For seven hours at a Geneva hotel earlier this month, top US and Chinese officials locked into talks on collectively managing their biggest fears around artificial intelligence — while keeping up a cutthroat competition to dominate technology that promises to reshape the global economy.
Despite Samsung Electronics recently appointing a new leader for its Device Solutions (DS) division that comprises memory and foundry units, the company’s lag behind SK Hynix in leading the High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) market could become a major obstacle to its semiconductor business amid the widespread adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI), as noted by industry insiders in South Korea.
In the ever-evolving landscape of Artificial Intelligence (AI) integration, Canada-based startup Applied Brain Research (ABR) develops technology that mimics how the brain processes information efficiently.
At the second Global AI Safety Summit, South Korea and the United Kingdom jointly introduced the “Seoul Declaration,” committing world leaders to a consensus on principles for the development and regulation of AI.
In the Taiwan Strait, a majestic array of 303 wind turbines now stands tall. Amid global headwinds facing the offshore wind industry due to inflation and rising interest rates, Taiwan reached a major milestone with the completion of the Changfang-Xidao Offshore Wind Farm. The project, led by Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP), held a completion ceremony to mark this significant achievement.