Bringing Taiwan to the World and the World to Taiwan

Bringing Taiwan to the World and the World to Taiwan

Chairman says memory chip supplies to remain tight until 2030 despite expansion

Bringing Taiwan to the World and the World to Taiwan

Bringing Taiwan to the World and the World to Taiwan

Nine US trade groups warned the government that AI data centers are consuming 70% of memory chip output, driving DRAM prices up over 60% and threatening

WASHINGTON, June 4 — A memory chip shortage driven by artificial intelligence demand is posing risks to sectors like consumer electronics and automobiles, trade groups warned...

A memory chip shortage driven by artificial intelligence demand is posing risks to sectors like consumer electronics and automobiles, trade groups warned

A memory chip shortage driven by artificial intelligence demand is posing risks to sectors like consumer electronics and automobiles, trade groups warned Wednesday, as they called…

Taiwan's semiconductor giant TSMC, the world's largest chip contractor, is confident about its growth over the next few years, thanks to robust...

TSMC CEO C.C. Wei warns chip supply will lag AI demand for years as advanced node capacity stays sold out through 2027, with major crypto implications.

TSMC CEO C.C. Wei says Taiwan's AI chip manufacturing dominance will be hard to challenge, as the company commits $165 billion to US expansion.

C.C. Wei told shareholders the company is working hard to avoid becoming a bottleneck as AI demand overwhelms capacity across the supply chain

Bringing Taiwan to the World and the World to Taiwan

Bringing Taiwan to the World and the World to Taiwan

Bringing Taiwan to the World and the World to Taiwan