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▲Alibaba's new AI chip: Key specifications comparable to H20news.futunn.com
244 points by dworks 13 hours ago | 253 comments
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pixelesque 12 hours ago [-]
Note also that today China has told its tech companies to cancel any NVIDIA AI chip orders and not to order any more:

https://www.ft.com/content/12adf92d-3e34-428a-8d61-c91695119...

pxc 7 hours ago [-]
Is this supposed to signal confidence in the chips already available on China's domestic chip market, or is it primarily aimed at boosting that market to make it ready?
acdha 6 hours ago [-]
I think those are both the case: they’re telling Chinese companies to invest in domestic hardware–implicitly also saying things like being prepared to stop using CUDA–and that means the hardware vendors know not to skimp on getting there (a nicer version of burning the landing boats on the beach).

It’s also an interesting signal to the rest of the world that they’re going to be an option. American tech companies should be looking at what BYD is doing to Tesla, but they’re also dealing with a change in government to be more like Chinese levels of control but with less maturity.

bsder 15 minutes ago [-]
Yes. :)

How big a deal is it to be on the cutting edge with this? Given that models seem to be flattening out because they can't get any more data, the answer is "not as much as you would think".

Consequently, a generation or 2 behind is annoying, but not fatal. In addition, if you pump the memory up, you can paper over a lot of performance loss. Look at how many people bought amped up Macs because the unified memory was large even though the processing units were underpowered relative to NVIDIA or AMD.

The biggest problem is software. And China has a lot of people to throw at software. The entire RISC-V ecosystem basically only exists because Chinese grad students have been porting everything in the universe over to it.

So, the signal is to everybody around this that the Chinese government is going to pump money at this. And that's a big deal.

People always seem to forget that Moore's Law is a self-fulfilling prophecy, but doesn't just happen out of thin air. It happens because a lot of companies pump a lot of money at the engineering because falling off the semiconductor hamster wheel is death. The US started the domestic hamster wheel with things like VHSIC. TSMC was a direct result of the government pumping money at it. China can absolutely kickstart this for themselves if the money goes where it should.

I'm really torn about this. On the one hand, I hate what China does on many, many political fronts. On the other hand, tech monopolies are pillaging us all and, with no anti-trust action anywhere in the West, the only way to thwart them seems to be by China coming along and ripping them apart.

TrainedMonkey 6 hours ago [-]
My cynical view is that it's mostly trade war and nationalism. If you follow the official PRC position, the chips are already made in China because TW is CN... Practically buying TW chips is boosting it's economy and hence funding it's military so from that perspective that makes sense. From long term development perspective this will absolutely boost national market... however that will take an insane amount of time. If you buy into AI is going to change everything hype, this move is a huge handicap and hence a boon to external economies. And I am probably missing a ton of viewpoints... politics meh
MaoSYJ 11 hours ago [-]
“grey market” smugglers gonna keep working on it
givemeethekeys 4 hours ago [-]
Until now it was perfectly legal to buy nVidia chips in China. It was the US that was blocking export.
arbuge 6 hours ago [-]
Are they allowed to rent them from server farms, datacenters, etc. located outside China that are able to procure them?
tonyhart7 3 hours ago [-]
"Are they allowed to rent them from server farms, datacenters, etc. located outside China that are able to procure them?"

alicloud has many cluster outside china, so they probably can because many friendly country with china has it

but it would be the same with US power play, they only permit anyone that they accept

belter 7 hours ago [-]
200% tariff incoming :-)

"Speaker Johnson says China is straining U.S. relations with Nvidia chip ban" - https://www.cnbc.com/2025/09/17/china-us-nvidia-chip-ban.htm...

Translation: "We are angry with China that they wont let the US undermine itself, and sell its strategic advantages to them..."

littlestymaar 6 hours ago [-]
> "Speaker Johnson says China is straining U.S. relations with Nvidia chip ban"

Oh, the irony.

UltraSane 6 hours ago [-]
That is going to really slow LLM development in China. But more GPUs for everyone else!
ponector 3 hours ago [-]
They have more electric power (also cheaper), more data centers. I bet AI development will be slower elsewhere.
kimixa 41 minutes ago [-]
Yup - at some level of scale it's very much an infrastructure game.

No amount of trade war politics will make up for a lack in infrastructure investment.

sameermanek 5 hours ago [-]
I mean, progress is already getting slow in llm development space and their qwen models are, well, good enough for time being. Meanwhile, its good for the world that they are working on their own chips, that way nVidia will have to stop being comfortable.

This is step in good direction for everyone except nvidia and its chinese distribution network

rich_sasha 10 hours ago [-]
Can someone ELI5 this to me? Nvidia has the market cap of a medium-sized country precisely because apparently (?) no one else can make chips like them. Great tech, hard to manufacture, etc - Intel and AMD are nowhere to be seen. And I can imagine it's very tricky business!

China, admittedly full of smart and hard working people, then just wakes up one day an in a few years covers the entire gap, to within some small error?

How is this consistent? Either:

- The Chinese GPUs are not that good after all

- Nvidia doesn't have any magical secret sauce, and China could easily catch up

- Nvidia IP is real but Chinese people are so smart they can overcome decades of R&D advantage in just s few years

- It's all stolen IP

To be clear, my default guess isn't that it is stolen IP, rather I can't make sense of it. NVDA is valued near infinity, then China just turns around and produces their flagship product without too much sweat..?

rsynnott 10 hours ago [-]
> because apparently (?) no one else can make chips like them

No, that's not really why. It is because nobody else has their _ecosystem_; they have a lot of soft lock-in.

This isn’t just an nvidia thing. Why was Intel so dominant for decades? Largely not due to secret magic technology, but due to _ecosystem_. A PPC601 was substantially faster than a pentium, but of little use to you if your whole ecosystem was x86, say. Now nvidia’s ecosystem advantage isn’t as strong as Intel’s was, but it’s not nothing, either.

(Eventually, even Intel itself was unable to deal with this; Itanium failed miserably, largely due not to external competition but due to competition with the x86, though it did have other issues.)

It’s also notable that nvidia’s adventures in markets where someone _else_ has the ecosystem advantage have been less successful. In particular, see their attempts to break into mobile chip land; realistically, it was easier for most OEMs just to use Qualcomm.

robotnikman 4 hours ago [-]
>In particular, see their attempts to break into mobile chip land;

I wouldn't exactly say it was a failure, all those chips ended up being used in the Nintendo Switch

rsynnott 3 hours ago [-]
If you are aiming to have your chips in a decent portion of all mid/high-end phones sold, which they appear to have been aiming for, then the Nintendo Switch isn't really that much of a consolation prize. The Switch had very high sales... for a console, with 150 million over 7 years. Smartphone sales peaked at 1.5 billion units a year. You'd probably prefer to be Qualcomm than Nvidia in this particular market segment, all things considered.
xgkickt 2 hours ago [-]
I thought those came from the automotive sector.
bbatha 9 hours ago [-]
It’s several factors and all of your alternatives are true to some degree:

1. An h20 is about 1.5 generations behind Blackwell. This chip looks closer to about 2 generations behind top end Blackwell chips. So ~5ish years behind is not as impressive especially since EUV is likely going to be a major obstacle to catching up which China has no capacity for

2. Nvidia continues to dominate on the software side. Amd chips have been competitive on paper for a while and have had limited uptake. Now Chinese government mandates could obviously correct this after substantial investment in the software stack — but this is probably several years behind.

3. China has poured trillions of dollars into its academic system and graduates more than 3x the number of electrical engineers the US does. The US immigration system has also been training Chinese students but having a much more limited work visa program has transferred a lot of knowledge back without even touching IP issues

4. Of course ip theft covers some of it

bangaladore 5 hours ago [-]
> China has poured trillions of dollars into its academic system and graduates more than 3x the number of electrical engineers the US does.

This metric is not as important as it seems when they have ~5x the population.

jacomoRodriguez 5 hours ago [-]
It is. The outcome rate will not grow by the relative number of electrical engineers to population but by the absolute number of the engineers.
bangaladore 4 hours ago [-]
In theory, but I'm not sure that's true in practice. There are plenty of mundane, non-groundbreaking tasks that will likely be done by those electrical engineers and the more people, the more space, the more tasks are to be done. And not to mention more engineers does not equal better engineers. And the types to work on these sorts of projects are going to be the best engineers, not the "okay" ones.

