DrMrLordX
Lifer
- Apr 27, 2000
- 22,764
- 12,775
- 136
Meditations. Lots and lots of meditationsLame, it's already annoying when @adroc_thurston does this.
You agree with the part of keeping Intel in one piece while infusing it with $40B?saw the link to former ceo craig 10 point plan and wrote this before reading it, just read it, almost 100% agree
They probably cumulatively spent more than $40B on share buybacks. Capitalism as we experience it today is seriously broken, but I 100% agree this is not the time and place to discuss such a topic.We can't blame capitalism for Intel's failures.
There's no need for this, you can agree to disagree and move on.Hope you get well soon 💐
It only works as long as a company takes its social responsibility seriously. The moment it stops caring about the workers who do the actual work and starts rewarding the sociopath executives for being the worst pricks, capitalism fails. I bet there were thousands of employees at Intel who knew how to make Intel better but they had no say in the matter because the people calling the shots were too arrogant to listen to their subordinates.I'm genuinely sorry for every non-billionaire human in this planet who thinks capitalism good.....
Now if trump doesn't suffer a short term memory loss and forget LBT's history he just learned about, hopefully Intel can get to a good place.
They probably cumulatively spent more than $40B on share buybacks.
Capitalism as we experience it today is seriously broken
sociopath executives
capitalism fails.
FWIW - Intel has spent $152 billion on stock buybacks since 1990.They probably cumulatively spent more than $40B on share buybacks.
New stock manipulationApple has spent nearly Trillion $ in stock buybacks btw new cope
[Capitalism] only works as long as a company takes its social responsibility seriously
You agree with the part of keeping Intel in one piece while infusing it with $40B?
Another comment:
As someone who works at an intel campus can confirm, the company is mostly cooked. 25% layoffs devastated all areas; eliminating 20+ yrs senior techs the buyout was too good, can't blame them. Attrition + the 2nd round of layoffs gutted areas so hard they just kept bleeding people, truly some areas are just running on life support; machines can't get fixed cause there's no one there etc. Ain't looking so good.
Most of the times they have zero idea of what a worker is actually doing and how much education/training and years of experience was required to get the worker to even start working. That's why these idiots will fire someone important, thinking they can find a cheaper replacement and then one of the following usually happens:it's extremely dystopian and only executed because HR and Corporate Management types are literally both braindead and soul-less
My previous managing director had a good handle on what each job entailed. He figured that HR duties were so minimal and could be done in a few hours per day so just had some existing staff do it on a rotation basis. The new management created a really expensive HR department, paying them handsome salaries and they are enjoying their lives and having "team sessions" in the conference room with pizza parties to brainstorm how to do their "difficult" job of data entry in Excel sheets. Such pathetic but really well paid losers.Don't forget HR is the position who does the least work in a company
agreed there only job is to hire people and do stuff in a company with 10s of thousands of employees you need some HR but very less not so muchMy previous managing director had a good handle on what each job entailed. He figured that HR duties were so minimal and could be done in a few hours per day so just had some existing staff do it on a rotation basis. The new management created a really expensive HR department, paying them handsome salaries and they are enjoying their lives and having "team sessions" in the conference room with pizza parties to brainstorm how to do their "difficult" job of data entry in Excel sheets. Such pathetic but really well paid losers.
Non-billionaire here typing on my capitolist laptop.I'm genuinely sorry for every non-billionaire human in this planet who thinks capitalism good.....
Hope you get well soon 💐
this is totally thanks to one dude motivating the industry not capitalismfaster and cheaper microprocessors that put them into OUR hands
Intel's biggest weakness is their lack of infrastructure and process to handle external customers with their foundry. Also, their costs are intertwined with the design portion of the company and are currently being used as the bad guy for spending vs. looking at the foundry as an independent company providing a service.There's a push for TSMC to get involved, and now Barrett is encouraging the Feds to force American semiconductor firms into an Intel-centric consortium (making it Intel-centric is probably the worst part about this plan).
I would argue that pure capitalism is bad. In the US we have socialized capitalism. The amount of socialization has decreased precipitously over the last 50 years.Can we not play the "capitalism bad" card in here? Capitalism has produced roaring successes like Apple, AMD, TSMC, etc. We can't blame capitalism for Intel's failures.
Any leading fabless design firm should be evaluating every cutting edge node because that's just called doing your due diligence. It doesn't automatically mean Apple/Nvidia will commit.![]()
Apple and NVIDIA Eye Intel's 14A Node for Trial Production
Intel's leadership has placed the fate of its 14A process on confirmed commitments, following CEO Lip-Bu Tan's statement that future spending will require confirmed external orders. Speaking on a recent earnings call, Tan signaled a departure from the previous build-first mindset and warned that...www.techpowerup.com
Right now, I think a little more socialism would be very helpful with respect to IFS.
China won't allow this they didn't allow buying Tower Semi it would have been a boon they posses the core skill of how to be a fab.If they were going to spend any money (and were serious about getting results) I would rather them buy another fab from TSMC or maybe give a bit to GloFo.
Again, let's look at Samsung and (arguably) SMIC. Handing Intel free Federal dollars (or similar) isn't going to be some panacea. Intel suffers from internal organizational problems, not from monopolism or whatever other societal bugaboo that people imagine has harmed poor Intel. TSMC is rapidly approaching global monopoly status in leading-edge foundries and is doing very well from a technical merit PoV. Their nodes are good, and their cadence is mostly solid. That doesn't mean that monopoly is a desirable outcome, but it DOES mean that being a monopoly hasn't (yet) turned TSMC into a failed company.Right now, I think a little more socialism would be very helpful with respect to IFS.
this is totally thanks to one dude motivating the industry
Really the semi industry and everything would be like this without Moore's Law ?What? No!
He doesn't want the tax dollars he wants funding from customers and they can make Intel a better foundry by actually berating them you are doing this wrong and all that. He wants government to force the companies to do this $40 Billion is too much though.If all the Feds do is take over Intel, they'll be on the hook to run a dysfunctional company. No one - and I mean NO ONE - in Congress or working with Congress knows how to fix Intel's problems. It would be a massive waste of tax dollars, which is exactly what Barrett seems to want for Intel.