Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-NYTnewswire3-4.txt)
Sent 1: The factory is highly automated and designed to shift flexibly to produce many different kinds of chips to suit demand.
Sent 2: "The diversity is the big difference with this plant," said Richard Doherty, president of Envisioneering, a research firm.
Sent 3: "It gives IBM the capability to make so many different kinds of custom chips, and the world is going to custom chips."
Sent 4: The 140,000-square-foot plant is a testament to advanced manufacturing technology.
Sent 5: The 300-millimeter silicon wafers -- about the size of a standard pizza -- are shuttled around the facility in enclosed plastic pods, which ride on overhead tracks.
Sent 6: They drop down from wires automatically into machines, sheathed in stainless steel and glass, for each stage of processing and fabrication.
Sent 7: Throughout the 500 processing steps, which typically last 20 days, the wafers are not touched by human hands.
Sent 8: The circuits etched into the chips are less than one thousandth the width of a human hair.
Sent 9: Human operators are there to monitor the systems, catch errors and fine-tune the production process for maximum efficiency.
Sent 10: Because each of the hundreds of processing machines is self-enclosed, and essentially airtight, the uniforms operators wear are less constricting than in the previous generation of chip plants, which looked like space suits.
Sent 11: The operators at the East Fishkill factory wear light nylon uniforms, light blue shoe coverings and translucent hair nets made of paper.
Sent 12: They look more like workers in a bakery.
Sent 13: Yes, said Richard Brilla, director of the new facility, "but the donuts are a lot more costly here."
Sent 14: Each wafer, holding hundreds of chips, is worth $6,000 to $10,000 apiece, depending on what insulation, circuitry and materials are used.
Question: What enables IBM to make different kinds of custom chips? (true/0)
Question: What are the silicon wafers sheathed in? (false/1)
Question: What are the steps that are required for every stage of fabrication? (true/2)
Question: Why do operators at the East Fishkill factory look like workers in a bakery? (true/3)
Question: What is the brief summarization of the appearance of the operators' uniforms as described above? (false/4)
Question: How big are the wafers that are not touched by human hands? (true/5)
Question: What is the name of the factory where Richard Brilla is a Director? (false/6)
Question: What is the approximate size the circuits etched in the chips as described above? (false/7)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json