It's certainly non-linear.

immibis 3 hours ago [-]
The more engineers you can sample from (in absolute number), the better (in absolute goodness, whatever that is) the top, say, 500 of them are going to be.
KerryJones 3 hours ago [-]
This is not necessarily true. Hypothetical, if most breakthroughs are coming from PHDs and they aren't making any PHDs, then that pool is not necessarily larger.
tonyhart7 3 hours ago [-]
"not to mention more engineers does not equal better engineers."

funny that you mention this because many top AI talent from big tech companies are from chinnese Ivy league graduate

US literally importing AI talent war as highest as ever and yet you still have doubt

stefan_ 4 hours ago [-]
Doesn’t seem to work for India. Wuhan university alone probably has more impact than the sum of. Of course a competent state and strategic investment matters.
FuriouslyAdrift 6 hours ago [-]
AMDs chips outperform nVidia's (Instinct is the GPU compute line at AMD) and at a lower per watt and per dollar range.

AMD literally can't make enough chips to satisfy demand because nVidia buys up all the fab capacity at TSMC.

greenpizza13 6 hours ago [-]
Would you care to provide sources?

It's NVIDIA, not nVIDIA. I don't think AMD outperforms NVIDIA chips at price per watt. You need to defend this claim.

FuriouslyAdrift 4 hours ago [-]
By NVIDIA's own numbers and widely available testing numbers for FP8, the AMD MI355X just edges out the NVIDIA B300 (both the top performers) at 10.1 PFLOPs per chip at around 1400 W per chip. Neither of these thngs are available as a discrete device... you're going to be buying a system, but typically AMD Instinct systems run about 15% less than the comparable NVIDIA ones.

NIVIDIA is a very pricey date.

https://wccftech.com/mlperf-v5-1-ai-inference-benchmark-show...

https://semianalysis.com/2024/04/10/nvidia-blackwell-perf-tc...

https://semianalysis.com/2025/06/13/amd-advancing-ai-mi350x-...

gchadwick 10 hours ago [-]
I'd say there's a mix of 'Chinese GPUs are not that good after all' and 'Nvidia doesn't have any magical secret sauce, and China could easily catch up' going on. Nvidia GPUs are indeed remarkable devices with a complex software stack that offers all kinds of possibilities that you cannot replicate over night (or over a year or two!)

However they've also got a fair amount of generality, anything you might want to do that involves huge amounts of matmuls and vector maths you can probably map to a GPU and do a half decent job of it. This is good for things like model research and exploration of training methods.

Once this is all developed you can cherry pick a few specific things to be good at and build your own GPU concentrating on making those specific things work well (such as inference and training on Transformer architectures) and catch up to Nvidia on those aspects even if you cannot beat or match a GPU on every possible task, however you don't care as you only want to do some specific things well.

This is still hard and model architectures and training approaches are continuously evolving. Simplify things too much and target some ultra specific things and you end up with some pretty useless hardware that won't allow you to develop next year's models, nor run this year's particularly well. You can just develop and run last year's models. So you need to hit a sweet spot between enough flexibility to keep up with developments but don't add so much you have to totally replicate what Nvidia have done.

Ultimately the 'secret sauce' is just years of development producing a very capable architecture that offers huge flexibility across differing workloads. You can short-cut that development by reducing flexibility or not caring your architecture is rubbish at certain things (hence no magical secret sauce). This is still hard and your first gen could suck quite a lot (hence not that good after all) but when you've got a strong desire for an alternative hardware source you can probably put up with a lot of short-term pain for the long-term pay off.

FooBarWidget 10 hours ago [-]
What does "are not good after all" even mean? I feel there are too many value judgements in that question's tone, that blindsides western observers. I feel like the tone has the hidden implication of "this must be fake after all, they're only good at faking/stealing, nothing to see here move along".

Are they as good as Nvidia? No. News reporters have a tendency to hype things up beyond reality. No surprises there.

Are they useless garbage? No.

Can the quality issues be overcome with time and R&D? Yes.

Is being "worse" a necessary interim step to become "good"? Yes.

Are they motivated to become "good"? Yes.

Do they have a market that is willing to wait for them to become "good"? Also yes. It used to be no, but the US created this market for them.

Also, comparing Chinese AI chips to Nvidia is a bit like comparing AWS with Azure. Overcoming compatibility problems is not trivial, you can't just lift and shift your workload to another public cloud, you are best off redesigning your entire infra for the capabilities of the target cloud.

gchadwick 8 hours ago [-]
To me at least "not good after all" means their current latest hardware has issues which means it cannot replace Nvidia GPUs yet. This is a hard problem so not getting there yet doesn't imply bad engineering just a reflection of the scale of the challenge! It also doesn't imply that if this generation is a miss following generations couldn't be large win. Indeed I think it would be very foolish to assume that Alibaba or other Chinese firms cannot build devices that can challenge Nvidia here on the basis of current generation not being up to it yet. As you say they have a large market that's willing to wait for them to become good.

Plus it may not be true, this new Alibaba chip could turn out to be brilliant.

rich_sasha 9 hours ago [-]
I think my question made it clear I'm not simply assuming China is somehow cheating here - either in the specs of their current product, or in stealing IP.

No, I just struggle to reconcile (but many answers here go some way to clarifying) Nvidia being the pinnacle of the R&D-driven tech industry - not according to me but to global investors - and China catching up seemingly easily.

FooBarWidget 7 hours ago [-]
Unfortunately I think global investors are quite dumb. For example all the market analysts were very positive about ASML, Nvidia, etc but they all assumed sales to China would continue according to projections that don't take US sanctions or Chinese competition into account. Every time a sanction landed or a Chinese competitor made major step forward, it was surprise pikachu, even though enthusiasts who follow news on this topic saw it coming years ago.
BrawnyBadger53 10 hours ago [-]
The article seems to only depict it being similar to the H20 in memory specs (and still a bit short). Regardless, Nvidia has their moat through cuda, not the hardware.
ndai 4 hours ago [-]
Isn’t NVIDIA fabless? I imagine (I jump to conclusions) that design is less of a challenge than manufacturing. EUV lithography is incredibly difficult- almost implausible. Perhaps one day a clever scientist will come up with a new, seemingly implausible, yet less difficult way, using “fractal chemical” doping techniques.
hollerith 3 hours ago [-]
>design is less of a challenge than manufacturing.

If so, can you explain why Nvidia's market cap is much higher than TSMC's? (4.15 trillion versus 1.10 trillion)

JeremyNT 3 hours ago [-]
I'd just say "market irrationality" and call it a day. TSMC is far closer to a monopoly than NVIDIA is, and they win no matter which fabless company is buying their capacity.
ndai 3 hours ago [-]
You could be right. But it could also be due to things like: automatic 401k injections into the market, easy retail investing, and general speculative attitudes.
amelius 10 hours ago [-]
My question would be: how did they fab it without access to ASML's high-end lithography machines?

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/jan/02/asml-halt...

FooBarWidget 10 hours ago [-]
They've gone all-in with using less advanced equipment (DUV instead of EUV) but advanced techniques (multi patterning). Also combined with advanced packaging techniques.

Also, they're working hard on replacing ASML DUV machines as well since the US is also sanctioning the higher end of DUV machines. Not to mention multiple parallel R&D tracks for EUV.

You also need to distinguish between design and manufacturing. A lot of Chinese chip news is about design. Lots of Chinese chip designers are not yet sanctioned, and fabricate through TSMC.

Chip design talent pool is important to have, although I find that news a bit boring. The real excitement comes from chip equipment manufacturers, and designers that have been banned from manufacturing with TSMC and need to collaborate with domestic manufacturers.

amelius 10 hours ago [-]
> They've gone all-in with using less advanced equipment (DUV instead of EUV) but advanced techniques (multi patterning).

But that still seems like a huge step behind using EUV + advanced techniques.

Anyway, I'm curious to know how far that gets them in terms of #transistors per square mm.

Also, do we know there aren't secret contracts with TSMC?

FooBarWidget 9 hours ago [-]
You need to see it from their perspective. "huge step behind" is better than "we have nothing, let's just die". This is the best they have right now, and they're going all in with that until R&D efforts produce something better (e.g., domestic EUV).

