These racist slayer always believe any technology marvel of breakthru always need a white man behind their success. TSMC rise up without them must have leave them bewildered....
Morris Chang worked in the US IC industry for
~30 years (mostly for Texas Instruments) before going back to Taiwan in the 1970's to take a job to help switch Taiwan from mostly an agricultural economy to something higher. They even licensed chip creation technology from RCA.
It's not like this guy woke up one day and started building a foundary from scratch. The Taiwanese government (not investors) gave him (and others) whatever money he needed to build a worldclass chip company and that is what he did.
For once I agree with you. I don't know why some idiot so easily believe Taiwanese really stupid enough to transfer their know how to USA.
You mean just like what RCA did for Taiwan to get them up and running in the chip business?
Veteran tells story of Taiwan’s semiconductor industry
In the early 1970s, a series of political and economic setbacks prompted the government of Taiwan to consider re-engineering the country’s economic structure. To pave the way for the transformation, then Minister of Economic Affairs Sun Yun-suan helped create the ITRI in 1973
...
With Sun taking charge and arrangements facilitated by Pan, the ITRI signed the “CMOS IC Technology Transfer Licensing Agreement” with
RCA March 5,
1976, under which RCA would transfer its know-how in complementary metal-oxide semiconductor technology to Taiwan.
“I reported for duty at ITRI just a few days before it signed the deal with RCA,” Shih recalled. As part of the agreement, in April 1976 the institute sent 19 young engineers to
RCA’s facilities for training in IC design, process technology, IC testing and semiconductor equipment. Later on more engineers went on the same pilgrimage to become Taiwan’s industry pioneers.
Shih was the leader of the process technology team. Other trainees included Bob Tsao, emeritus chairman of Taiwan’s first foundry, United Microelectronics Corp.; Tsai Ming-kai, chairman of the nation’s leading IC design house, MediaTek Inc.; and F.C. Tseng, vice chairman of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world’s largest contract chip maker.
“As an engineer,
I knew very well that my mission was to absorb as much of RCA’s technology as I could and try to convert its manufacturing processes into a set of standard operating procedures that would work for Taiwan,” Shih said.
“We were able to reach mass production within a very short period of time.
The spinoff of the ITRI IC plant became United Microelectronics Corp. in 1981, Taiwan’s first semiconductor company. In 1986 Shih joined then
ITRI President Morris Chang in negotiating a partnership with the Netherlands’ Royal Philip Electronics that culminated in the establishment of TSMC in 1987. TSMC pioneered the business model of dedicated foundry manufacturing and ultimately reshuffled the global semiconductor industry.