#ComputerChips

RAPPLER | Philippine & World News | Investigative Journalism | Data | Civic Engagement | Public Interestrappler.com@web.brid.gy
2026-01-25
<p><em>I am writing this because <a href="https://www.rappler.com/people/diosdado-banatao-dies/">Dado Banatao quietly passed away on 25 December 2025</a>, and it felt like the right moment to pause and acknowledge the scale of what he built. Not to memorialize him in the traditional sense, but to remind ourselves how deeply his work still shapes modern computing and daily life.</em></p>



<p>Most people can name the big figures in technology: Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Jensen Huang. Their stories are everywhere, and the products they built are part of our daily lives.</p>



<p>Far fewer people have heard of Diosdado “Dado” Banatao. That’s unfortunate, because without his work, modern computing as we know it would look very different.</p>



<p>While Dado didn’t build a famous consumer device or a global household brand, his legacy lives deep within the machines we use. He worked on the underlying systems that allow computers to function at scale. This is the part most people never see, but everyone depends on.</p>



<h5 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-a-problem-few-people-were-looking-at">A problem few people were looking at</h5>



<p>In the early days of personal computing, computers were expensive and difficult to build. Each one was a custom engineering effort, assembled from many separate parts that didn’t always work well together. That made computers fragile, costly, and hard to improve.</p>



<p>Dado saw this as the real bottleneck. It wasn’t that computers weren’t po
2026-01-22

The Unreasonable Machine: How ASML’s EUV Lithography Saved Moore’s Law

How ASML’s EUV Lithography | Chip Manufacturing

The Most Important Machine in the World: ASML EUV Lithography

In the silent, vibration-controlled clean rooms of the world’s most advanced semiconductor factories, machines worth over $400 million perform a miracle of precision 24 hours a day. They are the reason the smartphone in your pocket possesses more computing power than the guidance systems that took Apollo astronauts to the moon. These machines, known as Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems, are the pinnacle of human engineering and the unsung guardians of technological progress. For over three decades, their development was deemed nearly impossible, a fool’s errand that defied the laws of physics and tested the limits of material science. Yet, today, a single company from the Netherlands, ASML, builds them, making it perhaps the most strategically important technology firm on the planet. This is the story of unreasonable ambition, of scientists laughed off stages, and of the machine that refused to let Moore’s Law die.

The Brick Wall: Moore’s Law Grinds to a Halt

The journey begins with a fundamental truth of the digital age: smaller transistors mean faster, more powerful, and more efficient computers. For fifty years, the industry followed “Moore’s Law,” the observation by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore that the number of transistors on a chip doubled roughly every two years. This relentless miniaturization was driven by advances in photolithography—the process of “printing” circuit patterns onto silicon wafers using light. Engineers simply used shorter wavelengths of light to draw ever-finer lines.

By the late 1990s, the industry had settled on using 193-nanometer deep ultraviolet light. But as the 2010s approached, a brick wall loomed. The features chipmakers needed to print were becoming smaller than the wavelength of the light itself, leading to blurry, unusable patterns. The industry employed ingenious multpatterning techniques, etching patterns multiple times to squeeze out smaller features, but this was a costly and complex workaround. By around 2015, progress was stalling. The economic engine of the tech world, Moore’s Law, was in genuine peril. The industry desperately needed a leap to a radically new wavelength, one so short it existed only in theory and in the heart of the sun: Extreme Ultraviolet light at 13.5 nanometers.

The Impossible Problem: Building a Sun on Earth

The idea of using EUV light for lithography was first proposed in the 1980s by Japanese physicist Hiroo Kinoshita. It was immediately seen as preposterous. EUV light behaves less like visible light and more like an X-ray. It is absorbed by almost everything—air, lenses, and even the mirrors in a standard microscope. To use it, the entire process would have to occur in a vacuum. More critically, you couldn’t use traditional lenses to focus the light, as they would absorb it instantly. Kinoshita’s early presentations were met with extreme skepticism; his peers considered it “a big fish story.”

The core challenges were threefold and each seemed insurmountable. First, you needed to create the light. There is no natural EUV source on Earth. The solution was to create microscopic, man-made stars—superheating tiny tin droplets to a plasma state over 220,000 Kelvin, roughly 40 times hotter than the surface of the sun. This had to be done not once, but 50,000 times per second, with unerring accuracy.

Second, you needed to collect and focus the light. Since lenses were impossible, the only hope was to use mirrors. But standard mirrors absorb EUV light. The breakthrough came from adapting multilayer mirrors, developed for X-ray telescopes, which could reflect a small percentage of EUV light by using carefully layered stacks of atoms. To make a functional optical system, however, these mirrors needed to be the smoothest objects ever created by humankind. If scaled to the size of Germany, the largest imperfection on their surface would be just one millimeter high.

