News

As AI wipes the job market for Gen Z, AMD CEO Lisa Su insists she’s still hiring at the $300 billion semiconductor company—and believes humanity will not be outpaced by AI.
A couple of solid AI-related catalysts should help semiconductor designer AMD fly higher in the wake of its recent hiccup.
As AI wipes the job market for Gen Z, AMD CEO Lisa Su insists she’s still hiring at the $300 billion semiconductor company—and believes humanity will not be outpaced by AI.
The first official sighting of AMD's Radeon AI Pro R9700 out in the wild is now in the books after a user on Reddit scored a ...
AI cloud company CoreWeave said demand is “insatiable” for servers containing Nvidia hardware but analysts say the next ...
Analyst Daniel Ives said this unusual arrangement removes a key growth barrier for the AI industry, with potential rippl ...
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) shares jumped Thursday after analysts suggested the company’s latest AI chips could compete with ...
The US government is reportedly using hidden trackers in AI chip shipments to prevent illegal diversion to China, sparking ...
For Nvidia, that means roughly 13% potential upside. Rakesh is watching strong sales coming through Taiwan server makers like ...
AMD CEO Lisa Su has stated that AI will not result in large-scale job losses and remains confident in human capability.
The agreement between the chipmakers and the U.S. government will allow Nvidia and AMD to obtain export licenses to resume ...
The global AI chip race narrative used to be about U.S. national security, but apparently now it's about tariffs: Nvidia and ...