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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNew York Plans $45 Billion Fab Campus
The College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE) has teamed up with the economic development organization responsible for Mohawk Valley in upstate New York to develop a site that could accommodate up to three 450mm wafer fabs.
Each wafer fab would have approximately 450,000 square feet of cleanroom space after between $10 billion and $15 billion of private and public money had been spent. Such a build-out would create about 5,000 direct jobs and 15,000 indirect jobs, CNSE said in a press release.
http://www.eetimes.com/
lamp_shade
(14,828 posts)I was born and raised in a nearby town.
LuvNewcastle
(16,844 posts)have ruined it with high taxes! Surely this is a misprint. They meant to say Texas, right?
leveymg
(36,418 posts)Last edited Fri Sep 27, 2013, 11:50 AM - Edit history (1)
There's already a $13 billion fab facility run in the Mohawk Valley of NY by a consortia of large global companies that first started operating there in 1997, according to the Wiki for the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE.) I had to do a double-take and some Googling. That name just reads too much like science fiction from the early 1980s.
I've long been a skeptic of Silicon Valley hype (and a fan of Cyberpunk). In the early 1980s, I was living in Santa Cruz, CA, a little hippie surfer town just over the hill from San Jose, the epicenter of the then rocketing American computer software sector. But, I sensed all was not well and sustainable in this new industry and the cybernetic society it was shaping. I foresaw the dot.com crash of 2000 coming at the beginning of the personal computer age and described life in America after the Big Bust in a 1982 series of ten articles for a little weekly newspaper, The Santa Cruz Express. In the first installment, Santa Cruz in the Year 2002,I wrote:
Well, I got the timing of the crash spot-on, anyway. Here is one of several of the installments I've posted at Photobucket, part of the series: "Santa Cruz in the Years 2002-2012" (1982). This NY tech campus sounds eerily like one of the "Jack Junior" installations I imagined would be built, and largely abandoned after the bubble burst in the 2000s. Imagine that:
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