Not a doctor, but my go-to for medical advice is:
and the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements for information regarding nutrition/supplements.
I recently looked into buying SSDs in the 100s and the folks at r/NewMaxx helped a lot.
A flat rate is independent of whether they diagnose anything, and they will behave randomly.
I don't think I'll assign a prior of zero for Human altruism. There are also other social aspects that you didn't model, like status in society. A doctor who correctly diagnoses their patients would definitely have a higher status than a doctor who is random in their diagnosis. I like the idea behind this post, but this might work only for spherical chickens in a vacuum
You probably found this already, but the different dies are mentioned here under GPU chip: https://www.techpowerup.com/gpu-specs/
The previous generation RTX 30xx series were on Samsung 8nm node while A100 used TSMC 7nm. RTX 40xx series is currently planned on TSMC 4nm. The only other company advertising a 4nm process node is Samsung but they seem to be having troubles:
https://www.anandtech.com/show/17395/qualcomm-announces-snapdragon-8-gen-1-moving-to-tsmc-for-more-speed-lower-power
The Apple A16 chip (the one in iPhone 14) would be the largest customer of TSMC 4nm by my guess. Very few chips use the 4nm process node.
The folks over at Anandtech might be able to answer this better. You could also try reaching out to Dr.Ian Cutress on Twitter.