TSMC's solid results bode well for one of its largest customers, which currently dominates the market for AI chips.
Apple and Nvidia chip producer Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp has stopped chip sales to a suspicious buyer after TSMC chips ended up in Huawei Ascend 910B AI processors, according to an unnamed Taiwanese official. The 910B is a "multi-chiplet ...
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) said on Tuesday it has informed the United States of a potential attempt by Huawei to circumvent U.S. export controls prohibiting the chipmaker from producing AI chips for the Chinese company.
TSMC’s discovery raises questions about how Huawei, considered China’s best hope of ascending the semiconductor industry, acquired advanced chips.
An investigation of Huawei Technologies Co.’s latest AI offering has unearthed an advanced processor made by Nvidia Corp. manufacturing partner Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., suggesting that China is still struggling to reliably make its own advanced chips in sufficient quantities.
TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker, bet on sustaining its strong growth, after reporting on Thursday a forecast-beating 54% jump in quarterly profit driven by soaring demand for chips used in artificial intelligence (AI).
TSMC has advised the U.S. that there was an attempt by Huawei to violate sanctions against China restricting the export of AI chips to China, as the probe that could affect Apple chip production rolls on.
In the rapidly evolving world of semiconductor technology, Synopsys and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) are at the forefront, pushing
Huawei's most advanced AI accelerator chip, the Ascend 910B, may have been manufactured by TSMC, a source familiar with the matter has disclosed to
The demand for AI "is real," said CC Wei, TSMC's chairman and CEO.
Nvidia (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang says a flaw in Blackwell AI chips that impacted production has been fixed with TSMC’s (TSM) help and the issue was “100% Nvidia’s fault,” Reuters’ Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen and Supantha Mukherjee report.