The other part of this story is China’s investment in its domestic industry. Some estimates of Chinese semiconductor subsidies are as much as US$65 billion a year, even before the October 2022 US export control policy. That is an astonishing investment. China has a very ambitious goal, whic...
A lot of “me too” culture is out of date. I think most of the young generation or engineering community in Taiwan are used to staying in their comfort zone. They are not aboard for trying adventure. JUNKO YOSHIDA: How come, Judith? Why do you think that they wouldn’t want to chan...
If China can’t buy or make a single piece of a powerful chip, it could connect some less-advanced chiplets that it does have the ability to make. Together, they could potentially achieve a similar level of computing power to the chips that the US is blocking China from accessing, if ...
AI is Not "Magic" Nor is Any Other Known IT So Far and Why Does That Matter. Pioneering “AI For Good” AI-Cyber Practices across Government, Industry, Academia. AFRL-USAF Ventures: Pioneering Artificial Intelligence and AGI: To Save the World. AI & Cyber Security: Why American Public is...
China doesn’t just allow semiconductor workers to immigrate, they explicitly find people they want and go after it. There are multiple state owned enterprises which offer a highly specific and prestigious quality of life to engineers moving from Taiwan. They provide spacious accommodation near semico...
Beyond Data: Change, Uncertainty & Complexity Management Beyond Global Financial Crisis: VaR-Model Risk Management Beyond Artificial Intelligence: Build Self-Adaptive Complex Systems Beyond AI-Quantum Supremacy: Build for Command & Control Beyond Model Risk Management 'Black Hat' Model Risk Arbitrage KNOW...
Intel has its own fabrication facilities, but they lack the ability to produce their cutting-edge designs en masse. Enter TSMC, Taiwan's semiconductor powerhouse. Intel has been outsourcing chip production for Arrow Lake and others to TSMC and, in the meantime, they're building up their own ...
Why is that and how does China do it? In this article, I take my best shot at summarizing the three primary reasons for China’s resilience: A composite “three-layered duality” structure; a pragmatic approach of experimentation, learning and adaptation; and a set of highly sophisticated ...
[Narrator] The pandemic rattled supply chains and led to a surge in demand for electronics when people were stuck at home. While a perfect storm of natural disasters, a fire at one of the world's leading auto chip makers and the ongoing US-China trade war disrupted the production and ...