AI, China
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China’s new AI chips: How close are they to Nvidia H200?
China’s push to build its own high‑end AI accelerators has moved from aspiration to measurable silicon, and the obvious yardstick is Nvidia’s H200. The question is no longer whether Chinese vendors can tape out advanced chips,
With the rising technological prowess and greater openness of Chinese models, the world is increasingly turning to the East for efficient and customizable AI, a new report finds.
Zhipu and MiniMax are planning Hong Kong IPOs as filings show high cash spending and US chip limits, with pressure to list early before US AI giants go public in 2026 and attract global investors
It’s an “open testbed” for experimenting with “next-generation Internet” technologies at a national scale—a research/validation platform that is going to drive a specific kind of progress in a rapidly changing world. China, in a sense, has a big moat.
In the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics, China has distinguished itself as a leader in technological
He began with the foundational fact that AI is ultimately an energy-hungry technology. Training frontier models requires immense electricity— entire power stations dedicated to data centres— and here the gap is stunning.
In the city of Chifeng in northern China, an ultra-modern factory owned by green-energy company Envision is making hydrogen and ammonia using renewable electricity, helped by artificial intelligence (AI).
China’s open-weight LLMs are shifting the global AI race to an extent that neither the U.S. or China predicted.
As first reported by Bloomberg, China’s Central Cyberspace Affairs Commission issued a document Saturday that outlines proposed rules for anthropomorphic AI systems. The proposal includes a solicitation of comments from the public by January 25,