Third, you needed near-perfect alignment. A modern chip has over 100 layers that must be stacked with atomic precision. The overlay accuracy—the tolerance for misalignment between layers—is less than 1.5 nanometers. To achieve this while the machine’s internal components whip around at over 20 Gs of acceleration is a feat of control engineering that borders on magic.

The Unreasonable Pioneers: From Mockery to Milestone

For years, EUV was a project pursued only in national labs, like Lawrence Livermore in the US, where scientists like Andy Hawryluk worked on multilayer mirrors for imaging nuclear fusion reactions. When Hawryluk first proposed applying the technology to chipmaking at a conference, he was “literally laughed off the stage.” It was a career low point. Yet, a seed had been planted. Key industry players, realizing the 193-nanometer dead end was approaching, began to take notice. A consortium was formed, but the engineering challenges were so vast and expensive that, one by one, American tech giants like Intel and Motorola backed away from building the complete machine.

This left the field to an unlikely champion: ASML, a relatively small company from Veldhoven, Netherlands, that had spun out of Philips. Led by visionaries like Martin van den Brink and Jos Benschop, ASML made an “unreasonable” bet. They committed to solving the entire EUV puzzle, partnering with German optics master Zeiss for the mirrors. The journey was a marathon of failure and iteration. Early plasma sources generated only 11 watts of power—nowhere near the 250+ watts needed for commercial production. Tin debris from the plasma explosions constantly coated and ruined the priceless mirrors.

The breakthrough came from a shift in strategy. Instead of hitting a single tin droplet with one laser pulse, engineers devised a “pre-pulse” technique. A first laser pulse shapes the droplet into a pancake; a second, more powerful pulse then vaporizes it into a low-density plasma, dramatically increasing EUV output while reducing debris. It was a masterstroke of precision, akin to hitting a speeding bullet with a second bullet to make it explode more efficiently—50,000 times per second.

The Crown Jewel: Inside the EUV Machine

Today’s EUV machine is a cathedral of technology. It is assembled in a clean room 10,000 times cleaner than a hospital operating room. The machine itself is a network of modules: the powerful CO2 laser system, the complex vacuum chamber where tin droplets turn into plasma, the illuminator with its atomically smooth mirrors, and the precision stage that moves the silicon wafer with nanometer accuracy.

The scale is breathtakingly inverse to its purpose. To draw features just a few atoms wide, the machine is the size of a bus, weighs over 200 tons, and requires 250 crates transported in 20 trucks and three cargo planes to ship. It contains over 100,000 parts sourced from 5,000 suppliers worldwide. It is, as the video narrator states, “the most complicated commercial product humanity has ever built.”

ASML’s monopoly on this technology makes it the linchpin of the global tech economy. Its high-NA (Numerical Aperture) EUV machines, the next generation, are already pushing the boundaries further, ensuring Moore’s Law continues for years to come. Every advanced processor from TSMC, Samsung, and Intel—the brains behind everything from data centers to AI models—is made with an ASML machine.

The Triumph of Unreasonable Persistence

The story of EUV lithography is a testament to human ingenuity and stubborn perseverance in the face of unanimous doubt. It took over 30 years, tens of billions of dollars in investment, and the concerted effort of thousands of scientists and engineers to turn an “impossible” physics problem into the backbone of modern civilization. It proves that the greatest technological leaps are often achieved not by those who adapt to the world’s limits, but by the “unreasonable” ones who strive to change the world’s limits themselves. As we hold a device containing billions of perfectly formed transistors, we hold the result of that unreasonableness—a miracle, manufactured.

👉 Share your thoughts in the comments, and explore more insights on our Journal and Magazine. Please consider becoming a subscriber, thank you: https://borealtimes.org/subscriptions – Follow The Boreal Times on social media. Join the Oslo Meet by connecting experiences and uniting solutions: https://oslomeet.org

References & Further Reading

  1. Hijink, Marc. “Focus: The ASML Way.” (Book detailing ASML’s history and EUV development).
  2. Stewart, Jayson. “The Supernova in the Machine.” IEEE Spectrum, 2024. https://spectrum.ieee.org/euv-light-source-supernova

#ASML #computerChips #extremeUltravioletLithography #MooreSLaw #semiconductorTechnology
The Unreasonable Machine: How ASML's EUV Lithography Saved Moore's LawThe Unreasonable Machine: How ASML's EUV Lithography Saved Moore's Law
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-12-28

