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Asianometry
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Добавлен 5 май 2017
Video essays on business, economics, and history. Sometimes about Asia, but not always.
For general mail: hello@asianometry.com
For business inquiries: business@asianometry.com
I don't have an Asianometry Telegram. Don't fall for comment scams on RUclips, please.
For general mail: hello@asianometry.com
For business inquiries: business@asianometry.com
I don't have an Asianometry Telegram. Don't fall for comment scams on RUclips, please.
How a CVD Diamond is Made
I want to thank Ropac International for inviting me to their workshop. Fantastic experience and you should check out their equipment! Check out their website: www.ropac.com.tw
Просмотров: 44 959
Видео
The Birth, Boom and Bust of the Hard Disk Drive
Просмотров 203 тыс.12 часов назад
Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
How the Rich Ate Macau
Просмотров 146 тыс.19 часов назад
Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
The Difficult Birth of the Scanning Electron Microscope
Просмотров 72 тыс.День назад
I want to thank an anonymous Zeiss employee for suggesting this wonderful idea. Typo: 9:23: Vernon Cosslett's life was from 1908 ~ 1990, not 1980. My bad. Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
ASML's High-NA EUV Lithography: A 2024 Update
Просмотров 107 тыс.14 дней назад
I plan to be in Antwerp, Belgium for IMEC's ITF World 2024 in May 21st and 22nd. It's my first trip to Belgium. If you are in town, please let me know. Would love to speak to you. Email me. Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
The Rise of Oracle, SQL and the Relational Database
Просмотров 116 тыс.14 дней назад
Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
Czechoslovakia's "Socialist Miracle"
Просмотров 146 тыс.21 день назад
I want to thank one of my Patrons for suggesting this idea. Deep appreciations to K for his help and links Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
Toyota Stunned America with the Lexus LS 400
Просмотров 119 тыс.21 день назад
Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
STMicroelectronics: The Turnaround That Created a European Semiconductor Giant
Просмотров 76 тыс.28 дней назад
Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
The Birth of SQL & the Relational Database
Просмотров 182 тыс.Месяц назад
Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
The Origins of the Japanese Steel Industry
Просмотров 130 тыс.Месяц назад
Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
How TSMC Handled an Earthquake
Просмотров 116 тыс.Месяц назад
Links: - The Asianometry Newsletter: www.asianometry.com - Patreon: www.patreon.com/Asianometry - Threads: www.threads.net/@asianometry - Twitter: asianometry
Broadcom: The $600 Billion AI Chip Giant
Просмотров 183 тыс.Месяц назад
Broadcom: The $600 Billion AI Chip Giant
LSI Logic Mastered Custom Silicon. But It Wasn’t Enough.
Просмотров 68 тыс.Месяц назад
LSI Logic Mastered Custom Silicon. But It Wasn’t Enough.
The iPhone Forever Changed the RF Filter
Просмотров 174 тыс.Месяц назад
The iPhone Forever Changed the RF Filter
Texas Instruments Made a Computer (& It Failed)
Просмотров 147 тыс.Месяц назад
Texas Instruments Made a Computer (& It Failed)
The Japanese-American Translators of World War II
Просмотров 103 тыс.Месяц назад
The Japanese-American Translators of World War II
Can We Use Bacteria to Refine Rare Earths?
Просмотров 61 тыс.2 месяца назад
Can We Use Bacteria to Refine Rare Earths?
The Ferocious Rise and Quiet Struggle of China’s Country Garden
Просмотров 122 тыс.2 месяца назад
The Ferocious Rise and Quiet Struggle of China’s Country Garden
Why is TSMC Doing Better in Japan?
Просмотров 182 тыс.2 месяца назад
Why is TSMC Doing Better in Japan?
