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posted by hubie on Monday November 18 2024, @10:10AM   Printer-friendly

Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:

Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba revealed the $65 billion plan this week. Reuters saw an early draft of the proposal, which is scheduled to be submitted during the country's next parliament session, and notes its support of domestic chipmaker Rapidus among others.

The homegrown semiconductor manufacturer was founded in 2022 with support from several major Japanese tech companies including Sony and Kioxia, and entered into a strategic partnership with IBM in December 2022. The outfit expects to start mass production of advanced chips built on a 2nm process by 2027. It is an ambitious goal, but one that could be helped along with a significant infusion of cash.

[...] As Tom's Hardware highlights, it took many years for established players like TSMC to get to where they are today. The publication questions whether or not Japan has enough workers with the skills necessary to achieve their goals. As we have seen both domestically and abroad, finding workers with the smarts to get the job done can be a real challenge. Even China, with its heavy investments and accusations of IP theft, hasn't been able to compete toe to toe with leading chipmakers.

It remains to be seen whether or not Japan's investment will pay off, but it is hard not to think that increased competition will benefit the masses via lower prices and a more robust supply chain.


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Monday November 18 2024, @03:48PM

    by VLM (445) Subscriber Badge on Monday November 18 2024, @03:48PM (#1382299)

    MITI tried to run it like a NASA research project with predictable results. The money all got burned and some cool research papers got written and that's about it.

    I'm surprised that in an industry where "everything old is new again" and nothing ever really dies in FOSS, nobody is pushing "Concurrent Prolog on a JVM" or similar retro-new-wave stuff. AFAIK this is all that's "active" out there today:

    https://www.ueda.info.waseda.ac.jp/software.html [waseda.ac.jp]

    Note that Japan's chip success was more like their SEC said here's some seed money, a license to print more money, and a promise you don't have to follow any international trade regulations, then got out of the way, resulting in massive growth. This is quite a contrast to how MITI ran their project.

    They could go old school and hand out bags of money and promises not to enforce regulations (environmental, etc) and it would work pretty well.

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