From A.I. to Chips, Big Tech Is Getting What It Wants From Trump

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nyti

RAPPLER | Philippine & World News | Investigative Journalism | Data | Civic Engagement | Public Interestrappler.com@web.brid.gy
2025-12-27

PC, smartphone prices to rise by up to 8% as AI drives memory shortage — research firm

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.rapp

<p>MANILA, Philippines – A global shortage of memory chips, propelled by surging demand from artificial intelligence (AI) data centers, is expected to push up the average selling prices of personal computers and smartphones in 2026, said <a href="https://www.idc.com/resource-center/blog/global-memory-shortage-crisis-market-analysis-and-the-potential-impact-on-the-smartphone-and-pc-markets-in-2026/">research firm IDC</a>.</p>



<p>The memory market — which includes DRAM and NAND flash used in everyday devices — is facing an  imbalance as production capacity shifts toward AI-oriented components. </p>



<p>DRAM is fast-access memory that computers use to run programs and applications. NAND flash is storage memory for saving photos, documents, and all other files. The production for both types is expected to be affected by the growing demand of AI data centers. </p>



<p>The IDC explained: &#8220;Instead of expanding&nbsp;conventional&nbsp;DRAM&nbsp;and NAND used in&nbsp;smartphones, PCs,&nbsp;and other consumer electronics, major memory makers have shifted production toward memory used in AI data centers, such as&nbsp;high-bandwidth memory (HBM)&nbsp;and high-capacity DDR5. This has restricted the supply of general-purpose memory modules and driven up prices across the board.&#8221; &nbsp;</p>



<p>Memory manufacturing capacity is being reallocated. </p>



<p>Instead of allocating supply of conventional memory used in consumer devices, manufacturers like Samsung, SK Hynix,
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-12-10

Chip Company Plotted to Send Technology to China, Ex-C.E.O. Says

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nyti

On a production line of the Dutch semiconductor company Nexperia in Hamburg, Germany, last year. Dutch officials seized the company in September.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-12-10

Taiwan Invokes National Security Law to Protect TSMC Trade Secrets

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The authorities in Taiwan are taking a stronger hand in protecting the prized technology of the chip maker TSMC.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-12-10

Trump’s Nvidia Chip Deal Reverses Decades of Technology Restrictions

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President Trump with Jensen Huang, the chief executive of Nvidia, at the White House in April.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-12-09

Trump Eases Limits on Nvidia Exports to China at ‘Critical Moment’

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nyti

Nvidia has argued that blocking access to its chips has only spurred Chinese companies to improve faster.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-12-08
The Trump administration wants to encourage Chinese companies to use Nvidia’s H200 chip while limiting sales of the company’s newest chips, known as Blackwell.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-30

Silicon Valley’s Man in the White House Is Benefiting Himself and His Friends

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nyti

Verfassungklage@troet.cafeVerfassungklage@troet.cafe
2025-11-28

#Nexperia- #Chip-Mangel: Warum #Lagerhaltung die #Investition wert ist | #NDR #Info

Die globale #Chip-Knappheit hat #Industrien weltweit, insbesondere die #deutsche #Autoindustrie, hart getroffen. Doch während viele Unternehmen mit #Produktionsausfällen kämpfen, geht Marco Muth, ein erfahrener #Chip-Händler aus #Verden, einen anderen Weg: Er kauft #Computerchips auf Vorrat und lagert sie für seine Kunden ein.

m.youtube.com/watch?v=bsjjTfji

The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-20

The A.I. Boom Has Found Another Gear. Why Can’t People Shake Their Worries?

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OpenAI’s Stargate data center complex in Abilene, Texas.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-20
A trader on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday. In the United States, Nvidia shares climbed more than 5 percent in after-hours trading.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-20
Jensen Huang, the chief executive of Nvidia, made a bet on chips for artificial intelligence that has turned his company into a Silicon Valley giant.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-19
On Tuesday, executives from many of the biggest tech companies, including Elon Musk, attended a dinner hosted by President Trump honoring Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-19
The headquarters of Nexperia, a Dutch chipmaker owned by the Chinese company Wingtech.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-19
TSMC is teaming up with European chipmakers to build a factory near Dresden, Germany, as Europe’s need to make its own chips has grown more pressing.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-19

How Trump and Nvidia’s C.E.O. Became Partners on the International Stage

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In April, Jensen Huang, chief executive of Nvidia, announced at a White House news conference that Nvidia and its suppliers would invest $500 billion in U.S. manufacturing.
The New York Times - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videosnytimes.com@web.brid.gy
2025-11-14

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