US chip giant Nvidia holds a significant advantage with its CUDA computing platform, while OpenAI may be unwise to heavily invest in the "scaling law", according to a top Chinese scientist addressing two critical issues affecting the future of artificial intelligence (AI) development and US-China technology rivalry.
Nvidia’s H20 chips are in high demand in China—indicating that DeepSeek's more efficient AI doesn’t mean lower chip demand.
Nvidia faces continued concerns about potential restrictions on exports of its AI hardware amid reports that advanced chips are reaching China despite U.S. sanctions.
Nvidia’s chips are primarily manufactured by TSMC in Taiwan; however, some systems and computers utilizing these chips are produced in other regions, including Mexico.
3don MSN
The company delivered this top performance thanks to its dominance in one of today's most exciting and high-growth fields -- artificial intelligence (AI) -- a market expected to grow from about $200 billion right now to more than $1 trillion by the end of the decade.
Buyers in approved countries, like Taiwan and Malysia, are buying Nvidia Blackwell chips and selling a portion of them to Chinese companies.
Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest multimedia news provider, reaching billions of people worldwide every day. Reuters provides business, financial, national and international news to professionals via desktop terminals, the world's media organizations, industry events and directly to consumers.
On Monday, reports surfaced that Nvidia chips were making their way to customers in China, with the high-end tech circumventing strict US export controls.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been the unquestionable leader of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom of the past two-plus years with the stock up more than 600% since the start of 2023 and its market cap now hovering around $3 trillion.
Reports swirl that the Trump administration is weighing tightening export controls. In his confirmation hearing Howard Lutnick, now commerce secretary, threatened to take a hard line on technology sales to China,
New York Post on MSN10d
Nvidia stock slides as CFO raises worries over ‘unknowns’ on Trump tariffs, export controlsA top Nvidia executive said President Trump’s potential tariffs and export controls on its powerful computer chips remains an “unknown” for the business in the near future.
On Thursday, Singaporean police arrested three men for allegedly smuggling Nvidia chips, Channel News Asia reported. The men, two Singaporeans and one Chinese citizen, were charged with fraud over a supply of servers.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results