A timeline of the US semiconductor market in 2025
From leadership changes at legacy semiconductor companies to wishy washy policy around chip exports, a lot happened last year.
From leadership changes at legacy semiconductor companies to wishy washy policy around chip exports, a lot happened last year.
You can imagine how this is all going over in Silicon Valley, where the libertarian ethos runs deep.
Intel announces new processors produced in Arizona as the company looks to increase its U.S. manufacturing.
The Trump administration wants the industry to reach a 1:1 ratio of domestically produced and imported chips.
After strongly discouraging tech companies from buying Nivdia’s AI chips in August, the country is now banning the practice outright.
China is investigating Nvidia’s 2020 acquisition of Mellanox Technologies as trade tensions between the U.S. and China heat up.
From leadership changes at legacy semiconductor companies to wishy washy policy around chip exports, a lot has happened already.
The U.S. government’s recent stake in Intel comes after a long period of floundering at the company’s foundry business.
The Southeast Asian country reaches an AI milestone as it looks to become a more competitive player in the global AI race.
Beijing is reportedly urging Chinese companies to turn to domestic chips just weeks after Nvidia got the green light to sell in China again.