43 pointsby johncole8 hours ago7 comments
  • ElProlactin8 hours ago
    > The semiconductor industry has always had this quality: the difference between a pioneer and a founder is often just access to materials, capital, and time.

    This applies not just to the semiconductor industry but almost every industry, especially the ones that don't exist yet.

    And to this list I would add: a social and economic system that provides a fertile ground for research, experimentation, immigration and entrepreneurship.

    While the US has built up such advantages over the years that they can't all be lost in a manic overnight tweet storm, it's sad and a bit scary to see the current environment, which is much more hostile to all of these things.

    • johncole8 hours ago
      Who provides such an economic system?
      • ElProlactin8 hours ago
        The US, although much less so recently.

        China, with heavy state subsidies, has also proven to be pretty effective. Interestingly, it hasn't had to embrace immigration because it has over a billion people.

        • johncole6 hours ago
          Do Chinas state subsidies encourage innovation?

          This story is a great example of the system taking a brilliant person, and stomping their opportunity down because they were from the wrong class. But replace class with whatever you like.

          • jauco6 hours ago
            They do actually. There’s a fair bit of critique you can level at the system from a country-wide economic perspective and especially from a world-trade perspective, but they did manage to get a system in place where a central government can influence both the area and speed of innovation.

            The main thing they do is stack the market to be very favourable for a given industry and then have extreme competition between the companies.

          • fakedang6 hours ago
            They not only encourage innovation but also cross-pollination too. So say you discovered some minor technology, they'll even help you connect with other folks who work in the space, potentially combine the innovations together to create a new final product that can actually be licensed to OEMs.

            Where I find China lacking is in creativity and imagination. Yes, there are some changes in that front happening, but you'll never find OpenAI, Helion Energy or SpaceX being founded in China. Those projects won't even get the greenlight from the CCP to get started off the ground because of their high capital and startup costs.

        • fakedang6 hours ago
          Counterpoint on China - they will import special talent and help them immigrate. And of course, there are people who'll value the lifestyle of Shenzhen over San Francisco, or Shanghai over New York. One example that comes to mind is Dr. Erdal Arikan.
          • johncole12 minutes ago
            They will never be Chinese or considered Chinese. Has China become more welcoming to foreigners lately?
        • faangguyindia5 hours ago
          [dead]
        • nandomrumber7 hours ago
          Australia embraces immigration.

          And all we got was higher taxes.

          And severed hands.

          https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-06-06/nsw-home-invasion-gre...

  • cpldcpu2 hours ago
    The early discovery of light emission from silicon carbide long before the first LEDs is a very interesting finding, worth pointing out.

    But alas, as ever so often, the article turns this into a hyperbole. The premise from the title does not check out at all.

    >The Russian who invented semiconductors 25 years before the USA

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semiconductor#Early_history_of...

    • johncole10 minutes ago
      I probably over exaggerated there. But it does seem he was earlier than the team that’s been given credit for it, no?
  • CalChris7 hours ago
    His death at the Siege of Leningrad sounds a lot like Archimedes death at the hands of a centurion during the fall of Syracuse to the Romans. That death was told by the always reliable Livy.
  • didibus7 hours ago
    I think there's likely many things even today, hidden papers, that discovered things, that no one has really decided to give it a shot and try, or figured out what can be done with it.
  • wuschel5 hours ago
    > "He was 38. Shortly before his death, he had mailed a manuscript describing a new three-electrode semiconductor device to Physical Review. The paper was lost in the wartime Atlantic. Five years later, Shockley, ..."

    I wish the article had a reference for that claim.

    I remember from my childhood that my father told me that in the old soviet system, publications from were invented and dated back in order to demonstrate the superiority of their science. Both sides might have done it.

    Now, a story from my father is not strong data point. But falsification of scientific theories, statistics and publications was a thing in the Soviet Union [1,2].

    Then again, the guy might have really done it.

    [1] https://communistcrimes.org/en/falsification-memory-history-... [2] https://history.stackexchange.com/questions/33071/how-often-...

    • johncole9 minutes ago
      Fascinating, that’s really interesting.
  • belZaah7 hours ago
    Thus is the crime of the communist Russia: forcing millions into hard labor to die for progress yet squandering innovation for ideological reasons. But the same mechanism is there in, say, Microsoft. To get the attention of leadership, your idea must have 9 zeros at the very least. If it doesn’t, you either leave M$ or stay there and abandon your idea. But a 7-zero idea is a pretty expensive one to be abandoned.
    • johncole6 hours ago
      I don’t think Microsoft is sending people to the gulag because they didn’t have enough zeroes behind their idea.
  • tokamak4 hours ago
    We will never know the whole truth as that specific culture typically bend the facts and there are little to no proofs of the claims. During soviet era the narrative was that Russian scientists (soviet elites always preferred Russia over other republics) are behind most of human scientific advantages and others simply steal from them.
    • johncole8 minutes ago
      Favorite claim they made?