The nuclear fusion furnace and the analytical purifier solved his need for single-crystal silicon material. After producing the first single-crystal silicon wafer, he could use the Quark Device to synthesize them in bulk.
He then relied purely on his photographic memory, and manually carved out a 1μm (micron) chip and silicon-based storage particles from the chip manufacturing process structure.
On this particularly memorable day of March 8, 3020, Mr. Clark reinvented the 386 computer through sheer manual work.
Theoretically, his manual carving precision could reach the nanometer level, but the required concentration was too high, making the delicate control exhausting. One tiny mistake would ruin the entire silicon wafer, and it couldn't be done in bulk.
So, he chose this more laborious method instead.
After completing the 386 computer, the following tasks became much simpler.