It could also happen that all their DUV investment allows them to discover a valuable DUV-derived tech tree branch that the west hasn't discovered yet.

Results are at least good enough that Huawei can produce 7nm-5nm-ish phones and sell them at profit.

A teardown of the latest Huawei phone revealed that the chips produced more heat than TSMC equivalent. However, Huawei worked around that by investing massively into avdanced heat dissipation technology improvements, and battery capacity improvements. Success in semiconductor products is not achieved along only a single dimension, there are multiple ways to overcome limitations.

Another perspective is that, by domestically designing and producing chips, they no longer need to pay the generous margins for foreign IP (e.g., Qualcomm licensing fees), which is a huge cost saving and is beneficial for the economics of everything.

amelius 9 hours ago [-]
> You need to see it from their perspective. "huge step behind" is better than "we have nothing, let's just die".

Yes but that doesn't answer the question of how they got so close to nvidia.

> It could also happen that all their DUV investment allows them to discover a valuable DUV-derived tech tree branch that the west hasn't discovered yet.

But why wouldn't the west discover that same branch but now for EUV?

> Results are at least good enough that Huawei can produce 7nm-5nm-ish phones and sell them at profit.

Sidenote, I'd love to see some photos and an analysis of the quality of their process.

hadlock 5 hours ago [-]
China has been producing ARM chips like the A20, H40 (raspberry pi class competitors, dual and quad core SOC; went in to a lot of low end 720p tablets in the early 2010s) for a while now, their semiconductor industry is not zero. The biden administration turning off the chip supply in 2022 was nearly 3 years ago; three years is not nothing, especially with existing industry, and virtually limitless resources to focus on it. Probably more R&D capacity will be coming online here in the next year or two as the first crop of post-export control grads start entering the workforce in China.
FooBarWidget 7 hours ago [-]
> Yes but that doesn't answer the question of how they got so close to nvidia.

Talent pool and market conditions. China was already cultivating a talent pool for decades, with limited success. But it had no market. Nobody, including Chinese, wanted to buy Chinese stuff. Without customers, they lacked practice to further develop their qualities. The sanctions gave them a captive market. That allowed them to get more practice to get better.

> But why wouldn't the west discover that same branch but now for EUV?

DUV and EUV are very different. They will have different branches. The point however is not whether the west can reach valuable branches or not. It's that western commentators have a tendency to paint Chinese efforts as futile, a dead end. For the Chinese, this is about survival. This is why western commentators keep being surprised by Chinese progress: they expected the Chinese to achieve nothing. From the Chinese perspective, any progress is better than none, but no progress is ever enough.

9 hours ago [-]
tsoukase 1 hours ago [-]
Just some 2c totally out my head:

- Chinese labs managed to "overcome decades of R&D" because they have been trying for many years now with unlimited resources, government support and total disrespect of IP laws

- Chinese chips may not be competitive at process power/W with Western but they have cheaper electricity and again unlimited loss capacity

- they will probably hit wall at the software/ecosystem level. CUDA ergonomy is something very difficult to replicate and, you know, developers love ease of use

impossiblefork 10 hours ago [-]
>- Nvidia doesn't have any magical secret sauce, and China could easily catch up

This is the simple explanation. We'll also see European companies matching them in time, probably on inference first.

FooBarWidget 10 hours ago [-]
What gave you the impression that it's "without too much sweat"? They sweated insanely for the past 6 years.

They also weren't starting from scratch, they already had a domestic semiconductor ecosystem, but it was fragmented and not motivated. The US sanctions united them and gave them motivation.

Also "good" is a matter of perspective. For logic and AI chips they are not Nvidia level, yet. But they've achieved far more than what western commentators gave them credit for 4-5 years ago. And they're just getting started. Even after 6 years, what you're seeing is just the initial results of all that investment. From their perspective, not having Nvidia chips and ASML equipment and TSMC manufacturing is still painful. They're just not paralyzed, and use all that pain to keep developing.

With power chips they're competitive, maybe even ahead. They're very strong at GaN chip design and manufacturing.

Western observers keep getting surprised by China's results because they buy into stereotypes and simple stories too much ("China can't innovate and can only steal", "authoritarianism kills innovation","China is collapsing anyway", "everything is fake, they rely on smuggled chips lol" are just few popular tropes) instead of watching what China is actually doing. Anybody even casually paying attention to news and rumors from China instead of self-congratulating western reports about China could have seen this day coming. This attitude and the phenomenon of keep getting surprised is not limited to semiconductors.

anothernewdude 10 hours ago [-]
Flagship? No, H20 was their cut down chip they were allowed to sell to China.
tmottabr 5 hours ago [-]
No, that was the H800.

The H200 is the next generation of the H100.

spacephysics 10 hours ago [-]
Defaulting to China stealing IP is a perfectly reasonable first step.

China is known for their countless theft of Europe and especially American IP, selling it for a quarter of the price, and destroying the original company nearly overnight.

Its so bad even NASA has begun to restrict hiring Chinese nationals (which is more national defense, however illegally killing American companies can be seen as a national defense threat as well)

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9wd5qpekkvo.amp

https://www.csis.org/analysis/how-chinese-communist-party-us...

robotnikman 4 hours ago [-]
I'm not sure why you are being downvoted, this is well known knowledge and many hacks in the past decade and a half involved exfiltrating stolen IP from various companies.
buckle8017 5 hours ago [-]
It's all stolen IP.

Virtually all products out of china still are.

If you want something manufacturered the best way is still to fake a successful crowd sourcing campaign.

You'll be able to buy whatever it is on AliExpress (minus any safety features) within 6 months.

edm0nd 3 hours ago [-]
Yup this right here. The Chinese are estimated to steal hundreds of billions of dollars worth of US IP every single year. It's the Chinese way, they just steal or copy everything. Whatever gets them ahead.
fearmerchant 10 hours ago [-]
China's corporate espionage might have surpassed France at the winners podium.
notfried 12 hours ago [-]
If CUDA isn't that strong of a moat/tie-in and Chinese tech companies can seemingly reasonably migrate to these chips, why hasn't AMD been able to compete more aggressively with nVidia on a US/global scale when they had a much longer head start?
brookst 11 hours ago [-]
1. AMD isn’t different enough. They’d be subject to the same export restrictions and political instability as Nvidia, so why would global companies switch to them?

2. CUDA has been a huge moat, but the incentives are incredibly strong for everybody except Nvidia to change that. The fact that it was an insurmountable moat five years ago in a $5B market does not mean it’s equally powerful in a $300B market.

3. AMD’s culture and core competencies are really not aligned to playing disruptor here. Nvidia is generally more agile and more experimental. It would have taken a serious pivot years ago for AMD to be the right company to compete.

FuriouslyAdrift 6 hours ago [-]
AMD is HIGHLY successful in the GPU compute market. They have the Instinct line which actually outperforms most nVidia chips for less money.

It's the CUDA software ecosystem they have not been able to overcome. AMD has had multiple ecosystem stalls but it does appear that ROCm is finally taking off which is open source and multi-vendor.

AMD is unifying their GPU architectures (like nVidia) for the next gen to be able to subsidize development by gaming, etc., card sales (like nVidia).

immibis 3 hours ago [-]
Why doesn't AMD just write a CUDA translation layer? Yeah, it's a bit difficult to say "just", but they're a pretty big company. It's not like one guy doing it in a basement.

Does Nvidia have patents on CUDA? They're probably invalid in China which explains why China can do this and AMD can't.

FuriouslyAdrift 3 hours ago [-]
They did...HIPIFY translates from CUDA to HIP (ROCm)

https://rocm.docs.amd.com/projects/HIPIFY/en/latest/index.ht...

bjornsing 6 hours ago [-]
> CUDA has been a huge moat

The CUDA moat is extremely exaggerated for deep learning, especially for inference. It’s simply not hard to do matrix multiplication and a few activation functions here and there.

