The White House is finalising a 15% export tax on revenue from Nvidia and AMD chip sales to China. The deal grants the companies licences for AI chips designed for the Chinese market in exchange for a revenue share. Currently limited to Nvidia and AMD, the arrangement could expand to other companies in the future. The Department of Commerce is still working on the legal and operational details. The taxed chips, including Nvidia’s H20 and AMD equivalents, are part of U.S. efforts to restrict China’s access to advanced AI technology with potential military applications, and the agreement has sparked legal and industry debate.
If finalised, the deal would give the White House a direct cut of chip sales in China — a first-of-its-kind arrangement — while allowing Nvidia and AMD to maintain access to one of their most important markets
Though AMD’s fourth-quarter overall revenue topped estimates — and it provided an solid forecast for the current period — the data center numbers overshadowed the other results.
Super Micro Computer was able to carve out a high-growth niche with it AI servers. This was the outcome of Nvidia working closely with the company to design a new line of servers and workstations that fully support its H100 GPUs.
Nvidia and AMD engage in a fierce battle for GPU dominance, shaping the future of graphics technology.
AMD has launched the world's fastest graphics processing unit (GPU), the AMD Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition, an upgrade to the existing HD 7970. The AMD
It is here! Just like they promised, AMD has made the HD 7970 official, which makes it the first ever 28nm-based ...