Does Europe at last have an answer to Silicon Valley? – The Economist

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TEN TIMES a second an object shaped like a thick pizza box and holding a silicon wafer takes off three times faster than a manned rocket. For a few milliseconds it moves at a constant speed before being halted abruptly with astonishing precision—within a single atom of its target. This is not a high-energy physics experiment. It is the latest lithography machine dreamed up by ASML, a manufacturer of chipmaking tools, to project nanoscopic chip patterns onto silicon wafers. On January 5th Intel, an American semiconductor giant, became the first proud owner of this technical marvel’s initial components for assembly at its factory in Oregon.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Silicon lowlands”
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
A new generation of AI chips is on the way
Both are grappling with gloomy consumers at home and trouble abroad
Companies that get it wrong risk both derision and outrage
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