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Transcript

Inside a North Korean Missile: What Chips Are Inside?

A deep dive into reverse engineering, sanctioned chips, and why the global electronics ecosystem is so fragile.

Seve (founder at tscircuit) and Matt (founder at atopile) tear into the wild intersection of geopolitics and hardware as they explore a North Korean KN-23 ballistic missile teardown. This episode reveals how Western components still end up in restricted military tech, and how second-hand supply chains blur the line between hobby electronics and weapons of war.

But the conversation doesn’t stop there. From chip smuggling to the future of prototyping, this episode explores how electronics shape everything from missiles to laundry robots.

What You’ll Learn Today:

* How NXP, Analog Devices, and Fairchild chips wound up in a North Korean missile

* The surprising link between PlayStation 2 and military supercomputers

* Why chip reverse engineering is rarely worth it, unless you're a rogue state

* How China is trying (and struggling) to close the chip tech gap

* Why ASML is a single point of failure for the global chip industry

* The future of humanoid robots and open-source robotics startups

* A new “jumperless breadboard” that redefines prototyping

* A wild idea for a fully automated PCB assembly shop

Whether you're into defence tech, microcontroller ecosystems, or the nerdy tools reshaping prototyping and manufacturing, this episode will blow your mind!

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