Japan’s Legendary Semiconductor Breakthrough
Просмотров 95 тыс.2 месяца назад
Japan’s Legendary Semiconductor Breakthrough
The Gate-All-Around Transistor is Coming
Просмотров 433 тыс.2 месяца назад
The Gate-All-Around Transistor is Coming
Unbundling IBM Freed the Software Industry
Просмотров 73 тыс.2 месяца назад
Unbundling IBM Freed the Software Industry
Why Synopsys Bought Ansys (For $35 Billion)
Просмотров 206 тыс.3 месяца назад
Why Synopsys Bought Ansys (For $35 Billion)
Southeast Asia’s Vexing Haze Puzzle
Просмотров 153 тыс.3 месяца назад
Southeast Asia’s Vexing Haze Puzzle
Ugh these people should never have gotten them
35 Billions for a modeling software 😱
🙌🙌👍👌😊🍀🙏
A few days ago I saw an article about making diamonds at ordinary pressure and reduced temperature in liquid metal. They are still experimenting though.
As a 65 year old retired computer scientist, this is fabulous nostalgia for me.
I love all the ‘experts’ in the comments. Y’all pathetic 😂
enjoying the dry humour
I am so deeply ashame.
I lived in Cupertino and it was a short drive down Stevens Creek Blvd. to San Jose in the 60's and 70's before getting drafted for the war in Vietnam. That picture of 1st street downtown is just how I remember it. If remeber if you look the other way you will see the movie theater. Before I graduated from Soquel HS, I ived in Scotts Valley and my Dad, worked at Shugart after being pushed out, by all the Asian college graduates, from his line forman job at Hewlett Packard on Page Mill Rd in Pao Alto.I later worked for a company named ISS, Information Storage Systems. They made a large scale hard disk drive replacement for the IBM drive for much less money. I started wiring the motors for the drive and having gone to CDC programming school was in line to move up to the programming department. The day I was called in to Leo Shnurr's office to be promoted was 2 days after getting my draft notice in the mail. I had to decline and after serving in the Air Force instead of the Army, I went into the medical field. Good memories.
Am I alone in disliking the cadence of voice?
People complain about how speed and latency’s of hard drives but the cost per gigabyte is amazing. Personally I am looking to use ZFS as my file system so I can leverage the capacity of my hard drives but also the performance of my RAM and Intel Optane drive(s).
❤❤❤❤ Go buy one of these computers 😂
Can these diamonds be used for heat sink in spacecrafts? Would it be better than existing heat sinks?
I remember playing Street Fighter at the arcade in the early 90's and the was an LS400 in the game (in the background or something).
For what is worth, Hitachi and Toshiba sell well in Bolivia, and I have 4 Toshibas and right now making a back up of a Dying 1 TB Hitachi to a 3TB Toshiba, after about 8-10 years. HDDs run well off the Case, well ventilated with dedicated fans, on sponges and Silicon beds, so no vibration from the case or CPU+GPU cooler affect the HDD and the Soft Silicon and pink sponges from computer components, absorb most of the vibrations, giving them long life. Also do not put speakers on the same table HDDs are, that's also bad for HDDs Wasted Market: 5.25" HDDs, bigger, can have 12 platers, huge storage solutions, that companies and users can benefit from, instead of buying lots of 3.5" HDDs
Vernon Ellis Cosslett, 16 June 1908 - 21 November 1990
IBM handed its HD division over to Hitachi in 2000 in exchange for stopping their mainframe hardware business (aka Hitachi Data Systems). These were IBM plug-compatible mainframe computers. Which - by then - were considered a dinosaur already. But: it is still existing and the HD business Hitachi favoured for as being "the future", has largely gone.
McCarthy is my grand uncle, I don’t remember him
Yes yes. Mmmhm yes I can confirm. I was a nuclear scientist back in my home town of Springfield
🇺🇸🇺🇸
Natural diamonds are not millions of years old, nothing on earth is. They used to believe that opals needed millions of years to form. A opal miner named Len Cram proved opals can form much faster than that. He put sediment into jars and various liquids into the jars also and he eventually figured out how to make opals inside of the jars. The opals start to appear in the jars after a few weeks but they need more time to harden. As for natural diamonds they have carbon-14 in them , if they were millions of years old the carbon-14 would be gone. A book I think a lot of people should read to learn more about creation and evolution issues is the book Evolution's achilles' heels by Creation Book Publishers.
