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Oh, certainly. And I do feel it's a net positive ... just not from a strictly economic analysis.The way I look at [the CHIPS Act] is that it helps ensure domestic semiconductor production capacity is nonzero. It's a lot easier to scale up an industry from something, than to build it from nothing
In general, inflation in nation A does not cause inflation in nation B, no matter how many goods they import. The long run effect of a 20% inflationary rise in prices in a nation is an identical decrease in its currency exchange rates (technically, a 17% reduction); the short-run rate will exhibit some hysteresis. One major exception are those (mostly third-world) nations which either peg their currency, or perform a substantial amount of domestic transactions in dollars or euros, as they become de facto dual-currency economies. Otherwise, it's based strictly on a nation's balance of payments (or more precisely: the currency market's future expection of current account deficits or surpluses.)You can see exceptions to this in countries with tight monetary policy (as typically mandated by recipients of IMF loans) that are experiencing inflation due to rising prices of commodities they import.
The income effect is independent of elasticity of demand, and will remain so until the government passes legislation allowing us to spend the same dollar twice.Demand for energy is fairly inelastic, meaning that demand-reduction elsewhere can't easily cancel it out
Amd did terrible during the ps5 launch though, and by launch I mean like the first 2 years...AMD does a nice job with the game console business currently, but you have to wonder if the integrated wifi and thunderbolt features and the coming integrated directx12u tGPU will enable Intel to compete.
You do realize allocation to the foundries is done with years in advance for any given node, right?Amd did terrible during the ps5 launch though, and by launch I mean like the first 2 years...
PS5 where basically unobtanium for these years, AMD not having a second supplier really hurt them and sony/ms.
Sony might demand AMD to use intel foundry as a second supplier even if they keep using amd cpus.
Wow, I wonder which has more perf/mm^2. If you compare using 2 threads, it might be a real toss-up. The E-cores should still win on perf/W, even if you downclock both to their respective peak-efficiency points.Intel's E-cores are apparently half the size of AMD's zen4 cores,
I was actually wondering whether AMD was going to slap a RX 6500XT in-package, for some of their laptop APUs. Their Infinity Cache should be a huge win for scaling iGPU performance, since they tend to be so severely held back by memory bottlenecks.the coming integrated directx12u tGPU will enable Intel to compete.
Pandemic, bro.Amd did terrible during the ps5 launch though, and by launch I mean like the first 2 years...
PS5 where basically unobtanium for these years,
Could be, but not for the same reasons as before.Sony might demand AMD to use intel foundry as a second supplier even if they keep using amd cpus.
Not usually. Before the pandemic, I gather the wait was only a couple months, max.You do realize allocation to the foundries is done with years in advance for any given node, right?
It's not even a "hot" take, given that he's talking about > 2 years ago.that's a super hot take that doesn't even make sense.
I'm not pinning fault, I'm not even accusing of fault.You do realize allocation to the foundries is done with years in advance for any given node, right?
Also, you're pinning the fault on AMD for Sony's miscalculation of supply? I know you dislike AMD, but that's a super hot take that doesn't even make sense. AMD is a supplier to Sony and Sony themselves are responsible for sourcing and agreeing quantities before hand. As Sony (nor Microsoft) have sued AMD for anything regarding supply, you're either completely wrong or delusional on how it works.
If you have evidence to share, by all means please do share it.
Regards.
Or simply purchasing "options" on additional capacity, which is to say buying priority access to additional wafers. I'm guessing there's probably more than one solution to the problems they had.If I were one of sony/ms I would look into options for alternative/multiple sourcing for the next gen consoles.