80% of world’s computer
chips will be made by Intel
Intel Products
Vietnam CEO Sherry Boger (L) poses for a photograph with the Haswell CPU at a
ceremony in
Eighty percent of the semiconductor
chips used in computers around the world at this time next year will be made
by the Intel plant in
The abilities of the Vietnamese employees to adapt
Intel technologies are great and meet the expectations of the chipmaker,
Sherry Boger, told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper on the sidelines of a
ceremony to introduce the new made-in-Vietnam Haswell CPU processor in Ho Chi
Minh City.
This could be proven by the chip production of the
Intel Products Vietnam plant, located at the Saigon Hi-Tech Park (SHTP) in
District 9, over the years, she added.
The error rate of the made-in-Vietnam chips is low and
no customer has ever asked to return the products because they were
defective, according to the CEO.
This enables the company to be confident that 80
percent of the chips sold worldwide at this time next year will be labeled as
“made in Vietnam,” Boger pressed.
Intel Products Vietnam on Tuesday celebrated the
production of the Haswell CPU, the fourth generation Intel® Core™ processor,
which Boger said is good news to not only Intel but also the Southeast Asian
country as it is fresh evidence of the Vietnamese workforce’s ability to
acquire and integrate new knowledge and technology.
Intel Products Vietnam has more than 1,000 local
employees and it took them only two months to be certificated to produce the
Haswell processors, which the CEO said is an unexpected success for such a
new, hard-to-make product.
The Vietnamese plant is making two of Intel’s flagship
products, the SOC (system on a chip), used for tablets and smartphones, and
the Haswell CPU, four years after the chip-making titan began its operations
at the SHTP in 2010.
It took the Intel factory in
The CEO admitted that the localization rate of the
Vietnamese plant is “not really high,” with only a few local enterprises
qualified to be its equipment and parts suppliers.
Boger said Intel always welcomes Vietnamese suppliers
to join its production as it would save money and time because the chipmaker
currently has to have its machinery repaired overseas.
Intel targets an 80 percent localization rate in
In 2010 only three Vietnamese firms could supply parts
for the Intel plant, and the figure has risen to 16 after four years.
“It’s a considerable growth and I believe it will
continue to rise in the future,” Boger said.
The
In January 2006, Intel Corp first announced a USS$300
million plan to set up assembly and test facilities in
The chipmaker has so far disbursed $450 million into its
Vietnamese operations, nearly 50 percent of the registered capital, according
to statistics obtained by Tuoi Tre.
Tuoi Tre news
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Thứ Tư, 30 tháng 7, 2014
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