Apple’s MacBooks shine in a dull PC market
Why Malaysia is attracting the world’s biggest AI data centers
“Electricity is computing power,” said Taiwan’s Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI), predicting that global data center power demand will more than double by 2030. The trend toward hyperscale facilities is accelerating, with each data center in the Americas averaging 100MW of IT capacity, about twice the global average of 50MW. Malaysia has become a key hotspot for US and Chinese tech giants expanding their AI and cloud infrastructure, while Taiwan’s average load of just 7MW underscores its lag in large-scale AI development.
AR glasses get cheaper as the next platform race begins
China’s chipmakers cash in on localization momentum
SoftBank returns to robotics with US$5.4B ABB acquisition despite Pepper, Boston Dynamics setbacks
HannStar Board revenue jumps 33% as company plans Malaysia expansion to offset margin decline
How Nexperia’s low-cost chip became a high-stakes weapon
Star Fusion pivots from gaming to semiconductors and energy
Foxconn’s Young Liu calls for regional supply chains and ‘game-changing’ AI strategy
At the Nikkei Forum in Tokyo, Young Liu, chairman of Foxconn Technology Group, said that rising geopolitical tensions between the US and China are forcing global manufacturers to rethink their business models and embrace new regional production strategies. He also urged companies to make generative AI a core part of their long-term strategy, calling it a “game changer” for the global industry.