OkayPhysicist 5 hours ago [-]
It regularly shocks me that AMD doesn't release their cards with at least enough CUDA reimplementation to run DL models. As you point out, AI applications use a tiny subset of the overall API, the courts have ruled that APIs can't be protected by copyright, and CUDA is NVIDIA's largest advantage. It seems like an easy win, so I assume there's some good reason.
nerdsniper 5 hours ago [-]
A very cynical take: AMD and Nvidia CEO’s are cousins and there’s more money to be made with one dominant monopoly than two competitive companies. And this income could be an existential difference-maker for Taiwan.
tux1968 5 hours ago [-]
AMD can't even figure out how to release decent drivers for Linux in a timely fashion. It might not be the largest market, but would have at least given them a competitive advantage in reaching some developers. There is either something very incompetent in their software team, or there are business reasons intentionally restraining them.
wmf 3 hours ago [-]
They did; it's called HIP.
axoltl 46 minutes ago [-]
From what I've been reading the inference workload tends to ebb and flow throughout the day with much lower loads overnight than at for example 10AM PT/1PM ET. I understand companies fill that gap with training (because an idle GPU costs the most).

So for data centers, training is just as important as inference.

sciencesama 5 hours ago [-]
The drivers are the most annoying issue ! Pytorch kind of like cuda so much it just works anything with roccm just sucks !
danesparza 8 hours ago [-]
And it would be a big bet for AMD. They don't create and manufacture chips 'just in time' -- it takes man hours and MONEY to spin up a fab, not to mention marketing dollars.
FuriouslyAdrift 6 hours ago [-]
AMD has been producing GPU compute cards (and is highly sucessful at it) for nearly as long as nVidia. (https://www.amd.com/en/products/accelerators/instinct.html)
sagarm 8 hours ago [-]
AMD is fabless. They spun off GlobalFoundries years ago.
belval 9 hours ago [-]
> If CUDA isn't that strong of a moat/tie-in and Chinese tech companies can seemingly reasonably migrate to these chips, why hasn't AMD been able to compete more aggressively with nVidia on a US/global scale when they had a much longer head start?

It's all about investment. If you are a random company you don't want to sink millions in figuring out how to use AMD so you apply the tried an true "no one gets fired for buying Nvidia".

If you are an authoritarian state with some level of control over domestic companies, that calculus does not exist. You can just ban Nvidia chips and force to learn how to use the new thing. By using the new thing an ecosystem gets built around it.

It's the beauty of centralized controlled in the face of free markets and I don't doubt that it will pay-off for them.

PunchyHamster 9 hours ago [-]
I think they'd be entirely fine just using NVIDIA, and most of the push came from US itself trying to ban export (or "export", as NVIDIA cards are put together in the china factories...).

Also AMD really didn't invest enough in making their software experience as nice as NVIDIA.

belval 7 hours ago [-]
I was referring to this: https://www.reuters.com/markets/emerging/china-tells-tech-fi...
FuriouslyAdrift 6 hours ago [-]
ROCm is making serious inroads, now.
ithkuil 3 hours ago [-]
Are there precedents where an authoritarian state outperformed the free market in technological innovation?

Or would china be different because it's a mix of market and centralized rule?

eunos 11 hours ago [-]
Because Cuda moat in China is wrecked artificially by political reason rather than technical reason
nextworddev 8 hours ago [-]
This is the right answer
chii 11 hours ago [-]
AMD probably don't have chinese state backing, presumably, where profit is less of a concern and they can do it unprofitably for many years (decades even) as long as the end outcome is dominance.
shrubble 9 hours ago [-]
Sadly, AMD and its precursor graphics company, ATI, have had garbage driver software since literally the mid-1990s.

They have never had a focus on top notch software development.

8 hours ago [-]
baq 9 hours ago [-]
CUDA isn't a moat... in China. The culture is much more NIH there.
sampton 8 hours ago [-]
Because Chinese government can tell their companies to adopt Chinese tech and they will do it. Short term pain for long term gain.
buyucu 8 hours ago [-]
I use AMD MI300s at work, and my experience is that for PyTorch at least there is no moat. The moat only exists in people's minds.

Until 2022 or so AMD was not really investing into their software stack. Once they did, they caught up with Nvidia.

imtringued 7 hours ago [-]
The only way the average person can access a MI300 is through the AMD developer cloud trial which gives you a mere 25 hours to test your software. Meanwhile NVidia hands out entire GPUs for free to research labs.

If AMD really wanted to play in the same league as NVidia, they should have built their own cloud service and offered a full stack experience akin to Google with their TPUs, then they would be justified in ignoring the consumer market, but alas, most people run their software on their local hardware first.

overfeed 5 hours ago [-]
> The only way the average person can access a MI300 is through the AMD developer cloud trial which gives you a mere 25 hours to test your software

HN has a blindspot where AMDs absence in the prosumer/SME space is interpreted as failing horribly. Yet AMDs instinct cards are selling very well at the top end of the market.

If you were trying to disrupt a dominant player, would you try selling a million gadgets to a million people, or a million gadgets to 3-10 large organizations?

FuriouslyAdrift 6 hours ago [-]
AMD sells 100% of the chips they can produce and at a premium. It's chicken and the egg, here. They have to compete with nVidia for pre-buying fab capacity at TSMC and they are getting out bought.
tonyhart7 2 hours ago [-]
AMD also need to share that fab wafer capacity to processor division and third party client like (sony,valve,various hpc client)
Cheer2171 6 hours ago [-]
I can rent an MI300X for $2.69/hr right now on runpod.
dworks 11 hours ago [-]
Most chipmakers in China are making or have made their new generation of products CUDA-compatible.
belter 7 hours ago [-]
Do you know how bad AMD is at doing drivers and Software in general?
2OEH8eoCRo0 9 hours ago [-]
It's interesting that CUDA is a moat because if AI really was as good as they claim then wouldn't the CUDA moat evaporate?
random3 5 hours ago [-]
Exactly. The whole argument that software is a moat is at best a temporary illusion. The supply chain is the moat, software is not.
FrustratedMonky 10 hours ago [-]
People are trying to break the moat.

See, Mojo, a new language to compile to other chips. https://www.modular.com/mojo

PunchyHamster 9 hours ago [-]
I don't think "learn entirely new language" is all that appealing vs "just buy NVIDIA cards"
FrustratedMonky 9 hours ago [-]
This was in terms of breaking the Nvidia monopoly. Mojo is a variant of python. When looking at the difficulty of migrating from CUDA , learning python is pretty small barrier.

Sure, you can keep buying nvidia, but that wasn't what was discussed.

almostgotcaught 8 hours ago [-]
> Mojo is a variant of python.

Lol this is how I know no one that pushes mojo on hn has actually ever used mojo.

FrustratedMonky 7 hours ago [-]
Yes, over simplifying the concept. what is wrong with that? If I post a thesis on compilers would that really help clarify the subject? Read the link for details. Is Mojo attempting to offer a non-Cuda solution? Yes. Is it using Python as the language? Yes. Is there some complicated details there? Yes. Congratulations.
buckle8017 5 hours ago [-]
CUDA is a legal moat.

A reimplantation would run into copyright issues.

No such problem in China.

torginus 11 hours ago [-]
There's a very important point made in the article - with recent export controls, domestic Chinese firms don't need to beat Nvidia's best, but only the cut-down chips cleared for Chinese export.
jarym 11 hours ago [-]
The AI race is like the nuclear arms race. Countries like China will devote an inordinate amount of resources to be the best - it may take a year or two, but in the grand scheme of things that is nothing.

And NVIDIA will lose its dominance for the simple reason that the Chinese companies can serve the growing number of countries under US sanctions. I even suspect it won't be long before the US will try to sanction any allies that buy Chinese AI chips!

rhetocj23 9 hours ago [-]
China and Russia collectively have a talent pool dense enough to build future products and services the rest of the world uses, if China can produce comparative hardware for AI.

Simple example being TikTok.

Its just a matter of time really.

ponector 2 hours ago [-]
If russia has a dense talent pool why they are decades behind in chip design and manufacturing?
justapassenger 1 hours ago [-]
[dead]
cshores 5 hours ago [-]
Everything in china is a copy though. Even your example TikTok is a Vine clone
kamikazeturtles 5 hours ago [-]
The Europeans invented the car and Ford mass produced it.

