Most of that is conflation of Taiwan with China (and let’s not do that) as well as mixing up TSMC with a random Shenzhen factory. Taiwan is definitely fucked, but it is more “America fucked” than “996 fucked”, as it were.
And it is important to understand that TSMC are basically the best of the best in semiconductors. That is skilled labor. I wouldn’t want to work there but if I had to pick a semiconductor factory to work in…
No, the reason that the vast majority of “popular science” tech youtubers have not covered this too much is that it is really a mixture of
- Wages: Yes, the wages are not as high as American workers want. And a lot of that is because these ARE factory jobs. But people expect “tech company” salaries. And there will be a few roles that get that but most are more about implementing a design rather than building their own process.
- Work hours: Yeah. There are going to be “crunch” expectations. But likely less so than most “tech” jobs in this country
- Skill. Like it or not, Taiwan are the gods of semiconductors and the processes associated with them. We do not have that skillset.
So 1 and 2… should be valid but This Is America. But 3 is the real issue. Because we have people who are insisting on getting full salaries while more or less needing to be trained (often for a few years) on the job to be qualified. Versus flying out the people who DO know their shit. Like, we all like to complain that outsourcing usually makes a larger support burden on the parent company. And… yeah.
So most tech youtubers aren’t touching this with a ten foot pole. And LTT have a long history of spewing complete bullshit. Either people worship Linus for “not being afraid to cover a topic” or get angry and they get publicity for “another hot take”.
And basically every other tech youtuber just says “I am not at all qualified to talk about this subject”
lickmysword@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
All of which US companies would love to push onto their employees and work place.
eatstorming@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Yep. The thing is that in the US it’s not readily available, and even if companies do twist the government’s arm to make it happen, it’d still take quite a while for people to accept it (if they ever do in significant numbers).
Also, obligatory reference to the documentary American Factory, where the differences between American and Chinese work cultures are shown in a similar scenario (a Chinese company opening a factory in the US).
some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org 1 year ago
I didn’t know about this film, but I just watched the trailer and now it’s on my list. Thanks!
thal3s@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
Thanks! I just added this to my Netflix queue.