China to probe US chip subsidies
Beijing vowed "no bullying or coercion" would hamper its development and vowed to take "resolute measures" to protect China's interests.
A Camas semiconductor manufacturer could be among the next round of recipients for federal funding from the CHIPS for America program.
A sweeping 2022 law, touted by President Joe Biden as a way to revive U.S. semiconductor manufacturing and reduce reliance on foreign-made computer chips, will “sharply increase production’’ of semico
The Biden administration has issued new restrictions on the export of US-developed computer chips that power artificial intelligence (AI) systems, in a final effort to prevent rivals like China from accessing the advanced technology,
The restrictions, which serve as another example of the Biden administration's abuse of export controls against China, are built on measures the administration had already issued over the past several years to crack down on China's chip industry.
The Biden administration added more than two dozen Chinese entities to a U.S. restricted trade list on Wednesday, including Zhipu AI, a developer of large language models, and Sophgo, a company whose TSMC-made chip was illegally incorporated into a Huawei artificial intelligence processor.
The award, which promises to create 180 permanent manufacturing jobs in Saginaw County, was first announced in October.
In short, China must be taken seriously as a rival and a threat to U.S. national security in cyberspace and other domains.
Early in his 2024 campaign, the brash builder not only proposed unleashing domestic energy production but also promised to construct ten new “freedom cities” on federal land to “reopen the frontier” and “reignite American imagination.
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo says Donald Trump is a president-elect who for all of his aggressive talk is afraid to let America compete with the rest of the world, responding instead with tariffs
The Oura ring’s focus on living a balanced life—the ring will tell you when to rest, rather than chastising you for failing to exercise—comes directly from the Finnish culture of its founders, says head of human resources Marjut Uusitalo.