![]() Where does Intel Corporation stand today? Three key challenges ahead #manufacturing #electronics #engineering #design #work Thanks to Marco Mezger for posting the article. What is the specific work that changed? In investigating this issue it was and has been "how the work is done" in problem-solving and continuous improvement by engineering staff across each firm, it's the common element across all 3 firms, Intel's competitors changed the way they do/did problem-solving and continuous improvement, and Intel did not. The point made about Intel manufacturing losing its capability to compete against the likes of TSMC and Samsung Electronics is the primary issue here in "how the work changed" between these three competitors. True enough that heterogenous ("More than Moore") computing made inroads into Intel's market share with AMD's application of chiplets in CPU (SiP) designs, and the shift of CPU-centric designs giving way to CPU-GPU-accelerator designs as well as the rise of low power architectures (ARM, RISC-V) meaning the products being produced changed, one could stretch the concept in the work of computing changed, but not how the work of design had changed. Much in the article are symptoms of the problem that Intel Corporation has faced in "how the work changed with a 10X effect" (definitively what a Strategic Inflection Point is). She previously reported on politics and world affairs for The Atlantic. “And because he is losing and because the sanctions and the Ukrainians are humiliating him, because he is backed into a corner, he is the most dangerous he has ever been, because it is now existential for him.” Julia Ioffe is an American journalist who was born in Russia, and is a writer for and founding partner of the media company Puck. So in an interview for the FRONTLINE documentary “Putin’s Road to War,” journalist Julia Ioffe discusses Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine “What he has opened up with this invasion is unthinkable,” Ioffe says. Putin, and reflecting on the similar saber rattling that the Chinese Communist Party has been doing over the last year I thought a review of how Putin's War came to pass was in order. ![]() As I was reviewing the recent routes of the Russian Army in their ill-fated and stupid war by Mr. Colbert proceeded to plant his face in his palm.Being the Corporate Competitive Intelligence Analyst that I am, one thing I always want to understand is the thinking of my opponents. When Colbert intimated that he had meant a best-case scenario for Ukraine or the West, Ioffe hastily gave the response of “Ukraine wins and drives them back,” though in a tone of voice suggesting she doubted the likelihood of such a turn of events. Ioffe then proceeded to say that the best-case scenario would be for Russia to decapitate Ukraine’s government, establish a puppet regime, withdraw its military without needing to occupy the country and scare the populace into not launching another uprising for at least a few years. When asked by Colbert for her best-case scenario for the future, Ioffe’s initial response was “Do you have any more of that Bourbon?” Colbert noted that he had a whole bar behind him, which appropriately included vodka. Ioffe also speculated on the possibility that Zelenskyy might be taken by the Russians, brought to Moscow and tried for war crimes. And today, many Russians who watch state television have come to believe that Ukraine is essentially run by neo-Nazis, despite being led by a Jewish president, Volodymyr Zelensky, who has relatives who died in the Holocaust. In response, the Kremlin’s propaganda arm did what they often do, which is “take a little bit of truth and spin it into this cotton candy of lies,” she said. On Putin’s stated objective to “denazify Ukraine,” Ioffe said that during Ukraine’s Revolution of Dignity in 2014, it was true that a right-wing, nationalistic and in some cases neo-Nazi contingent was present, but it was in the minority. In response, Colbert asked Ioffe if this was because the Russian people are fatalistic, or because it’s necessary to be fatalistic while thinking about Russia. That’s how you predict what happens with Russia.” ![]() ![]() “Imagine if everything goes wrong, and if the worst comes to pass, that’s usually what’s gonna to happen. ![]() “I always know that to get Russia right, you have to go with the worst-case scenario,” said Ioffe, a graduate of Beth Tfiloh Dahan Community School, while sitting down with Colbert. 25 episode of “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” to offer her take on the unfolding invasion of Ukraine, she didn’t come with a lot of optimism. When Julia Ioffe - the Washington correspondent for Puck news with more than 15 years of experience covering Russia - appeared on the Feb. ![]()
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