I can hardly wait for my multi-carat CPU !
I've got a feeling my old HDD's will outlast SSD's.
In Yokohama, there is a fantastic museum dedicated to the lives of the Japanese diaspora. Highly recommend it if you ever visit
My first hdd was a 520 mb, it's been a while. 😂
HDD market peaked in 2008 when Hitachi released the "Get Perpendicular" video on youtube. Seriously
Maybe they can go back to convincing people that animal skin coats are better than synthetic materials too.
CVD can be used for diamond coating also. It can be made on top of plastics, metals, etc. Makes also really low friction and low wear.
"back then it was engineering marvel" It doesn't stop being a engineering marvel, simply becouse more marvels were create since then. It would be quite difficult to nearly impossible for most us, and it was, to think of and create such marvel along with our ancient centuries old marvelous tech. Even more so of today's people, since they are incapable of making even a tiny fraction of the tech they use.
"oh no they gonna destroy or children labor monopoly of diamonds" that's what that FTC complain sounded liked
Fun fact: the high hydrogen to carbon ratio in the gas mix is for etching away the non diamond allotropes
why can't we make wheat or corn powder in a lab? That would be a revolutionary.
Digital Equipment Corp. (DEC) made thousands of disk drives in various US Plants like Rockrimmon CO. Wonder why they were ignored.
Great watch. I wounder if we will see 1EB spin drives, I say it's just a matter of time. I got a 21TB drive for a server the other day. 21TB, just think about that. Amazing what humans can do.
Love these reports they are so interesting.
ty
Every Seagate I've had over the last 40 years has failed quite early Meanwhile WD and Maxtor have almost all lasted ages I did have some WD reds slowly degrade but those were part of a raid and we're cheaper and safely replaced
Considering the fact that De Beers owns vaults which contain hundreds of tons of gem quality diamonds, yet keeps drip feeding the market and convincing us that they are rare and precious... Somehow, it would be poetic if cultured, lab grown diamonds could completely price them out of the market.
Would a thin flat diamond work as a good barrier for a heat exchanger? I could see uses in superminiature heat pumps and heat multipliers. Really interesting video. Thanks. Lots to think about. 👍🏻🇬🇧
7:54 Wow! Danny DeVito was into computer software? Oh my goodness!
Still is the most important component in some PCs. A 22TB WD Ultrastar DC570 will set you back €500 on a good day. And you'd probably want to RAID it.
Loved this video. Brings me back to my grad school days when I used to work on diamond thin films for solvated electron generation. Another interesting thing about diamond probably most people don't know is its conduction band is actually so high in energy that it has above the energy of an electron in vacuum. As a result, if the diamond surface is properly controlled, it can have something called negative electron affinity and act as a great electron emitter assuming you can get an electron into the conduction band. This effect works not just in vacuum, but gases and liquids too and with amazing results.
Awesome. I am involved in a research project for developing in-situ monitoring of diamond growth inside CVD reactors
A no child policy would have been the bee,s knees!!!
The many-to-many relationship is actually one-to-one... It would be more characteristic if you had multiple "parents" of a more graph-like structure...
can you cover zoho, they are probabiliy the most successful startup out of India's startup ecosystem (in terms of profitability)
Indeed diamonds have a bright future a head of them. Next to all of the other stories in the comments, Some time ago it was found how to make a P-fet on diamond filament, and recently also the N-fet. thus making it possible to make full IC's in diamond filament.
I have lived through most of these developments. Have kept many memorabilia.
Observe the classic marketing pivot from "natural = pure, you can't do it like nature does" to "natural = impure, and the impurities are what makes the thing unique" once technology catches up.
These comments are hilarious. It’s like employers have to thank employees for doing a job they willfully signed up for and are paid to do. People need to realize how good they have it today, however at some point real inflation will kick in way beyond what we’ve seen the past 3 years. The US is becoming Argentina