ai, NVIDIA and Taiwan
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The initiatives, developed in partnership with key Taiwanese players and backed by government support, underscore Taiwan’s growing role in the global AI race.‘AI factory’ supercomputerNvidia revealed plans to build Taiwan’s first large-scale AI supercomputer,
Taiwan's Foxconn , the world's largest contract electronics maker, downgraded its full-year outlook on Wednesday citing recent appreciation of the Taiwan dollar, even as it struck an upbeat note about booming demand for AI servers.
Nvidia said it is working with Dell Technologies, HPE, Lenovo and other vendors to deliver its new RTX Pro servers that can “run virtually every enterprise workload,” including those for agentic AI, physical AI,
The Foxconn chief executive’s comments underline the growing significance of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) across industries, including automobile, for efficiency gains and cost savings.
Nvidia is rewriting the AI playbook. Instead of relying solely on U.S. cloud giants like Microsoft (MSFT) and Google (GOOGL) (GOOG), it’s striking “sovereign AI” deals with countries eager to build their own AI stacks. First Saudi Arabia. Now Taiwan.
Foxconn’s broader vision for AI-enabled smart hospitals is built on Nvidia’s full-stack solution, from data centre to bedside.
CEO Jensen Huang announced a wave of new technologies and partnerships at the Computex 2025 conference in Taiwan to reinforce the company’s dominance in AI computing space.
“Nvidia DGX Cloud Lepton connects our network of global GPU cloud providers with AI developers,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia. “Together with our NCPs, we’re building a planetary-scale AI factory.”