AI, China and NVIDIA
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China's key weapons in its AI battle with the U.S. — massive Huawei chip clusters and cheap energy
China's strategy for competing with the U.S. on AI revolves around huge clusters of Huawei chips and cheap energy.
In this conversation, the FT’s John Thornhill and MIT Technology Review’s Caiwei Chen consider the battle between Silicon Valley and Beijing for technological supremacy.
Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang has warned that China will beat the US in the artificial intelligence race, thanks to lower energy costs and looser regulations. In the starkest comments yet from the head of the world’s most valuable company, Huang told the FT: “China is going to win the AI race.”
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang reportedly told the Financial Times that "China is going to win the AI race," before releasing a notably softer statement soon after.
China and U.S. signal openness to AI patents in the AI race, but applicants should proceed carefully
Kirk Sigmon and Hengyi Jiang of Banner & Witcoff Ltd. examine recent policy shifts in both China and the U.S. that signal a greater openness to AI-related patents, creating a more favorable environment for inventors.
Kimi K2 Thinking sets ‘new records across benchmarks that assess reasoning, coding and agent capabilities’, Moonshot AI researchers say.
Mech-Mind Robotics, a unicorn company specializing in artificial intelligence (AI) robotics, made its official debut and commenced operations in Xiong'an New Area, North China's Hebei province on Thursday, injecting fresh momentum into the area's burgeoning AI industry.
The privately held company has reached a valuation of $15 billion, as Liang wants to push the boundaries of technology.
China's regulatory authorities have ordered state-sponsored data centres that are less than 30 per cent complete to remove all installed foreign-manufactured chips or cancel plans to purchase them.