Trump says NVIDIA can sell H200 chips to China
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Futurum CEO Daniel Newman says China still needs Nvidia's H200 chips to stay competitive in AI despite political tensions, U.S. export scrutiny, and Beijing's push for domestic alternatives like Huawei.
Opinion
China’s AI Chip Deficit: Why Huawei Can’t Catch Nvidia and U.S. Export Controls Should Remain
Executive SummaryOn December 8, the Trump administration announced plans to loosen U.S. export controls on artificial intelligence (AI) chips to China by approving the sale of Nvidia H200 chips—the
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
China’s chip titan steps up to chase Nvidia as Huawei watches
China’s race to build its own high-end chips is entering a more aggressive phase, with Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation moving to close the gap with Nvidia just as Huawei sharpens its own challenge in artificial intelligence hardware.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang appeared to have scored big on Monday when the White House approved sales of his company’s H200 chips to China. But China may prefer Chinese-made chips—or smuggled ones.
According to a new report, the Trump Administration's U-turn on allowing exports of the Nvidia H200 AI accelerator chip is down to competition from China's native Huawei, which offers comparable power.
Tom's Hardware on MSN
China starts list of government-approved AI hardware suppliers: Cambricon and Huawei are in, Nvidia is not
Chinese government began to add government-approved AI suppliers to the Information Technology Innovation List in a bid to accelerate deployment of domestic hardware. But can Chinese semiconductor industry satisfy the needs of domestic AI industry?