothest surface on the face of the planet
30:16I feel that you feel contagion
30:17Here's an example, my friend. Explain.
30:18If our women's surface area were the size of a country like Germany
30:21Size of the shards on this surface
30:23The size of Germany
30:25That's it, oh
30:2510 millimeters
30:2610 ml
30:27I feel that you feel contagion
30:29This woman is making billions of transistors on a chip
30:31It needs to reflect a very precise angle.
30:35What's the name of the thing they're saying?
30:36Their devices are accurate.
30:37The accuracy of what you are saying is that you are narrowing the matter.
30:40So it connects to Queen on the Earth's surface
30:42And it afflicts her
30:43What's her name, actually, my dear?
30:44On the frontier of physics, technology, and engineering
30:48I paid the card and returned, cracked.
30:49The explanation I'm giving
30:51The simplest thing that can be said about the company
30:53And its greatness is amazing
30:54Not just in engineering and technology
30:56Its true greatness in the field
30:57The supply chain from Manjabal
30:58Yasmine, my dear, so that this machine can be produced
31:01By the way, she produces between 25 and 30 machines a year.
31:03Each machine costs between $150 million and $250 million.
31:07Your journey will lead you to work with thousands of companies.
31:10Thousands of suppliers
31:11Among laser companies
31:13Lens companies
31:14Software companies
31:16Equipment companies
31:17We'll come back after we've collected them all.
31:19We're taking it apart so we can send it to the FABS.
31:21The ones like TSMC and Samsung
31:23And then Intel
31:23I feel that you are good, that's normal
31:25This is not normal
31:26This machine, my dear
31:27He is transported by 20 Arab women
31:29Boeing 747 aircraft followed
31:31The nickname when you enter the vap
31:32She has the ability
31:33It produces 3000 wafers per day.
31:36This wafer is the one that comes with the silicone tattoo.
31:38You put it on for gray hair
31:39It works on gray hair
31:40Each wafer has approximately 100 chips on it.
31:41Every gray hair contains 10 billion transistors
31:44This company, my dear, is a monopoly.
31:46100% of the lithographic location
31:48The one who uses
31:48EUV
31:49Extreme Ultraviolet
31:50This is the only company in the world, my dear.
31:52This company, my dear
31:53Selling to Russia is prohibited
31:54Selling to China is prohibited
31:55Selling to Ukraine is prohibited
31:56And anyone from these nationalities is prohibited
31:59He works in it
32:01Summary, my dear
32:02We are talking about the most important industry in the world.
32:04The manufacture of wafers
32:05The industry that is prevalent today
32:07competing with oil
32:08The world's largest company
32:09Mobile phone company
32:09Apple designs chips
32:10Second largest company in Asia
32:11It produces approximately
32:1353% of the world's SIM cards
32:15This is more than Saudi Arabia's share.
32:16Russia and Canada
32:17Iraq
32:18Two petroleum-based communities
32:19In the worst part of the world, there's only one company
32:21Helena, my dear, tried the king's episode in Nasr Gif
32:23This industry, my dear
32:24It is divided into three important parts
32:25The first section is the lithographic section.
32:26Which is the most prominent company in this section?
32:28What is it, Samal?
32:28This company has a monopoly
32:29The most advanced part of lithography
32:31Which is second
32:32The company produces 100% of this material.
32:34We are humble in the second section
32:35The second part is the companies that design
32:37The most prominent of these are Nvidia, Apple, and Qualcomm.
32:39These are companies that design the shape of chips.
32:41Depending on the job
32:42Part three in this production cover
32:43He is the Fabz
32:44Or chip manufacturing companies
32:45The three largest companies in this area
32:47They are Samsung, Intel and TSMC
32:48These countries are responsible for producing 90% of the world's chips.
32:51These chips are used in mobile phones and cars.
32:53Dish and Washk
32:54And I washed away the smog
32:55This is in addition to the warplanes.
32:56Zero for space
32:57If you pay attention, my dear, you will find
32:57That's a very, very, very small number for companies.
33:00If you pay attention, you'll notice
33:01There's no talk about Russia today.
33:02Or on China
33:03Imagine the world's factory
33:04He has no role in this industry
33:05Change at the last station
33:06The end brings all of this together
33:07All the difficult technology
33:09This happens in America and its allies
33:11America and its allies monopolize the semiconductor industry.
33:14This is of course very exciting for China.
33:15God willing, there will be an episode in the future.
33:17We will talk about technological warfare.
33:18Between China and America
33:19Finally, my dear
33:20While writing this episode
33:21I am truly proud of us as a community.
33:23We make transistor gates
33:25In the sizes of the seeds
33:26Transistor opinions today
33:27Its thickness is ten thousand times less than a hair
33:29The smallest transistor in the world
33:31one nanometer
33:32The size of the grain
33:33Which means indivisible
33:37The size of the grain, my dear
33:38Which is supposed to be the smallest thing in the world
33:40It is supposed to have its definition
33:41You can't divide it
33:42Of course, we knew that we could divide it.
33:44Disasters occur when we divide it
33:45But the atom, my dear, can reach a size of half a nanometer.
33:48So you're making a transistor
33:50The grain may be twice the size
33:52I don't think this makes me happy
33:53I don't know what feelings you have, my dear.
33:54When you learn something like this
33:55But I feel extremely proud
33:56We helped each other on this planet and in this universe
33:58Not too old, 300,000 years
34:00But we're just a commercial break in the life of the planet.
34:02But we're just playing around and following the rules of philosophy.
34:04The second thing that piqued my curiosity was what happened in Asia.
34:06What happened in Asia was amazing and incredible
34:08As we said, South Korea
34:09I was very poor in the sixties
34:10She emerged from a civil war
34:12Japan emerging from a world war
34:14Two nuclear cannons are located on it.
34:16Taiwan is constantly under threat from the giant China.
34:18The countries were completely decayed, my dear.
34:20But what they've done with their investments in local companies is truly impressive.
34:23What's even more impressive is the investments that are still being made.
34:26America, my dear
34:27It brings in the businessman who chips with grants and investments worth $50 billion
34:31The European Union intends that within the next 10 years
34:34He invests more than $150 billion
34:37I was amazed by the numbers, my dear.
34:38I sense that you feel this is normal.
34:39These bruises are really normal, my dear.
34:41Because Asia invests much more than that.
34:43TSMC will invest $100 billion in just three years.
34:48This is a company, not a country.
34:49It is also said that Korea intends to invest $450 billion.
34:54The expectation, my dear, is that everything in the world will become smart.
34:57Smart, and as long as there is zakat (Islamic alms), there must be chips.
35:00The end, my dear, I don't need to tell you.
35:02You need to see the previous cases and the upcoming cases.
35:04Go down and look at the sources if we're on YouTube
35:11Thanks for watching

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