A year after the DeepSeek shock following R1's release, US tech companies still lead in AI chips, model quality, and sales, with no change in investment trends
About the author: Chris Miller is the author of Chip War: The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology.LinkedIn:Chris MillerLinkedIn:Chris Miller:One year has passed since the Chinese AI lab Dee...
A look at the challenges facing Europe's chip industry, as the EU will likely fail to increase its 10% global chip manufacturing share to a targeted 20% by 2030
including the United States. https://www.foreignaffairs.com/ ... @foreignaffairs : “A purely European supply chain for semiconductors—the sector that undergirds the digital economy and defense sector—...
Israel compromising Hezbollah pagers shows the West must take hardware security more seriously, especially as most electronics manufacturing has shifted to Asia
Chris Miller / Financial Times :
The CHIPS Act has been surprisingly successful so far, giving the US greater scope to meet critical infrastructure needs in the event of a crisis in East Asia
Chris Miller / Financial Times :
China's chipmakers are ramping up production capacity, helped by the country's subsidies, raising concerns among western nations about China flooding the market
Chris Miller / Financial Times :
SMIC used DUV lithography, not EUV, for its 7nm chip, which isn't a breakthrough but does show progress and reaffirms China's commitment to domestic production
Chris Miller / Financial Times : Mastodon: @valeg@mastodon.social . X: @soft_fox_lad , @crmiller1 , and @fletcherschool . Forums: Beehaw Mastodon: Monsieur Valentine / @valeg@mastodon.social : @Techm...
An interview with Chris Miller, a Tufts professor and author of the book Chip War, on EUV lithography, ASML's role in global chip manufacturing, TSMC, and more
Professor Chris Miller's new book Chip War explains the complicated global politics inside your iPhone. Tweets: @brianweeden Tweets: @brianweeden : The global battle over chip manufacturing and why th...
Apple is doubly vulnerable to Chinese escalation against Taiwan, which could impact the complex iPhone components and assembly, driving production to near zero
Chris Miller / The Atlantic :