1469 articles
2026-04-09
eetimes.com
2026-04-09
Pat Brans
As the Nexperia episode sharpens Europe’s focus, experts say resilience will hinge on application relevance, supply chain depth, and smarter investment priorities.
2026-04-09
semiengineering.com
2026-04-09
Brian Bailey
Processor architectures are evolving faster than ever, but they still lag the pace of A...
2026-04-03
eetimes.com
2026-04-03
Emily Newton
Hardware shortages are stimulating the AI chip counterfeit market. Experts believe a hardware root of trust could alleviate authenticity and security challenges.
2026-04-01
eetimes.com
2026-04-01
Pablo Valerio
Alibaba is directly challenging global chip leaders by leveraging open-standard architecture to redefine the AI hardware landscape.
2026-04-01
semiengineering.com
2026-04-01
Ed Sperling
Full automation is still a goal, but humans will still be in the loop for the foreseeab...
2026-03-16
eetimes.com
2026-03-16
Majeed Ahmad
Here is how a prolonged war in the Middle East could turn into a disaster for the semiconductor business.
digitimes.com
The United States and China have reached a trade and investment agreement that could reshape critical technology supply chains, with Beijing committing to ease restrictions on rare earth minerals and open new government-to-government channels to manage economic ties, according to a White House fact sheet.
digitimes.com
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) CEO Lisa Su stated that the company plans to invest more than US$10 billion in Taiwan's industrial ecosystem to accelerate the development of artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure. The announcement was made during her visit to Taiwan, where she also disclosed the latest progress in collaborations with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), backend pac
digitimes.com
The global semiconductor industry is being pulled in two directions. On one side, the cost of building a single advanced chip factory has ballooned to as much as US$40 billion, concentrating production in the hands of a shrinking club of players. On the other hand, US-China technology rivalry is redrawing the map of who gets to make what — and for whom.