You are currently viewing SemiWiki as a guest which gives you limited access to the site. To view blog comments and experience other SemiWiki features you must be a registered member. Registration is fast, simple, and absolutely free so please, join our community today!
I don’t understand why the US government is moving to cripple NVidia. It’s not Jensen’s fault that he’s a visionary CEO. It’s also not Jensen’s fault that Intel had incompetent leadership for 15 years before Pat Gelsinger joined in 2021.
It's AI related, nothing to do with Intel. But I posted yesterday somewhere else: " Intel's future success and its entering foundry sector is a must for US long-term benefit and a key component of the national strategic reset. Take this insight into our picture, we should be aware that this is no more a pure "market" (yield or time-to-market, etc.) competition/decision, either from technology or economy point of view, and it's very clear what will happen soon...There is no doubt Intel will retake the leading position once they move away from the shadow of their former CEOs. It may be a good time to buy Intel stocks once the most difficult time is passed."
I don’t understand why the US government is moving to cripple NVidia. It’s not Jensen’s fault that he’s a visionary CEO. It’s also not Jensen’s fault that Intel had incompetent leadership for 15 years before Pat Gelsinger joined in 2021.
I don’t understand why the US government is moving to cripple NVidia. It’s not Jensen’s fault that he’s a visionary CEO. It’s also not Jensen’s fault that Intel had incompetent leadership for 15 years before Pat Gelsinger joined in 2021.
According to Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, Nvidia was just lucky to pick GPU and AI to work on. I'm not sure if FTC and DoJ ever talked to Mr. Gelsinger for this matter?
According to Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, Nvidia was just lucky to pick GPU and AI to work on. I'm not sure if FTC and DoJ ever talked to Mr. Gelsinger for this matter?
They'll be going after lottery winners next following this logic ...
I have some instinctive distrust of very large organisations, but there's a difference between intervening to correct actual market manipulation and acting vindictively or out of jealousy simply to punish success. The US government seems to be leaning towards the second path.