> I want to build a chip fab in Canada. Here's the plan:
> We need to raise ~$350 million to purchase a world-class extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machine from ASML. Then, we get the machine installed and can start producing chips for cell phones, laptops, TVs, etc. If you want to join the party, check out the HN thread.
Do you realize that is just one short step in producing chips, even before we get to full devices
How do you intend to do quality control? How do you even plan to design chips? Have you looked into the local regulations for the toxic chemicals you will need to purchase, store, and dispose of? Clean room costs?
The list gets rather long, I worked in a fab 20 years ago
Then, do you think ASML is going to sell you one? Do you know how high in demand and low volume production those machines are?
L
that site has the same issue. It will give ridiculous and easily provably false results for iPhones.
There are ~40 million in the PST time-zone. Some percent have smartphones (80%+), ~50% of those are iPhones (16 million). Of those, the majority are set it English (80%+), and are divided into screen sizes. But basically, if you have an iPhone, you have the same fingerprint has at least a million other other people in the PST time size. You are at best, 1 of 100, not 1 of x,xxx,xxx,xxx.
You might be x,xxx,xxx,xxx of people who visited that unpopular site but no one needs tracking on an unpopular site. On a popular site you will not have a unique finger print.
IE6 was a really good browser when it shipped in 2001, especially compared to Netscape 6.
The problem was it didn't improve for the next 5 years.
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