OKI (TOKYO: 6703), in collaboration with Nisshinbo Micro Devices Inc. (Head office: Tokyo; President: Keiichi Yoshioka), has successfully achieved three-dimensional (3D) integration (Note 1) of thin-film analog ICs (Note 2) using Crystal Film Bonding (CFB) technology (Note 3).
Japanese automaker Nissan is slimming down its production in the U.S. and offering buyouts to workers in a push to cut jobs after reporting losses during the last quarter. Nissan is offering voluntary separation packages to employees at assembly plants in Smyrna,
Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. 0.00% ₩356.7T
VicOne, an automotive cybersecurity solutions leader, today announced that it co-hosted with Trend Micro the world's largest zero-day vulnerability discovery contest, Pwn2Own Automotive 2025, at Automotive World,
The Black Swan author Nassim Taleb warns AI stocks investors of future setbacks. He pointed to Monday’s brutal selloff in Nvidia Corp., asserting that the
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD -6.37%) has been a top performer in the semiconductor industry over the last decade. The fabless chip stock has grabbed market share from Intel PCs and
Nasdaq futures slump as China’s DeepSeek, utilizing low-cost chips, challenges AI profitability, sparking a sell-off in tech stocks and raising doubts about chip demand.
Nvidia faced a catastrophic 16.9% drop in its stock price today, its worst day on Wall Street since March 2020. The sell-off was caused by Chinese AI company DeepSeek, who shattered confidence in the competitiveness of US tech companies.
Global chip stocks slumped Monday on DeepSeek revealing it had developed AI models that nearly matched American rivals despite using inferior chips.
By Sinéad Carew, Amanda Cooper, Ankur Banerjee NEW YORK/LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Investors sold off a host of technology stocks from Tokyo to New York on Monday as they worried that the emergence of a low-cost Chinese artificial intelligence model would threaten the dominance of current AI leaders such as Nvidia.
Global chip stocks slumped Monday after Chinese artificial-intelligence company DeepSeek said it had developed AI models that nearly matched American rivals despite using inferior chips, raising questions about the need to spend huge sums on advanced gear provided by Nvidia and other tech giants to train AI models.
DeepSeek launched a free, open-source large language model in late December, claiming it was developed in just two months at a cost of under $6 million.