F
Flyguy
Guest
On Thursday, January 27, 2022 at 6:29:03 PM UTC-8, bill....@ieee.org wrote:
SNIPPERMAN, as usual, doesn\'t know what he is talking about. A large part of TI\'s business is with the automotive industry. These guys are VERY astute users of semiconductors and have much tougher specs than commercial products. TI delivers those products at competitive prices and have a huge backlog of orders from them.
On Friday, January 28, 2022 at 4:14:11 AM UTC+11, Cydrome Leader wrote:
bitrex <us...@example.net> wrote:
On 1/25/2022 6:41 PM, Cydrome Leader wrote:
Gerhard Hoffmann <dk...@arcor.de> wrote:
Am 25.01.22 um 18:40 schrieb Fred Bloggs:
On Tuesday, January 25, 2022 at 12:37:34 PM UTC-5, Fred Bloggs wrote:
The only typewriter company still in business is IBM, but they never made cheap (price not quality) consumer products, so their transition was easier and possible.
They aren\'t what they were, and their activities on the standards groups that I knew about was all about protecting their market share, rather than getting better standards.
I still think Texas Instruments is the model of a clever company that has always been able to adapt to the times.
They\'ve always been a crooked company, in much the same mold, always ready to shaft their customers. They have never been all that innovative.
They\'ve jettisoned entire lines of products, but it was always at the right time, and there was always something new to take its place.
Something relatively cheap and nasty ...
--
SNIPPERMAN, Sydney
SNIPPERMAN, as usual, doesn\'t know what he is talking about. A large part of TI\'s business is with the automotive industry. These guys are VERY astute users of semiconductors and have much tougher specs than commercial products. TI delivers those products at competitive prices and have a huge backlog of orders from them.