In general we look for a new law by the following process: first we guess it, then we compute the consequences of the guess... and then we compare those computation results to experiment.
If it disagrees with experiment it is wrong. In that simple statement is the key to science. It doesn't make a difference how beautiful your guess is. It doesn't make a difference how smart you are, who made the guess, or what his name is. If it disagrees with experiment its wrong, that's all there is to it.
Notice however that we never prove it right... In the future there could be a wider range of experiments, or you could compute a wider range of consequences, and you may discover then that the thing is wrong. That's why laws like Newton's laws for the motions of planets last such a long time... It took several hundred years before the slight error in the motion of Mercury was developed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYPapE-3FRw "The ITH can trace different internal hardware component (VIA - Visualization of Internal Signals, ODLA - On-chip logic analyzer, SoCHAP - SOC performance counters, IPT - Intel Process Trace, AET - Intel Architecture Trace), and external component like CSME, the UEFI firmware, and you can even connect it to ETW. *This telemetry eventually finds its way to Intel in various methods*."
The second is the nested complexity. The sheer quantity of stuff running before the bootloader is staggering. How is it possible to secure these nested trees of computers-in-computers? F(t) = integral(a,b) f(t, x) dx
~ sum(i) f(t, xi) * Dx
F'(t) ~ (F(t+Dt) - F(t)) / Dt
= integral(a,b) f(t+Dt, x)-f(t, x) dx/Dt
~ sum(i) (f(t+Dt, xi) - f(t, xi))/Dt Dx
~ sum(i) f'(t, xi) Dx
~ integral(a, b) f'(t, x) dx
This kind of thinking has infected corporate America, which is optimizing return based measures--typically IRR--rather than profit based measures. That kind of thinking will lead you to believe offshoring your fabs is a good idea, because is reduces assets in the denominator.
On the other hand, financial thinking can help you better understand the world. One of the more powerful insights that comes to mind is Merton's model of corporate capital structure. It turns out that equity is "equivalent" to a long call on firm assets and debt is "equivalent" to a risk-free bond and a short put on assets.
Seeing things this way tells you something about how firms are run. Equity owners (management) have an incentive to increase asset volatility, which increases the call value. This value is taken straight from the bond holders short put. This is why you see buybacks in situations where buybacks seem crazy (Intel in 8/2020).
https://www0.gsb.columbia.edu/faculty/ssundaresan/papers/Mer...