China turns to Malaysia for High-End GPU chip assembly during U.S. restrictions. Chinese semiconductor design companies are reportedly turning to Malaysia for the assembly of a portion of their high-end chips, known as graphics processing units (GPUs).
With a $35 million CHIPS Act grant to a local BAE Systems facility, Nashua, N.H., is pushing to train a new generation of domestic semiconductor workers.
To leapfrog in the semiconductor products business, the process of setting up business needs to be swift, and the logistics process needs to be expedited. The government has to play a bigger role directly.
The AMD Technostar campus is part of the company’s $400 million investment in India over the next five years, announced earlier this year. The campus will serve as a centre of excellence for the development of leadership products across high-performance CPUs for the data center and PCs, data center and gaming GPUs, and adaptive SoCs and FPGAs for embedded devices.
Omron Corp., a Japanese provider of health-care equipment and factory automation, is setting its sights on the lucrative chipmaking gear market to fuel future growth.