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In this episode of Stewart Squared, Stewart Alsop III sits down with his father, Stewart Alsop II, for a rich, cross-generational conversation about China’s technological ambitions and the shifting balance of global power in semiconductors, AI, and manufacturing. Together, they unpack how China achieved seven-nanometer chips without EUV, the dominance of TSMC and its partnership with Apple, the rise of Nvidia and the GPU revolution, and how decades of offshoring reshaped the U.S. industrial landscape. The conversation weaves through topics like robotics, ARM architecture, battery innovation, and the intertwined futures of hardware and software, offering a blend of history, strategy, and insight from two distinct perspectives shaped by time and technology.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation
Timestamps
00:00 Stewart III opens with China’s semiconductor advances—7 nm chips without EUV—and its strategy to dominate manufacturing and robotics.
05:00 Stewart II explains TSMC’s two-nanometer lead, Apple’s tight partnership, and how GPUs differ from CPUs in AI.
10:00 The pair explore China’s robotics boom, humanoid robots, and demographic pressures alongside open-source AI and industrial scaling.
15:00 They shift to China’s political economy—local subsidies, Xi Jinping’s control, and the fragile balance of power in global manufacturing.
20:00 A deep dive into GPUs, TPUs, and ARM architecture; why Nvidia dominates and Intel missed the AI transition.
25:00 The conversation turns to TSMC’s origins, unions, and the offshoring of U.S. manufacturing.
30:00 They connect rare earths, EVs, and battery innovation to China’s industrial ecosystem.
35:00 Discussion of Ion Storage Systems and solid-state battery breakthroughs.
40:00 Reflections on TSMC’s fabs, Taiwan’s rise, and Stewart II’s early coverage of semiconductors.
45:00 They close with Raspberry Pi, embedded systems, and how hardware and software co-evolve.
Key Insights
By Stewart Alsop II, Stewart Alsop IIIIn this episode of Stewart Squared, Stewart Alsop III sits down with his father, Stewart Alsop II, for a rich, cross-generational conversation about China’s technological ambitions and the shifting balance of global power in semiconductors, AI, and manufacturing. Together, they unpack how China achieved seven-nanometer chips without EUV, the dominance of TSMC and its partnership with Apple, the rise of Nvidia and the GPU revolution, and how decades of offshoring reshaped the U.S. industrial landscape. The conversation weaves through topics like robotics, ARM architecture, battery innovation, and the intertwined futures of hardware and software, offering a blend of history, strategy, and insight from two distinct perspectives shaped by time and technology.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation
Timestamps
00:00 Stewart III opens with China’s semiconductor advances—7 nm chips without EUV—and its strategy to dominate manufacturing and robotics.
05:00 Stewart II explains TSMC’s two-nanometer lead, Apple’s tight partnership, and how GPUs differ from CPUs in AI.
10:00 The pair explore China’s robotics boom, humanoid robots, and demographic pressures alongside open-source AI and industrial scaling.
15:00 They shift to China’s political economy—local subsidies, Xi Jinping’s control, and the fragile balance of power in global manufacturing.
20:00 A deep dive into GPUs, TPUs, and ARM architecture; why Nvidia dominates and Intel missed the AI transition.
25:00 The conversation turns to TSMC’s origins, unions, and the offshoring of U.S. manufacturing.
30:00 They connect rare earths, EVs, and battery innovation to China’s industrial ecosystem.
35:00 Discussion of Ion Storage Systems and solid-state battery breakthroughs.
40:00 Reflections on TSMC’s fabs, Taiwan’s rise, and Stewart II’s early coverage of semiconductors.
45:00 They close with Raspberry Pi, embedded systems, and how hardware and software co-evolve.
Key Insights