1. Samsung and SK Hynix are ramping up production of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips to meet AI-driven demand, particularly from Nvidia; 2. Both companies are upgrading facilities and developing next-gen HBM4 chips to compete with Micron; 3. The expansion aims to secure dominance in the AI semiconductor market amid rising global demand.
Related Articles
- Nvidia Rubin CPX forms one half of new, "disaggregated" AI inference architecture — approach splits work between compute- and bandwidth-optimized chips for best performanceabout 2 months ago
 - NVIDIA RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell Family for Workstations and Servers6 months ago
 - Prototype of a Particularly Sustainable and Energy-Autonomous E-Bike Terminal Developed at HKA7 months ago
 - Enhancing Chitosan Films with Silanized Hexagonal Boron Nitride for Sustainable Applications7 months ago
 - White Knight to save Shibaura7 months ago
 - Ed Rides The Tariff Roller-Coaster7 months ago
 - Image Acquisition Software Launch for Centralized Control of NanoZoomer® MD Series7 months ago
 - Trump creates U.S. Investment Accelerator to manage CHIPS Act and 'negotiate much better deals'7 months ago
 - Micron confirms memory price hikes as AI and data center demand surges7 months ago
 - Contactless Timing for Paralympic Swimming7 months ago