News & Analysis
Intel Seeks to Lessen Cash Squeeze With Brookfield Deal
By Bolaji Ojo
What’s at stake?
Intel needs far more money than it can generate from operations or receive from governments to fund its massive fab construction program. A partnership with investor Brookfield may help ease the pains.
Untether AI Aims to Become Nvidia of AI Inference
What’s at stake?
Armed with its own unique at-memory compute architecture, Untether AI wants to lead the general-purpose AI inference accelerator market. Can the startup unseat leading CPU and GPU vendors that dominate the AI training sector and are extending their reach into AI inference? Is the knock-your-socks-off performance enough to pull that off?
Chiplets Are a Second Path to Higher Integration
By Ron Wilson
What’s at stake:
As the industry moves down the Moore’s Law path toward 2nm, increasing design and process costs and spiraling complexity threaten to limit the game to only two or three fabrication companies and only a few of their customers. But a reconsideration of an old idea—building a system out of multiple dies in a single package—could break through these strictures, reopening the industry to smaller customers and giving many organizations and many countries opportunities to participate.
What Caught Our Eye This Week
Massive Recall Forces Out Philips CEO van Houten
Philips announced CEO Frans van Houten will leave the company in October. Van Houten, at the company’s helm for almost 12 years, has transformed the Dutch giant from a sprawling consumer electronics, industrial and lighting company to a leading health technology vendor.
Succeeding Van Houten is Roy Jakobs, head of the company’s Connected Care units.
Read More »What Caught Our Eye This WeekIntel Foundry Future Explained
By Bolaji Ojo
What’s at stake?
The future of Intel is in manufacturing semiconductors for other chipmakers, which could help fulfill U.S. geopolitical objectives but require the company to spin off its design operation.
Following the Money: How CHIPS Act Subsidies Will Be Spent
What’s at stake:
Taxpayer funds appropriated by Congress draw a corporate crowd. The Commerce Department now faces the daunting task of distributing CHIPS Act funding in a way that quickly rebuilds U.S. technology supply chains. We’re following the money.
What Can U.S. Learn From China’s ‘Big Fund’ Fiasco?
What’s at stake?
Big funding, no matter in what country, attracts lobbyists galore, while politicians and corporate executives jockey for pieces of the action. China’s experience in this feeding frenzy ended in the collapse of Tsinghua Unigroup and the tarnished reputation of its “Big Fund.” There are lessons here as the United States considers how to oversee, divvy up and execute the CHIPS Act.
What Caught Our Eye This Week
AMD, ECARX Partner on Digital Cockpit
AMD announced a strategic collaboration with ECARX, a Chinese mobility tech company headquartered in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province.
ECARX was co-founded in 2017 by Eric Li, founder of Geely Holding. The Chinese startup is poised to go public in the U.S. as a special purpose acquisition company. It expects to begin trading on the NASDAQ exchange in the fourth quarter.
AMD has yet to outline its automotive strategy since acquiring Xilinx. The company used the ECARX announcement to signal a foray into the global automotive market, thanks to the Geely connection. Geely owns several international brands including Lotus Cars, Lynk & Co., Polestar and Volvo.
Read More »What Caught Our Eye This WeekPatent Manager Expands Semiconductor Focus with Intel Deal
By George Leopold and Junko Yoshida
What’s at stake:
The latest outsourcing trend for technology companies includes turning over management of patent licensing to intellectual-property brokers. The deals are often based on revenue-sharing schemes. Some, like Intel, also argue the approach could eventually help reform a broken patent system.