വാർത്ത

Broadcom Inc aims to challenge Nvidia's AI market dominance with its 2nm chip innovation and full rack-scale AI systems.
The Trump administration is aiming to take an equity stake in Intel, according to US commerce secretary Howard Lutnick. Experts say the unconventional deal could backfire.
Details have yet to be ironed out, but it's noteworthy given that Trump has called the CHIPS Act a 'horrible' program and argued that companies don't need the money.
The Trump Administration is considering the utilization of U.S. CHIPS and Science Act funds to buy a stake in Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) in a plan to help the chipmaker expand its domestic foundry goals, ...
U.S. mulls equity stakes in chipmakers like Micron, Samsung & TSMC in exchange for CHIPS Act subsidies. Micron hiked Q4 outlook on strong DRAM demand, projecting $11.1B–$11.3B revenue and $2.78–$2.92 ...
MSN-ൽ ഹോസ്റ്റുചെയ്‌തു

Former CPO Director on chips: You want a stable long-term policy environment & incentive structure

Michael Schmidt, Princeton University distinguished visitor and former CHIPS Program Office director under President Biden, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the U.S. government exploring possible equity ...
Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) is one of the best QQQ stocks to buy right now. On August 29, Intel announced that it amended ...
Palantir cofounder Joe Lonsdale said the government's decision to take a stake in Intel is "cronyism in some form." ...
(Reuters) -Intel said on Friday it amended the CHIPS Act funding deal with the U.S. Department of Commerce to remove earlier project milestones and received about $5.7 billion in cash sooner than ...
President Donald Trump says the US government is taking a 10 percent stake in chip maker Intel. Trump shared the news during a press conference on Friday, though an official announcement is still ...
While China is determined to reduce reliance on U.S. chips, CFR’s Rush Doshi highlights that lithography hurdles could delay progress, shaping the global AI contest.
Can Ohio take an equity stake in Intel like the Trump White House? Here's what state law allows and prohibits.