

I still don’t fucking understand how people voted for someone who sounds they’re having a stroke 24/7.
I still don’t fucking understand how people voted for someone who sounds they’re having a stroke 24/7.
My dude, the chips aren’t manufactured in the US. If the tariffs don’t apply to the chips that are inherently imported from outside the US since basically only TSMC and Samsung make them at this point, then there is no tariff at all. Companies in the US import the chips, then use the imported chips as part of their products. All the companies in the US do is assemble the imported parts (and sometimes not even that).
EDIT: Ah, there was a miscommunication. I think we’re both saying the same thing at this point. Well, mostly the same, since this doesn’t really help US companies and just drives up prices for everything.
I’m convinced you’re a troll/bot. That is not in fact how tariffs work since the chips are not made in the US.
Looking into it, the US implementation goes down into the components, so yes. Except, I believe it’d be $50 chip @ 100%, other components at whatever tariff rates they may have, and then the 15% per-country/region tariff applies to all of it on top. So if the other components have no tariffs, it’d be $172.50. I’m now wondering how expensive everything would end up if you have tariffs on materials as well.
In any case though, it becomes ludicrously expensive no matter what because you’re at most dodging the 15%.
EDIT: You can also dodge some of the tariffs if some percentage of the product is made in the US. I wonder if you’d be able to dodge the chip tariff if the materials for it were partially sourced from the US. If possible, that’d probably be cheaper for companies than actually trying to manufacture chips here.
EDIT 2: Actually your calculation may be right, I’m having a hard time finding how they’re actually meant to be calculated. Admittedly it seems a bit weird to me that the rate would override the country-specific rate and thus be the same for chips from the EU and China, but I suppose none of this makes sense in the first place.
Pretty sure that’s their point. Say a product costs $100 dollars with no tariffs. If you import the product from the EU with a 15% tariff, it’s now $115 with tariffs (assuming no tariffs importing the chips into the EU). If you manufacture the product in the US, you need to pay 100% tariffs for all the chips. Obviously the impact depends on how much the chips cost relative to the entire product, but if the chips are half the cost ($50), then with a 100% tariff you’re now paying $150 for the product manufactured in the US.
Lol they want $400 billion in investment in the US too. However, aside from that, I sort of wonder how buying Intel would work out for TSMC. They’d basically be buying a research wing + existing US foundries. The most important thing for them would probably be ensuring that the foundries and so on in Taiwan are the most advanced to avoid the US ditching them if the PRC decides to invade.
Just watch as the media and idiot politicians focus on them being trans instead of being a fucking Nazi.
“Thank God, we are wiping out this evil. We are pushing this population that has been educated on ‘Mein Kampf.'”
I literally do not understand how someone can say this with a straight face when you’re talking about wiping out a group of people based on ethnicity/religious beliefs.
I like how no one actually reads the article that’s posted.
What I said was literally from the article. This is about an association of governors, not parliament.
Also, I’m assuming you’re talking about Sanseito, which does not have a majority. The recent election just gave them more seats (which isn’t great obviously, but is very different from them controlling parliament). Note that when I say “more seats,” I mean it went from 1 to like 15 or something out of 250 or so.
I mean they’re sorta trying to do that. They’re calling for effectively more immigration and listening to younger people and women rather than just having a bunch of old dudes decide everything. They’ve kinda got a lot of problems that have piled up though (economy, work culture, shrinking rural communities, etc.).
Tbh kinda explains why they use Brave
I haven’t really checked since I’ve never needed to, but I imagine there’s a way to report that they’ve harassed you, which presumably would be worse for them.
Not really surprising. China’s not a particularly great neighbor since their govt seems to enjoy claiming territory it don’t actually control.
Shenzhen is huge and has an absurd amount of tech companies, so this doesn’t really surprise me.
I don’t know anything about this product, but if the data is just on an SD card attached to the doorbell, couldn’t someone just steal the SD card? Like, this is why offsite storage for cameras is useful.
Their dignity seems a bit fragile. Might want to work on that.
I can’t wait for the AI future.