Nvidia did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
The three women, who became friends during the police investigation and the following court case, later went on an overseas trip together after the man was imprisoned.
"At 13:09, the temperature at Xujiahui station hit 36.1 degrees Celsius (97 degrees Fahrenheit), breaking a 100-year-old record for the highest temperature in May," a post on the service's official Weibo account read.
An undated public notice said the potential expansion would give the Shanghai Gigafactory the capacity to produce 1.75 million powertrain units annually, up from 1.25 million currently.
Global and Chinese automakers plan to unveil more than a dozen new electric SUVs, sedans and muscle cars at the Shanghai auto show from April 18 to April 27, their first full-scale sales event in four years in a market that has become a workshop for developing electrics, self-driving cars and other technology.
The factory is due to break ground in the third quarter of this year and start production in the second quarter of 2024.
The automaker plans to produce a weekly average of nearly 20,000 units at its Shanghai factory in February and March, according to the memo, which detailed output plans for Tesla's most productive and profitable manufacturing hub.
Besides running Prometheus Capital, founded in 2012 as a family fund, Wang Sichong has launched a variety of businesses, none of which have reached the heights of success of his father’s ventures.
The steep rise in infections came after years of hardline restrictions were abruptly loosened last month with little warning or preparation, and quickly overwhelmed hospitals and crematoriums.
Tesla will run production for 17 days in January between Jan. 3 to Jan. 19 and will stop electric vehicle output from Jan. 20 to Jan. 31 for an extended break for Chinese New Year, according to the plan seen by Reuters.
Christmas is not traditionally celebrated in China, but it is common for young couples and some families to spend the holiday together.
A spectator's account of being in Shanghai under COVID-19 lockdown, soaking in the heritage of ancient water town Zhujiajiao, and the fear of never leaving.
The EV maker did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
It all started after the Shanghai woman ate spicy food. She started coughing violently afterwards and heard a cracking noise from her chest.
China's hardline COVID-19 strategy is stoking public frustration, with many growing weary of the snap lockdowns.
Hundreds of people took to the streets in Beijing and Shanghai on Sunday to protest against China's zero-Covid policy in a rare outpouring of public anger.
Images and videos circulated online showed students at universities in cities including Nanjing and Beijing holding up blank sheets of paper in silent protest, a tactic used in part to evade censorship or arrest.
In Beijing, cases have been hitting new highs every day, prompting calls from the city government for more residents to stay put and show proof of a negative COVID test, not more than 48 hours old, to get into public buildings.
Strict measures have been imposed across the country, from Shanghai in the east to Tibet far to the west, where anti-lockdown protests have also been reported.
Shanghai took emergency measures to secure its water supply because contamination from the sea forced authorities to cut delivery from two key reservoirs temporarily, the Beijing-based Caixin Global reported Tuesday night, citing city officials.
Under Xi, China has become the world’s dominant manufacturer of everything from cement to solar panels, as well as the main trading partner and dominant lender for most of the developing world.
London, Shanghai, Tokyo and Frankfurt declined. Oil prices edged lower but stayed above $90 per barrel.
Xiao and Tomorrow Holdings were charged with illegally siphoning away public deposits, betraying the use of entrusted property, and the illegal use of funds and bribery, the Shanghai First Intermediate Court said.
China has been in the spotlight for its draconian policies to combat COVID-19.
Shanghai shut all schools in mid-March before the city's two-month lockdown to combat its worst COVID outbreak in April and May.