Yet, we see Ford as extremely innovative and revolutionary. I think we can draw lots of parallels between a 19th and early 20th century industrializing US and current China.

overfeed 4 hours ago [-]
You may disparage TikTok as a Vine clone, but it redefined the state of the art for recsys algorithms. Google and Meta had to play catch-up with how quickly and how good TikTok is at discovering videos users find interesting out of the ocean of available content.
WhereIsTheTruth 11 hours ago [-]
> And NVIDIA will lose its dominance

They are vendor locking industries, i don't think they'll loose their dominance, however, vendor locked companies will loose their competitiveness

greenpizza13 6 hours ago [-]
"lose" not "loose" please.
TSiege 11 hours ago [-]
This is not true and a lot of Nvidi’s chips are smuggling into the country. There’s a ton of domestic pressure to be the leading chip producers. It’s part of China’s strategic plan called Made in China 2025
MangoToupe 8 hours ago [-]
Indeed. You could (and probably should) view the export restrictions as a subsidy for chinese manufacturing.
cedws 12 hours ago [-]
Apparently DeepSeek’s new model has been delayed due to issues with the Huawei chips they’re using. Maybe raw floating point performance of Chinese chips is competitive with NVIDIA, but clearly there’s still a lot of issues to iron out.
elp 12 hours ago [-]
I'm sure there are LOTS of issues that need to be addressed, but the demand for the chips are so high that the incentives are overwhelmingly in favor of this continuing. If the reported margins on the Nvidia chips are as high as the claims make it out to be (73+% ??) this will easily find a world wide market.

It was also frustratingly predictable from the moment the US started trying to limit the sales of the chips. America has slowed the speed of Chinese AI development by a tiny number of years, if that, in return for losing total domination of the GPU market.

johndhi 9 hours ago [-]
>America has slowed the speed of Chinese AI development by a tiny number of years, if that, in return for losing total domination of the GPU market.

I'm open to considering the argument that banning exports of a thing creates a market incentive for the people impacted by the ban to build aa better and cheaper thing themselves, but I don't think it's as black and white as you say.

If the only ingredient needed to support massive innovation and cost cutting is banning exports, wouldn't we have tons of examples of that happening already - like in Russia or Korea or Cuba? Additionally, even if the sale of NVIDIA H100s weren't banned in China, doesn't China already have a massive incentive to throw resources behind creating competitive chips?

I actually don't really like export bans, generally, and certainly not long-term ones. But I think you (and many other people in the public) are overstating the direct connection between banning exports of a thing and the affected country generating a competing or better product quickly.

filoleg 9 hours ago [-]
> If the only ingredient needed to support massive innovation and cost cutting is banning exports, wouldn't we have tons of examples of that happening already - like in Russia or Korea or Cuba?

That's just one of the ingredients that could help with chance of it happening, far from being "the only ingredient".

The other (imo even more crucial) ingredients are the actual engineering/research+economical+industrial production capabilities. And it just so happens that none of the countries you listed (Russia, DPRK, and Cuba) have that. That's not a dig at you, it is just really rare in general for a country to have all of those things available in place, and especially for an authoritarian country. Ironically, it feels like being an authoritarian country makes it more difficult to have all those pieces together, but if such a country already has those pieces, then being authoritarian imo only helps (as you can just employ the "shove it down everyone's throat until it reaches critical mass, improves, and succeeds" strategy).

However, it is important to remember that even with all those ingredients available on hand, all it means is that you have a non-zero chance at succeeding, not a guarantee of that happening.

lukevp 9 hours ago [-]
Russia and Korea and Cuba don’t have the economy, manufacturing and competent research scientists that China has
teyc 9 hours ago [-]
Head of SMIC was ex TSMC IIRC. They were able to poach TSMC engineers because Taiwan didn’t pay as well.
robotnikman 4 hours ago [-]
>They were able to poach TSMC engineers because Taiwan didn’t pay as well.

Apparently that was an issue for them when it came to hiring people to work at their US fabs as well.

antonvs 8 hours ago [-]
Russia and Cuba? Why not mention Somalia and Afghanistan? They're about equally relevant in this context.

South Korea might have the capability to play this game (North Korea certainly doesn't), but it hasn't really had the incentive to.

Which brings us to the real issue: an export ban on an important product creates an extremely strong incentive, that didn't exist before. Throwing significant national resources at a problem to speculatively improve a country's competitiveness is a very different calculation than doing so when there's very little alternative.

brazukadev 9 hours ago [-]
The catch-up would happen one way or another but with the exports ban it definitely accelerated
smokefoot 11 hours ago [-]
I mean, I don’t know how long the NVIDIA moats can hold. With this much money at stake, others will challenge their dominance especially in a market as diverse and fragmented as advanced semiconductors.

That’s not to say I’m brave enough to short NVDA.

mark_l_watson 11 hours ago [-]
I think that NVIDIA’s moat is the US government. Remember our government’s efforts to prevent the use of Huawei cell infrastructure in Europe and around the world?

I am a long time fan of Dave Sacks and the All In podcast ‘besties’ but now that he is ‘AI czar’ for our government it is interesting what he does not talk about. For example on a recent podcast he was pumping up AI as a long term solution to US economic woes, but a week before that podcast, a well known study was released that showed that 95% of new LLM/AI corporate projects were fails. Another thing that he swept under the rug was the recent Stanford study that 80% of US startups are saving money using less expensive Chinese (and Mistral, and Google Gemma??) models. When the Stanford study was released, I watched All In material for a few weeks, expecting David Sack’s take on the study. Not a word from him.

Apologies for this off-topic rant but I am really concerned how my country is spending resources on AI infrastructure. I think this is a massive bubble, but I am not sure how catastrophic the bubble will be.

heavyset_go 10 hours ago [-]
> Remember our government’s efforts to prevent the use of Huawei cell infrastructure in Europe and around the world?

The US is burning good will at an alarming rate, how long will countries keep paying a premium to be spied on by the US instead of China?

mark_l_watson 10 hours ago [-]
I think the answer to your question is ‘not for very long.’ I frequently have breakfast with a friend who is a retired math professor and he is an avid investor in the stock market. We talk a lot about how long the US stock market will keep increasing in value. We don’t know the answer about the stock market, but it is fun to talk about. We both want to start easing out of the stock market.
rsynnott 9 hours ago [-]
The main competitors to Huawei in cell network stuff are mostly European (Nokia and friends), not American.
anonymousDan 9 hours ago [-]
You say 95% failed like it's a bad thing - a 5% success rate sounds reasonable to me in terms of startups!
GoatInGrey 9 hours ago [-]
It's not startup success rate, it's application of the technology at companies. Meaning that 95% of the time that AI is applied to a work problem, it fails to generate material value over existing methods.
nikkwong 9 hours ago [-]
Sacks has always been absolutely disingenuous and interested in pedaling his own interests over the interests of the common good. As a total Trump shill he talks out of both sides of his mouth at the same time & accuses the left of things that he has no problem with when he or his own party does it.

Anyone who's listened to him (even those who align with him politically) for an extended period of time can't help but to notice so obviously so self interested to the point of total hypocrisy—the examples of which are too many to begin to even wanting to enumerate. Like—take the Trump/Epstein stuff, or the Elon/Trump fallout—topics he would absolutely lose his sh*t over if these were characters on the left. I find it hard to believe anyone actually ever took him seriously. Branding myself as a fan of his would just be a completely self-humiliating insult to my intelligence and my conscience IMO.

giancarlostoro 9 hours ago [-]
> a week before that podcast, a well known study was released that showed that 95% of new LLM/AI corporate projects were fails.

I mean. I think some of us knew this. There's a lot of issues with AI, some psychological, some are risk adverse individuals who would love to save hours, weeks, months, maybe years of time with AI, but if AI screws up, its bad, really bad, legal hell bad, unless you have a model with a 100% success rate for the task, it wont be used in certain fields.

I think in the more creative fields its very useful, since hallucinations are okay, its when you try to get realistic / look reasonably realistic (in the case of cartoons) that it gets iffy. Even so though, who wants to pay the true cost of AI? There's a big uphill cost involved.

It reminds me a lot of crypto mining, mostly because you need an insane amount to invest into before you become profitable.

ivape 9 hours ago [-]
They are heavy into AI investing but will tell people AI startups are just toy apps (Chamath). That podcast is full of crooks. I’d be willing to give them a pass as bunch of old white guy techies that just love to talk about tech, but they are literally at the dinner table with Trump and Musk.

This country used to have congressional hearings on all kinds of matters from baseball to the Mafia. Tech collusion and insider knowledge is not getting investigated. The All-in podcast requires serious investigation, with question #1 being “how the fuck did you guys manage to influence the White House?”.

