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Discover LudwigThe word 'fabs' is correct and usable in written English.
It is a shortened version of the word "fabulous" and is often used as a slang term to describe something as excellent, amazing, or fantastic. Example: "I just finished reading this book and it was totally fabs. I couldn't put it down!".
Dictionary
fabs
verb
Third person singular of fab
Exact(60)
Western tech firms set up shop in Taiwan in the 1960s, increasing the pool of skilled workers and suppliers.Today Hsinchu Science and Industrial Park, the hub of Taiwan's IT industry, is home to about 400 high-tech companies, chief among them TSMC with its huge "fabs".
Having built chip foundries or "fabs" in Taiwan, Italy, Japan and elsewhere, he decided to do the same in China.Two measurements sum up the stature of a chipmaker: the diameter of the silicon wafers it turns out (bigger is better), and the scale at which it etches them (the smaller the better).
Dr Moore's less-quoted "second law" is that chip fabs get twice as expensive with each new generation.
Ever better chips mean ever increasing sales, which mean ever more money with which to build ever better factories for ever better chips.The firm's top brass attributes much of the company's success in harnessing this virtuous circle to the fact that it both designs and makes its chips, with ten chip factories ("fabs" in industry argot) operating and two more under construction.
But as they produced more chips for others, the Taiwanese learned about the business, acquired technology from abroad, improved their manufacturing skills and tweaked the fabs with technology of their own.
Encouraged by a personal-computer market growing by more than 25% a year, the three firms borrowed heavily to invest billions of dollars in chip-fabrication factories, known as "fabs", creating a new industry virtually from scratch.
When growth switches off All in a tangle ReprintsNothing if not tenacious, the chaebol continue to build memory-chip fabs in the hope of a PC boom, spending a cool $8 billion in this way last year alone.
Now those inventories are seen as far too large.The chip makers' troubles are also hitting the firms that supply them with the expensive equipment required to build their ultra-clean chip-fabrication plants, which are called "fabs".
Fabs have costly filtering and vacuum systems to keep dust particles away from the chips.
Spin-offs make sense because there are too many firms doing the same thing on too small a scale, and the need to finance new fabs is a drag on the firms' main businesses.
By contrast, Symetrix uses barium strontium titanate, a layered form of perovskite, because of the problems that semiconductor fabs have in processing lead.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com