NVIDIA to boost H20 chip sales to China
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Nvidia ( NVDA 1.06%) has proven itself to be the bellwether of the artificial intelligence (AI) industry. The company is the leading AI chip designer and has been among the first to speak of what's next in the field -- from sovereign AI to humanoid robots.
NVIDIA's new N1X AI PC chip has 'subtle flaws' spotted in initial validation, rumor has it modifications are required to the silicon before 2026 release.
Nvidia announced at China's International Supply Chain Expo that its H20 chips received US government approval to resume sales in the world's second-largest economy, marking a pivotal moment for the semiconductor giant's efforts to regain lost ground in a critical market.
The combination of AI and edge computing is catalyzing this transformation, enabling cities to evolve into smarter, safer and more sustainable ecosystems.
Nvidia is the dominant player in AI infrastructure, but its size could limit some of its upside. AMD and Broadcom, meanwhile, have huge opportunities. Given their smaller sizes, the stocks have the potential to outperform Nvidia in the coming years.
As the chipmaker becomes world’s most valuable company, marketers face a new reality: the AI tools reshaping creative work and ad buying rely on a single supplier with growing influence.
But Nvidia now says that Trump, having met personally with Huang, is promising to issue those licenses, which would enable Chinese AI companies to greatly accelerate model development and infrastructure buildout. And even though the H100 chips are officially still supposed to be off-limits, China may be able to get its hands on them as well.
Jensen Huang, NVIDIA's chief, is set to meet Chinese officials in Beijing amid US AI export curbs. This visit coincides with NVIDIA's brief surge to a $4 trillion market capitalisation.
Malaysia has begun requiring trade permits for U.S.-origin AI chips, including those from Nvidia, in a move to curb unauthorized shipments to China amid mounting U.S. export pressure and global semiconductor tensions.