Other notes:

- Many of them are technically illiterate

- They will speak in business talk , you won’t find a hint of intimate technical knowledge

- The more you watch it, the more you realize that money absolutely buys a seat at the table:

https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/goskagit.com/co...

(^ Saved myself another thousand words)

hbarka 8 hours ago [-]
Remember that time in history when Chamath thought he found gold in SPACs. Hubris is easily forgotten or forgiven.
dworks 11 hours ago [-]
"Your margin is my opportunity" as someone said. Certainly Google must have plans to sell its chips externally with this much up for grabs?
heavyset_go 10 hours ago [-]
They make more money using them themselves or renting out their time to others.
mark_l_watson 11 hours ago [-]
I was also wondering if Google would try to make profit from selling TPUs, but they probably won’t because:

At least for me, Google has some real cachet and deserves kudos for not losing money selling Gemini services, at least I think it is plausible that they are already profitable, or soon will be. In the US, I get the impression that everyone else is burning money to get market share, but if I am wrong I would enjoy seeing evidence to the contrary. I suspect that Microsoft might be doing OK because of selling access to their infrastructure (just like Google).

alephnerd 11 hours ago [-]
There's no point selling TPUs when you can bundle TPU access as part of much more profitable training services. The margins are much higher providing a service as part of GCP versus selling.
mark_l_watson 10 hours ago [-]
I agree. Amazon and I think Microsoft are also working on their own NVIDIA replacement chips - it will be interesting to see if any companies start selling chips, or stick with services.
alephnerd 10 hours ago [-]
From what I'm hearing in my network, the name of the game is custom chips hyperoptimized for your own workloads.

A major reason Deepseek was so successful margins wise was because the team heavily understood Nvidia, CUDA, and Linux internals.

If you have an understanding of the intricacies of your custom ASIC's architecture, it's easier for you to solve perf issues, parallelize, and debug problems.

And then you can make up the cost by selling inference as a service.

> Amazon and I think Microsoft are also working on their own NVIDIA replacement chips

Not just them. I know of at least 4-5 other similar initiatives (some public like OpenAI's, another which is being contracted by a large nation, and a couple others which haven't been announced yet so I can't divulge).

Contract ASIC and GPU design is booming, and Broadcom, Marvell, HPE, Nvidia, and others are cashing in on it.

coredog64 9 hours ago [-]
I wouldn't be surprised if a fair portion of Amazon's Bedrock traffic is being served by Inferentia silicon. Their margins on Anthropic models are razor thin and there's a lot of traffic, so there's definitely an incentive. Additionally, every model that's served by Inferentia frees up Nvidia capacity for either models that can't be so served or for selling to customers.
Mistletoe 10 hours ago [-]
Do you have a link or references showing Google isn’t losing money on Gemini?
mark_l_watson 10 hours ago [-]
Earning report does not break out profit from Gemini separately, but this is still useful https://abc.xyz/assets/34/fa/ee06f3de4338b99acffc5c229d9f/20...

A long time ago I worked as a contractor at Google, and that experience taught me that they don’t like things that don’t scale or are inefficient.

brazukadev 9 hours ago [-]
That's the same as saying that Google is winning the AI race because they don't like losing. They won't win anything if we are in a bubble that burst tho
GoatInGrey 9 hours ago [-]
A hypothetical AI bubble bursting doesn't mean that every single AI vendor fails completely. Like the Dot-Com Bubble, the market value drops precipitously and many companies fold, but because the market value does not fall to zero, the survivors (i.e. Amazon) still win.
hiddencost 10 hours ago [-]
Fabrication is the bottle neck. They can't even meet internal demand.
mrktf 11 hours ago [-]
As long as only TMSC is only top performance chip producer and it is possible to reserve all it manufacturing capacity for one two clients the NVIDIA will hold without problem...

My opinion, the problems for NVIDIA will start when China ramp up internal chip manufacturing performance enough to be in same order of magnitude as TMSC.

impossiblefork 10 hours ago [-]
But all sorts of people get their things fabbed by TSMC.

Cerebras get their chipped fabbed by them. I assume Eucyld will have their chips fabbed by them.

If there's orders, why would they prefer NVIDIA? Customer diversity is good, is it not?

nebula8804 6 hours ago [-]
TSMC and NVIDIA's relationship has gone back for more than 20 years. In the NVIDIA biography they talk about how TSMC really helped NVIDIA out early on when other suppliers just couldn't meet the quality and rate demands that NVIDIA aspired to. That has led to a strong relationship where both sides have really helped each other out.
impossiblefork 5 hours ago [-]
Yes, but other are still getting chips from them. I think it's just a matter of having enough demand.
re-thc 9 hours ago [-]
> If there's orders, why would they prefer NVIDIA? Customer diversity is good, is it not?

Money talks. Apple asked for first dips a while earlier (exclusively).

impossiblefork 5 hours ago [-]
But other people are literally getting their things fabbed by them.

AMD are, Cerebras are, I assume OpenChip's and Euclyd's machines will be.

user34283 11 hours ago [-]
I'm not knowledgeable about this, but I wonder how important performance really is here.

Wont it be enough to just solder on a large amount of high bandwidth memory and produce these cards relatively cheaply?

alephnerd 11 hours ago [-]
> but I wonder how important performance really is here.

Perf is important, but ime American MLEs are less likely to investigate GPU and OS internals to get maximum perf, and just throw money at the problem.

> solder on a large amount of high bandwidth memory and produce these cards relatively cheaply

HBM is somewhat limited in China as well. CXMT is around 3-4 years behind other HBM vendors.

That said, you don't need the latest and most performant GPUs if you can tune older GPUs and parallelize training at a large scale.

-----------

IMO, Model training is an embarrassingly parallel problem, and a large enough cluster leveraging 1-2 generation older architectures that is heavily tuned should be able to provide similar performance to train models.

This is why I bemoan America's failures at OS internals and systems education. You have entire generations of "ML Engineers" and researchers in the US who don't know their way around CUDA or Infiniband optimization or the ins-and-outs of the Linux kernel.

They're just boffins who like math and using wrappers.

That said, I'd be cautious to trust a press release or secondhand report from CCTV, especially after the Kirin 9000 saga and SMIC.

But arguably, it doesn't matter - even if Alibaba's system isn't comparably performant to an H20, if it can be manufactured at scale without eating Nvidia's margins, it's good enough.

TylerE 11 hours ago [-]
Isn’t memory production relatively limited also?
TSiege 11 hours ago [-]
They are currently doing this. It’s part of their Made in China 2025 plan
StopDisinfo910 10 hours ago [-]
> That’s not to say I’m brave enough to short NVDA.

Their multiples don't seem sustainable so they are likely to fall at some point but when is tricky.

re-thc 9 hours ago [-]
> Their multiples don't seem sustainable so they are likely to fall at some point but when is tricky.

They've been trying really hard to pivot and find new growth areas. They've taken their "inflated" stock price as capital to invest in many other companies. If at least some of these bets pay off it's not so bad.

xbmcuser 11 hours ago [-]
google has already started offering its TPUs to other neocloud providers
xnx 11 hours ago [-]
I hadn't heard that. Source?
xbmcuser 10 hours ago [-]
https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/google-offers-its...
xnx 9 hours ago [-]
Interesting. I read that as Google is using colocation to host its TPUs. I don't think Google is selling its TPUs like Nvidia sells H100s.
catigula 9 hours ago [-]
Slowing AI development by even one month is essentially infinite slowness in terms of superintelligence development. It's a kill-shot, a massive policy success.

Lost months are lost exponentially and it becomes impossible to catch up. If this policy worked at all, let alone if it worked as you describe, this was a masterstroke of foreign policy.

This isn't merely my opinion, experts in this field feel superintelligence is at least possible, if not plausible. This is a massively successful policy is true, and, if it's not, little is lost. You've made a very strong case for it.

jyscao 9 hours ago [-]
>in terms of superintelligence development

doing a lot of heavy lifting in your conjecture

catigula 7 hours ago [-]
This is not merely my opinion, but that of knowledgable AI researchers, many of whom place ASI at not a simple remote possibility, but something they see as almost inevitable given our current understanding of the science.

