Jeremy Schultz
@jschultz
Tech translator/communications manager/content strategist for hire. Fan of local brews, wicked guitars, and 2-wheeled machines.
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Great thesis, bold mission, and probably the most fun you can have with a particle accelerator 🤔
The United States invented all of the critical technologies that power today’s advanced semiconductors, but over time, we have lost the lead. For years, many have spoken of the need for a new pure-play American foundry, yet view it as an impossible task. History repeatedly shows…
substrate.com
Our purpose - Substrate
Substrate is building America's next-generation semiconductor foundry
Here’s your next must-read—so well reported and written, my goodness:
Come for the fun pictures, stay for the obsession > nytimes.com/2025/08/12/tec…
nytimes.com
Hidden Inside Our Electronics, Tiny Doodles From Another Era (Gift Article)
Decades ago, designers etched microscopic doodles onto silicon chips to leave their marks. Now, techno-archaeologists search for the tiny fossils.
If it burns, we can cool it.
Faster AI chips – by cooling them better? 🥶 Rajiv Mongia and Intel’s thermal team are pushing boundaries to keep the heat off Moore’s Law, exploring exotic solutions for big packages of stacked dies. Take a look at some wickedly cool work. > newsroom.intel.com/intel-foundry/…
Among his talents, Rajiv is also an endless supply of cool puns...
Faster AI chips – by cooling them better? 🥶 Rajiv Mongia and Intel’s thermal team are pushing boundaries to keep the heat off Moore’s Law, exploring exotic solutions for big packages of stacked dies. Take a look at some wickedly cool work. > newsroom.intel.com/intel-foundry/…
The best part of my job is meeting people like Chung-Hsun and trying to wrap my brain around their absolutely mind-boggling work. We took this photo in a lab full of wafer test machines his team uses throughout development.
A centerpiece of Intel 18A is RibbonFET, which Intel’s Chung-Hsun Lin calls “probably the most difficult transistor ever built.” In a new story, Lin illuminates his job at the nexus of performance targets and the realities of physical silicon. > newsroom.intel.com/intel-foundry/…
Whoa, it's like the Lady Gaga and Beyonce of tech teamed up for another new mega hit! This is excellent 🙌
People worldwide are using Intel-powered tech to do incredible things. @Zoox is revolutionizing autonomous transport with Intel Xeon CPUs. Intel Products CEO @MJHolthaus took a robotaxi ride with @Zoox CEO @aicha2evans to chat about their partnership with Intel. #IntelVision
My first job at Intel (1999!) was to build/support applications used to run product through assembly/test, where silicon dies get dressed for work. 👨🔬>🦸
After silicon dies exit the cozy confines of the fab, they’re fitted with armor – that’s packaging – and tested for top performance. Take a quick tour of the lesser-known half of chipmaking, assembly and test! intel.ly/3XBlXJm
👋 Oregon can ditch Daylight Saving Time in 2025! Please tell #ORLeg YES on SB 566 & SB 1038, restore permanent Standard Time for health and safety! Click here to let your legislators know 👉votervoice.net/ditchDST/Campa…
PowerVia backside power is already underrated in how much it changes the process--wait till you wrap your mind around RibbonFET and gate-all-around transistors. 🤯
Intel 18A isn't just another process technology stop for Intel Foundry — it's a milestone in the history of chipmaking. Everything you need to know about Intel 18A and innovations like RibbonFET and PowerVia, in under 90 seconds 👇. intel.ly/3WEWChl
As soon as I learned the details behind Lunar Lake, it was clear the real story was its leap in efficiency. How'd we do it? I got the scoop from two of Intel's smartest at the heart of the work 👇
With refined power management and faster E-cores, new Intel Core Ultra processors draw as much as 40% less power and deliver several more hours of battery life than their predecessor — all without sacrificing performance. Learn how. intel.ly/3Z7AHRV
What more joyful career could there be than being "balloon man"? This is delightful: bloomberg.com/news/features/…
This has been a great Olympics...don't miss the best story far 🥇 wsj.com/sports/olympic…
wsj.com
From Venture Capital to a Shocking Olympic Gold: The Wild Ride of an American Cyclist
Seven years ago, Alaska’s Kristen Faulkner didn’t know how to clip her bike shoes into her bike pedals. Now she’s a champion in Paris.
Every time a colleague @ mentions you in a chat, for which you already get notifications, in Microsoft Teams
The story says taking "to" suburban streets, but taking "over" would be great. What an upside-down world: we routinely let 16-year-olds drive 2-ton death-machines but worry about the "risks" of battery-powered bikes. 🙄
Teens are taking over suburban streets across the U.S. while skipping a rite of passage: driving a car. Instead, they’re opting for e-bikes. on.wsj.com/3yZbiP4
Women's pro cycling in the WSJ has got to be a milestone and I am here for it. Go go @FaulknerKristen!
Kristen Faulkner was a rising star in venture capital when she made a dramatic career change to pro cycling. This week, she won a major race in Spain. @JasonGay talks to her. on.wsj.com/3UqIJ47
You all really should read "Slow Productivity," but to spread the gospel in short form, I'd suggest: wsj.com/lifestyle/work…
wsj.com
Less Is More: The Case for ‘Slow Productivity’ at Work
We’re thinking about productivity at work all wrong, Cal Newport says. But how do we tell the boss that?
An undersold requirement for innovation is perseverance. You need folks like Srini with an insatiable hunger for unsolved problems. Working on the forefront of the most awe-inspiring products in all of humankind helps, too. 😉
Glass dates to ancient times, but it might hold the future of AI. Srini Pietambaram is Intel’s 2023 Inventor of the Year and helped make glass substrates a working reality. Learn more. intel.ly/47eQa3S
New goal for the centenarian decathlon: qualify to be profiled in the @WSJ's "what's your workout" series at age 85 wsj.com/articles/cycli…
Industrial engineering never goes out of style 👏
Starbucks annual sales is ~$40B across 37k+ stores. At such scale, it’s very profitable to shave a few seconds off each order. Per Bloomberg, Starbucks would make an extra ~$900m a year if each store served 5 extra patrons per day. That’s why Starbucks is spending $450m on a…
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