Prologue Huawei’s Dilemma Part I Global Chip Industry Chapter 1 From Transistor to Chip Transistor replaces vacuum tube 8 Texas Instruments and Fairchild invented chip 13 Chip moves from military to civilian 18 Chapter 2 Memory Company Intel proposes Moore’s Law 26 The birth of memory and microprocessor 29 The advent of personal computer era 34 Japan’s VLSI Plan 39 Chapter 3 Intel’s Transformation to CPU US-Japan Chip War 46 Only the Paranoid Survive 53 Angry AMD and Frustrated IBM 57 Chapter 4 New Memory Force Micron emerges from “Potato State” 64 The birth of flash memory 66 The rise of Samsung memory 70 Taiwan’s memory industry follows suit 77 Chapter 5 ASML, the Ugly Duckling The Philips Lithography Machine Laughed at by the Industry 82 ASML was Founded on April Fool’s Day 87 Market Breakthrough from AMD 94 Chapter 6 ITRI President forced to join the chip food chain 100 ASML’s Turnaround 106 The Legend of Zeiss Lenses 112 Chapter 7 The United States Completely Victorious in the Gulf War Can Japan Say “No”? 118 Korean memory beats Japan122 The Soviet Union abandoned by Moore\'s Law125 China endured hardships130 Chapter 8 Asian Financial Crisis: American-style success behind Samsung\'s legend136 Hynix\'s turnaround141 Taiwan\'s memory industry in crisis147 Chapter 9 Wafer foundry competition: Taiwan\'s two wafer foundry giants confront each other154 AMD spins off GlobalFoundries157 ASML solves lens problem160 Lithography dry and wet war165 Chapter 10 Global financial crisis reshuffles Elpida\'s troubles172 Memory failure176 Memory market divided into three parts181 Chapter 11 The twilight of Japanese chips: Toshiba sells flash memory190 The failure of Japanese smartphones and LCD panels196 The decline of Japan\'s electronics industry200 Part II: China\'s chip powerChapter 12 The whole story of \"Project 909\" and the negotiation of partners210 Huahong NEC\'s factory construction and technology introduction215 Huahong\'s chip design and venture capital220 Chapter 13: Designing China\'s own CPU chip 228 Where did Spreadtrum come from? 233 Hanxin scam 239 Chapter 14 Jiang Shangzhou is a banner in Zhangjiang\'s SMIC 246 Zhang Rujing goes north 250 The masterpiece of a factory construction expert 254 Chapter 15 The darkest moment of China\'s chip industry Jiang Shangzhou\'s four major contributions to China\'s chip industry 264 SMIC lost the lawsuit 270 Jiang Shangzhou was appointed in a critical situation 274 Chapter 16 Ten years of bumpy road from Xinsheng to Xinen 282 Chengdu Chengxin and Wuhan Xinxin struggle to survive 285 Tsinghua Unigroup integrates Spreadtrum 292 Chapter 17 China\'s mainland memory breakthrough Yangtze Memory rises 300 Fujian Jinhua stops 307 Hefei Changxin breaks through 311 Chapter 18 Beyond the 28-nanometer node, the invention of 3D transistors 320 TSMC and Samsung Electronics compete for supremacy 324 Moore\'s Law comes to an end 331 Chapter 19 Extreme ultraviolet lithography problem EUV LLC overcomes the century-old problem 338 Extreme ultraviolet lithography machine comes out 342 China cannot get an extreme ultraviolet lithography machine 349 Chapter 20 SMIC, a Chinese chip company suppressed by Trump, sprints to 7 nanometers 356 The gap and potential of China\'s semiconductors 361 The politics and capital behind chips 368 Chapter 21 The new battlefield of processors The rise of ARM architecture 374 Su Ma, who is \"constantly fighting\" 377 The war between cousin and niece 386 Chapter 22 Cloud computing and artificial intelligence Cloud computing competition 392 The battle for cloud processors 396 AIoT\'s lane change and overtaking 401 Epilogue American chip focus 409 Main reference books 413 Postscript 417
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