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Intel to install second production line at Vietnam factory: CEO

BoQ77

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Intel to install second production line at Vietnam factory: CEO

TUOI TRE NEWS

Updated : 11/11/2014 14:02 GMT + 7

Intel Products Vietnam's headquarters are seen at the Saigon Hi-Tech Park in Ho Chi Minh City on April 16, 2010.
sbtxYqUO.jpg


U.S. chipmaker Intel will install a second production line to manufacture computer CPUs at its Ho Chi Minh City factory, the chief executive of the company’s Vietnam unit revealed Monday.

The installation is part of Intel’s effort to expand the production of its flagship products in the Southeast Asian country, Intel Products Vietnam CEO Sherry Boger told a semiconductor chip-themed seminar in Ho Chi Minh City.

The new production line is slated to begin operations this month, the chief executive said.

The Intel Products Vietnam plant is located at the Saigon Hi-Tech Park (SHTP) in District 9.

In late July, Intel Products Vietnam celebrated the production of the new made-in-Vietnam Haswell CPU processor, the fourth generation Intel® Core™ processor.

The Vietnamese plant is making two of Intel’s flagship products, the SOC (system on a chip), used for tablets and smartphones; and the Haswell CPU, four years after the chip-making titan began its operations at the SHTP.

Intel Products Vietnam has more than 1,000 local employees, and the CEO has spoken highly of their ability to acquire and integrate new knowledge and technology.

The abilities of the Vietnamese employees to adapt to Intel technologies are great and meet the expectations of the chipmaker, Boger told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper on the sidelines of the celebration ceremony on July 29.

Boger said in the same talk that 80 percent of the semiconductor chips used in computers around the world will be made by Intel’s Vietnam plant by around July 2015.

The Vietnam manufacturing site is the largest overseas facility operated by Intel, Boger said in a statement in July. It is three times the size of a normal Intel assembly and test plant, and double the size of the company's Malaysian plant.

In January 2006, Intel Corp first announced a USS$300 million plan to set up assembly and test facilities in Vietnam. The total registered investment was increased to $1 billion ten months later.

As of the end of July, the chipmaker already disbursed $450 million into its Vietnamese operations, nearly 50 percent of the registered capital, according to statistics obtained by Tuoi Tre.
 
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I'd like to see Vietnam increase its investment in R&D, but gaining access to more manufacturing jobs is nothing to complain about. Good to see more and more companies seeing an opportunity in Vietnam!!! In this instance I say ignore the naysayers (they know who they are) and congrats to Vietnam.
 
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This is Intel's assembly and test plant, where the high tech chips are packaged and assembled by Vietnamese labor. No technology, other than manual labor intensive packaging and testing, is taught to Vietnamese. All intellectual property and profits belong to Intel.
 
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Intel is a private corp. They would only transfer the know how to their people - Intel people !!!
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Investing in Science, Engineering and People
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When computer chip maker Intel Corporation opened a plant in Vietnam, the company’s largest in the world, it generated thousands of jobs. But Vietnam, a country transitioning from an agriculture- to a knowledge-based economy, lacked the highly skilled workers to fill those jobs. Instead of looking elsewhere for employees, Intel invested in Vietnam.

By partnering with the Vietnamese government, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and Arizona State University, Intel established the Higher Engineering Education Alliance Program (HEEAP) to help Vietnamese universities improve their science and engineering programs.

Aimed at sparking systemic change, HEEAP started with leadership workshops for university rectors and deans, then continued with faculty training on active learning approaches and problem-based curriculum. By 2012, HEEAP had trained 122 Vietnamese faculty members at Arizona State. An additional 200 faculty members received training at in-country workshops. In 2013, Intel and its partners announced an expansion to HEEAP that will include leadership development, distance learning and English-language education, among other components.

In addition to improving higher education in Vietnam, Intel has promoted sustainable development. All of Intel’s plants in Vietnam recycle and treat their wastewater. The company has also built Vietnam’s largest solar power plant, significantly reducing its carbon dioxide production.

Intel received the U.S. Department of State’s Award for Corporate Excellence in 2012 for its efforts to advance education and protect the environment of Vietnam.