I don't see myself there, but, given that even the faint possibility of superintelligence would be an instant national security priority #1, grinding China into the dust on that permanently seems like a high reward, low risk endeavor. I'm not recruitable via any levers myself into a competitive ethnostate so I'm an American and believe in American primacy.

11 hours ago [-]
maxglute 3 hours ago [-]
Reported by one of the more least credible PRC reporters on FT who should be thoroughly ignored.
cshores 5 hours ago [-]
The Chinese state operates the country much like a vast conglomerate, inheriting many of the drawbacks of a massive corporation. When top leadership imposes changes in tools or systems without giving engineers the opportunity to run proof-of-concept trials and integration tests to validate feasibility, problems like these inevitably arise.
eagerpace 9 hours ago [-]
Why do we look at these as a race? There is nothing to win. Nobody won space, or nukes, and they won’t win AI. You might get there first, but your competitor will get there soon after regardless. Embrace it.
TechSquidTV 9 hours ago [-]
We win. The companies think they'll "win", and I'm fine letting them. The race is good for us.
xorcist 9 hours ago [-]
There is no us and them!

But them, they do not think the same.

9 hours ago [-]
CamperBob2 47 minutes ago [-]
Huh? Things would certainly have turned out very differently if Nazi Germany or Imperial Japan had won the nuke game.
neworder56 9 hours ago [-]
Considering the fact China controls most of the world supply of rare minerals, considering the fact the US is lead by a incompetent leader, considering the fact Nvidia looses a big market, I think China can compete with even the leading Nvidia chips in a couple of years time.

If that happens, China in turn can export those Chips to countries that are in dire need of Chips, like Russia. They can export to Africa, South-America and the rest of Asia. Thus resulting in more competition for Nvidia. I see bright times ahead, where the USA no longer controls all of the worlds chip supply and OS systems.

I see this as an absolute win.

Citizen_Lame 9 hours ago [-]
China doesn't control the supply of rare minerals but rather production. Rare minerals are not really rare, but the processing them is a "dirty" business and does lot of damage to environment.

China has managed to monopolise the production (cheap prices) and advance the refinement process, so other domestic projects to extract rare earth minerals were not really profitable. To start it again would take some time.

olaulaja 4 hours ago [-]
Not a word on compute or interconnect speeds. All this really says is they stuck some HBM on a chip.
aurareturn 11 hours ago [-]
US government f'ed over Nvidia's China market dominance in order to help OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, xAI.

China shouldn't be buying H20s. Those are gimped 3 year old GPUs. If Nvidia is allowed to sell the latest and greatest in China, I think their revenue would jump massively.

reilly3000 6 hours ago [-]
For a comparison, the latest Nvidia Blackwell cards have up to 8tb/sec memory bandwidth vs 700GB/sec here.
_zoltan_ 6 hours ago [-]
funny that you didn't capitalize TB properly but did GB. :)

anyway.

VR200 supposedly has 20TB/s HBM, so I wish good luck to all these copy cats to catch up.

MonkeyClub 10 hours ago [-]
This conveniently coincides with China banning purchases of Nvidia AI chips:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45275070

jarym 11 hours ago [-]
One of these headlines in the next few months will spark a US market selloff greater than what we saw on the initial DeepSeek release.

I believe about 1000 S&P points down - to just above the trade war lows from April.

h1fra 10 hours ago [-]
If CUDA is nvidia's moat, which has basically created a monopoly, how long until there is an anti-monopoly trial against them in EU or even in the US?
seatac76 6 hours ago [-]
So about 5 years behind the cutting edge, SMIC showed their advanced lithography tools today(still no ASML) but come 2030 at this rate? Hard to say they won’t catch up.
boggio 1 hours ago [-]
While their lithography may lag, their system-level engineering is leveraging unique strengths. China's lack of power constraints allows them to build massive, optically-networked systems like the CloudMatrix 384. There is a SemiAnalysis that compares it to Nvidia’s GB200 NVL72. It looks like they overcome weaker individual chips to outperform Nvidia’s GB200 NVL72 with 2x the compute, 3.6x the aggregate memory, and 2.1x the memory bandwidth. with scale-out networking and software optimization, not just silicon.
buyucu 2 hours ago [-]
The A100 gpu is almost 5 years old at this point, and still useful for a lot of things.
zer00eyz 6 hours ago [-]
This article is propaganda.

If you have the most basic understanding of chips its not just design, as that has a high degree of coupling to manufacturing and this article doesn't say where, who or how the chips are being made.

China, at last check was behind Intels home grown chip making efforts when it came to sizes and yields.

Hype and saber rattling to get the US to (Re)act, or possibly ignore the growing black market for Nvidia gear (that also happens to be bi-directional with modified cards flowing back to the US).

buyucu 2 hours ago [-]
I hope China floods the world with cheap, affordable GPUs. We’re sick and tired of the Nvidia tax.
byyoung3 9 hours ago [-]
isnt the h20 nerfed anyways? H20’s FP16/BF16 performance is reduced to ~148 TFLOPS vs ~1,979 TFLOPS for the H100?
tw1984 10 hours ago [-]
Several years ago, whenever some Chinese engineers dared to propose using some Chinese parts, the challenges he/she had to face is always "who is going to be responsible if it is not reliable enough for its quality?"

Nowadays, whenever some Chinese engineers dared to propose using some American parts, the challenges he/she had to face is always "who is going to be responsible if it is not reliable enough for its supply?"

tonyhart7 3 hours ago [-]
if the card is legit and china can scale it to millions

then its just matter of time when SOTA model is produced from china first or not

techlatest_net 7 hours ago [-]
[dead]
g42gregory 4 hours ago [-]
So faced with a choice of buying hobbled H20 GPU chips vs developing their own (so far behind the SOTA), the Chinese market decided to develop/buy their own GPU chips?

Who could have possibly seen this coming? /s

gok 7 hours ago [-]
tldr it's somewhat comparable to an A100, which was released in May 2020.
rapsey 12 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
glimshe 11 hours ago [-]
We've heard that about Japan in the 80s and the Soviet Union a couple of decades earlier. While China is a mighty competitor, they also have structural problems they don't hesitate to sweep under the rug.

The jury is out there about whether China can take a meaningful lead in any major technological field the US and Europe are actively invested in.

mark_l_watson 10 hours ago [-]
I think that The Plaza Accord (1985) ended up crippling Japan economically. The Plaza Accord is an excellent example of my country benefiting from military and economic power - unfortunately, the days of us getting away with this kind of behavior are probably over.

That said, we will probably get away with bullying Europe for a while longer. Canada seems to be standing up to USA pressure fairly well. Europe needs to do the same, and they will probably eventually get there.

dash2 9 hours ago [-]
I'm interested, how did US economic/military power feed in to the Plaza Accord?
mark_l_watson 9 hours ago [-]
Short answers: dollar dominance and market access leverage.

The argument for benefits of US economic power are clear. Less clear is military power:

The Plaza Accord was framed as cooperation among G5 allies. But in practice U.S. security guarantees gave it disproportionate influence. Japan, for example, had little independent military capability, so its security reliance on the U.S. translated into willingness to accept U.S. economic pressure.

bigthymer 7 hours ago [-]
> The Plaza Accord was framed as cooperation among G5 allies. But in practice U.S. security guarantees gave it disproportionate influence. Japan, for example, had little independent military capability, so its security reliance on the U.S. translated into willingness to accept U.S. economic pressure.

Really hit the nail on the head here.

