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Zhen Zhu Wan Online Community Club of Elite Chinese

Zhen Zhu Wan Online Community Club of Elite Chinese


Nvidia losing AI chip market to Huawei
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motif

01/17/2024, 04:17:04




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thanks to US sanction.


Huawei's AI chip Ascend 910B has been selling like hot cake. The fab capacity is full, Huawei is ordering more material for chip fabrication. And the Chinese customers are switching to Huawei's ecosystem. The best way to build up a new ecosystem is to force the customer to use it, because ecosystem and customer is a chicken and egg problem. No one can force them as effectively as US government.



Ascend 910 was unveiled in 2018, actually first of its kind AI chip. But due to you know what, it stagnant. In Aug last year, its successor 910B was unveiled, with performance close to A100. Not a coincidence with the launch of Mate 60, it's an indication Huawei is able to fabricate high end chip in China.

Chinese companies aren't interested in Nvidia's slower AI chips

Polly Thompson
Jan 7, 2024, 8:07 PM GMT+8
  • Nvidia recently unveiled a slower, less powerful AI chip for sale in China.
  • The new chip allows Nvidia to comply with US export rules.
  • But Chinese firms like Alibaba and ByteDance have suggested that they're not interested in the product.

Nvidia, the world's leading AI chipmaker, recently unveiled a slower, less powerful version of a gaming processor that complies with US export controls and can be sold in China.

The GeForce RTX 4090 D chip will go on sale in January, but Nvidia is already experiencing some headwinds, with some of China's largest cloud companies indicating that they don't want to buy the chips.

Alibaba Group, Tencent, Baidu, and TikTok owner ByteDance have all suggested that they're planning to order far fewer chips from the American company this year now that its most powerful chips aren't on offer, The Wall Street Journal reported.

By downgrading its chips, there is far less of a performance gap compared with locally-made, Chinese alternatives, meaning the companies may start to shop at home instead, per the report.

Chinese firms are also concerned about potential increases to US restrictions.

The Biden Administration has made it clear that it's aiming to slow China's technological advancements, introducing a series of export restrictions in October aimed at stunting the country's chip industry.

That's led to tech companies starting to prepare for a world with less access to Nvidia's chips.

Jensen Huang, Nvidia's CEO, previously told the Financial Times that US export controls were like having "our hands tied behind our back."

China has been a crucial market for Nvidia, making up around 20% of the company's revenue, Huang said recently, per Reuters.

The California company has also enjoyed a more than 90% share of China's $7 billion AI chip market.

Related link: Chinese companies aren't interested in Nvidia's slower AI chips
Baidu placed AI chip order from Huawei in shift away from Nvidia
Huawei's GPU on par with Nvidia A100 which is banned by US






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