The new silicon valley (literally) - The Verge The new silicon valley (literally) Is the promise of jobs worth all the water and chemicals it takes to manufacture chips in the Arizona desert?
How a semiconductor funding growth is popping Arizona into . . . Technology How a semiconductor funding growth is popping Arizona into “America’s Semiconductor HQ”, attracting greater than $200B in investments within the final 5 years (Justine Calma The Verge)
Techmeme: How a semiconductor investment boom is turning . . . How a semiconductor investment boom is turning Arizona into “America's Semiconductor HQ”, attracting more than $200B in investments in the last five years — Cath Virginia The Verge, Getty Images … Arizona's economy was once dominated by the “five C's”: cotton, cattle, citrus, copper, and climate
The US semiconductor industry is on a roll—but current supply . . . The United States could account for 30 percent of advanced-node semiconductor fabrication capacity But that potential will not become a reality if fabs cannot get the chemicals and materials they need when they need them That is why establishing a reliable, resilient supply matters—and why the effort to do so must start now
How a semiconductor investment boom is turning Arizona into . . . How a semiconductor investment boom is turning Arizona into “America's Semiconductor HQ”, attracting more than $200B in investments in the last five years — Cath Virginia The Verge, Getty Images … Arizona's economy was once dominated by the “five C's”: cotton, cattle, citrus, copper, and climate from Techmeme https: ift tt 0YKgMzL
Potential US semiconductor manufacturing boom complicated by . . . Because of the CHIPS Act, the U S is projected to more than triple its semiconductor manufacturing capacity — the highest rate of growth in the world during that period, according to a May 2024 report from the Semiconductor Industry Association and the Boston Consulting Group
UC helps bring first-of-its-kind semiconductor hub to California The second of three planned hubs, the Sunnyvale facility will serve as headquarters of the National Semiconductor Technology Center (NSTC), a consortium of industry, academia, and government that’s working together to accelerate domestic innovation and onshore production