Read more: Investing in Science, Engineering and People | IIP Digital
 
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Intel to install second production line at Vietnam factory: CEO

TUOI TRE NEWS

Updated : 11/11/2014 14:02 GMT + 7

Intel Products Vietnam's headquarters are seen at the Saigon Hi-Tech Park in Ho Chi Minh City on April 16, 2010.
sbtxYqUO.jpg


U.S. chipmaker Intel will install a second production line to manufacture computer CPUs at its Ho Chi Minh City factory, the chief executive of the company’s Vietnam unit revealed Monday.

The installation is part of Intel’s effort to expand the production of its flagship products in the Southeast Asian country, Intel Products Vietnam CEO Sherry Boger told a semiconductor chip-themed seminar in Ho Chi Minh City.

The new production line is slated to begin operations this month, the chief executive said.

The Intel Products Vietnam plant is located at the Saigon Hi-Tech Park (SHTP) in District 9.

In late July, Intel Products Vietnam celebrated the production of the new made-in-Vietnam Haswell CPU processor, the fourth generation Intel® Core™ processor.

The Vietnamese plant is making two of Intel’s flagship products, the SOC (system on a chip), used for tablets and smartphones; and the Haswell CPU, four years after the chip-making titan began its operations at the SHTP.

Intel Products Vietnam has more than 1,000 local employees, and the CEO has spoken highly of their ability to acquire and integrate new knowledge and technology.

The abilities of the Vietnamese employees to adapt to Intel technologies are great and meet the expectations of the chipmaker, Boger told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper on the sidelines of the celebration ceremony on July 29.

Boger said in the same talk that 80 percent of the semiconductor chips used in computers around the world will be made by Intel’s Vietnam plant by around July 2015.

The Vietnam manufacturing site is the largest overseas facility operated by Intel, Boger said in a statement in July. It is three times the size of a normal Intel assembly and test plant, and double the size of the company's Malaysian plant.

In January 2006, Intel Corp first announced a USS$300 million plan to set up assembly and test facilities in Vietnam. The total registered investment was increased to $1 billion ten months later.

As of the end of July, the chipmaker already disbursed $450 million into its Vietnamese operations, nearly 50 percent of the registered capital, according to statistics obtained by Tuoi Tre.

Great news for Vietnam & it's economy
You guys should also invest more in R&D
 
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great news..
keep on going guys... A strong economy is necessity for a strong military and a strong military for a strong nation..:tup::tup:
 
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Congrats Vietnam... you guys are really impressive, i was wondered when i found you are becoming a semiconductor manufacturing base.
 
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Congrats Vietnam... you guys are really impressive, i was wondered when i found you are becoming a semiconductor manufacturing base.

Vietnam does not manufacture any semiconductors. Not a single wafer of Si is processed in Vietnam.
 
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Vietnam does not manufacture any semiconductors. Not a single wafer of Si is processed in Vietnam.
ICDREC, established in 2005, is one of the nation's leading centers in training and transferring technology for the IC industry. Located in Ho Chi Minh City, the centre has long been known for its successful design of the 8, 16 and 32-bit chips, used for many handling and telecommunication devices.

https://dac.com/sites/default/files/App_Content/files/50/Global Forum/Vietnam_Summary.pdf
 
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China still can't produce world-class high technology CPU,too.
Plz don't make fun as laughing at others,especially when they are making progress.

Ha...I am imatating BoQ77's speaking style. When China makes some progress, that guy made the same comments as well.
 
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Ha...I am imatating BoQ77's speaking style. When China makes some progress, that guy made the same comments as well.
既然我们不喜欢那样的人,那为什么还要变成那样的人呢?

Why we need to act as something we don't like?Many foreign people don't know the reality and thoughts of China,we just explain something as we can.Quarrel make no sense. :cheers:
 
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既然我们不喜欢那样的人,那为什么还要变成那样的人呢?

Why we need to act as something we don't like?Many foreign people don't know the reality and thoughts of China,we just explain something as we can.Quarrel make no sense. :cheers:

Except Vietcongs aren't the usual foreigners, they were enslaved by China for over a millenium. Now they just like to troll Chinese progress, i think you don't realize that's how their inner characters are.
 
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