If we extrapolate this way of thinking to Europe, the US keeps pushing Europe to fund more of its own defense. If Europe does so, the US will probably find that a more independent Europe may be less likely to agree with the US on other global issues since Europe will need the US less in Europe.

dworks 7 hours ago [-]
They made Japan agree to doubling the exchange rate of the Yen, which crashed their exports among other things.
contrarian1234 10 hours ago [-]
> they also have structural problems they don't hesitate to sweep under the rug

lol, people has been saying this for the past two decades. The truth of the matter is everyone and their mom has "structural problems". Each time I visit their quality of life is only improving there and the pace of progress hasn't slowed down

xbmcuser 11 hours ago [-]
Japan was destroyed by US as it was dependent and subservient to US as a market as well with US army and navy all over Japan. They unlike China could not say fuck off
jcfrei 11 hours ago [-]
Japan wasn't "destroyed" - they fell into the same trap that most emerging countries fall into eventually. Massive economic growth -> people become more wealthy -> they put it all into real estate -> real estate market collapses -> people are disillusioned, stop spending and growth crumbles. Happens to many nations that try to enter the group of high-income economies, same with China. The problem is that people don't trust any other asset besides housing to put their savings in. That creates a bubble and a lack of private investment in other parts of the economy.
dworks 11 hours ago [-]
look up the plaza accord. It led to a bubble that eventually burst and an uncompetitive export industry as the JPY doubled.
jcfrei 10 hours ago [-]
Two sides of the same coin. The yen appreciation didn't change the trade deficit the US had with Japan substantially. Japan's own actions after the plaza accord (very loose monetary policy) lead to the asset bubble I described. That's because domestic consumption was weak and everyone used excess savings for the housing market - rather than buying more goods domestically. Which lead to the bubble I described.
dworks 10 hours ago [-]
If you read the Wikipedia article more carefully you would have understood that the loose monetary policy was an effect of the Plaza Accord, hence why I mentioned it.
paganel 10 hours ago [-]
China is ten times bigger than Japan was at the time, a big enough difference in quantity has its own quality. China also has a much easier/cheaper access to natural resources compared to Japan, both internally and from external partners that are shunned by the US (think Russia or Iran).
hollerith 9 hours ago [-]
That's not an effective reply to GP because during the process GP describes ("Massive economic growth -> . . .") Japan has enjoyed complete freedom to engage in ocean shipping and ocean trade unless perhaps you want to argue that the knowledge that this freedom to trade could stop at any time (e.g., because of a new world war) prevented Japanese decision makers from making full use of ocean trade.

Also, China would not have been able to rise anywhere near as high as it has without intensive use of ocean trade.

In other words, although national economic independence matters a lot, it matters only in specialized circumstances, namely, war that is not restricted to only a few countries, but rather spreads to cover large areas of ocean; Washington's deciding to stop policing the world ocean; or Washington's deciding to stop enforcing a policy of freedom of shipping and freedom of ocean trade for every nation (modulo US sanctions).

dworks 7 hours ago [-]
The US cannot sanction China's shipping of goods.
alephnerd 9 hours ago [-]
The median Chinese in 2025 is also much poorer (edit: and much older [2] and less educated [3]) than the median Japanese in the 1980s or 1990s.

China has built a successful tech pipeline, but it doesn't translate to significant prosperity in a country where median disposable household incomes are around $400/mo [0] - much lower than their peers in Thailand [1]. And China's HDI only caught up with Thailand's over the past 2-3 years, and China's GDP per capita has been stagnant for 4 financial years now.

This does NOT imply Chinese collapse, but it does highlight real issues that exist with the China story.

From a power projection perspective, China has capabilities that very few nations have and can tie with the US, but that has not translated to mass prosperity in the way growth in 1970s and 1980s Japan did. It is still an open question about whether or not China "Japanifies" or not.

China is now at a crossroads, similar to what South Korea, Thailand, and Malaysia faced in the 1990s.

As long as the Xi admin remains avowedly opposed to what he termed "Welfarism" ("福利主义典范国家,中产塌陷、贫富分化、社会撕裂、民粹喧嚣,这不乏警示— 防止落入“福利主义”养懒汉陷阱"), Chinese growth will sputter.

[0] - https://www.stats.gov.cn/english/PressRelease/202501/t202501...

[1] - https://www.nso.go.th/nsoweb/storage/survey_detail/2023/2023...

[2] - https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/median-age

[3] - https://globaldatalab.org/shdi/table/msch/CHN+JPN/?levels=1+...

paganel 9 hours ago [-]
> The median Chinese in 2025 is also much poorer than the median Japanese in the 1980s or 1990s.

Yes, and that’s a big plus for China, it means that there’s still room for productive growth. The also means that the price of labor will still continue to be competitive.

alephnerd 9 hours ago [-]
> it means that there’s still room for productive growth

The median Chinese in 2025 is also much older than the median Japanese was in 1990 when their bubble burst. Without welfare expansion and a broad project to increase the prosperity of the median Chinese household, growth will sputter - as it already is [0]

Xi's admin remains avowedly opposed to what he termed "Welfarism" ("福利主义典范国家,中产塌陷、贫富分化、社会撕裂、民粹喧嚣,这不乏警示— 防止落入“福利主义”养懒汉陷阱") [1], and almost all stimulus provided is supply-side.

Chinese households need to either earn enough so they can save for a rainy day and consume, or the state needs to dramatically increase the scope of it's social safety net to incentivize spending.

China needs a "New Deal" style welfare reform if it wants to escape Japanification at this stage.

> The also means that the price of labor will still continue to be competitive.

It's isn't anymore. China's costs have caught up with those of Mexico and Malaysia's, so cost sensitive manufacturing began leaving over a decade ago to Vietnam, Mexico, and India.

High value manufacturing has taken off in China, but generates very few jobs, because a heavily automated factory requires much fewer and much more educated employees, which locks out a large number of Chinese as the average age of schooling amongst working age Chinese is around 8-9 years [2]

[0] - https://www.reuters.com/world/china/chinas-economy-slumps-au...

[1] - http://theory.people.com.cn/n1/2021/1116/c40531-32283350.htm...

[2] - https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/average-years-of-schoolin...

dworks 7 hours ago [-]
It definitely has resulted in mass prosperity.
csomar 10 hours ago [-]
I kinda feel their bubble burst would have happened anyway but they wouldn’t treat themselves to a plaza accord kind of deal.
11 hours ago [-]
JimDugan 11 hours ago [-]
EVs, Batteries, Civilian Drones, Quantum Communications, Robotics (Industrial & Consumer), Clean Energy (Solar, Wind, Nuclear tech).

Have you been living under a rock the past couple of years?

rabidonrails 11 hours ago [-]
Don't be duped by China's clean energy talk. Their energy infra is mainly coal and they continue to build (dirty) coal plants.

They sell you solar infra so that you can feel good about protecting the world while they continue to build coal plants. For reference, in 2023 they built 95% of the world's new coal plants...

Don't be fooled.

ddeck 8 hours ago [-]
You're right, but it's not quite so black and white. They are certainly continuing to build out coal capacity, but they are building solar/hydro/nuclear/wind generation at a greater rate, such that the proportion of generation from coal has been falling, from over 70% ten years ago, to about 55% currently.
rapsey 10 hours ago [-]
They also connected more solar to their grid than the rest of the world combined. China is massively increasing their power generation capacity and yes most of it is still coal. They are also building 20+ nuclear reactors. The scale of what China is doing is mind boggling.
palmotea 8 hours ago [-]
> The jury is out there about whether China can take a meaningful lead in any major technological field the US and Europe are actively invested in.

They might not have to do that to dominate. They'd dominate if they're just near the cutting edge and cheaper.

And the US and Europe have shown a lot of shortsightedness and incompetence by abandoning technological fields when faced with Chinese competition (e.g. solar panels). They're too blinded by free market economics to make the right decisions.

sschueller 11 hours ago [-]
> they also have structural problems they don't hesitate to sweep under the rug

I have the feeling the US is creating giant problems by putting massive tariffs on allies and pretending they don't hurt themselves.

9dev 10 hours ago [-]
The tariffs are really just a symptom of the underlying disease that is fully eroded trust in the stability of the United States. If everything can change at any time, and the president makes up his mind about anything from tariffs to wars to brand logos, turning a full 180 degrees every so often, how could you do long-term business?
sschueller 10 hours ago [-]
That is exactly the issue.

Why would you invest billions to build a factory when the president at anytime just decides that you can no longer build it or it's of "national security" and forces you to sell it at a loss?

At that point I would build the factory in China or India were the market is much bigger and at the moment the risk appears lower.

rhetocj23 9 hours ago [-]
Precisely.
loudmax 11 hours ago [-]
Unfortunately for the US, the administration is also furtively generating brand new structural problems.
dan-robertson 9 hours ago [-]
EVs/solar counterexamples?
glimshe 9 hours ago [-]
The US isn't seriously invested in either due to poor demand and irregular government interest. The US wants fossil (oil and gas) and trucks, two areas where it crushes China (for better or worse).
walls 8 hours ago [-]
Does TikTok not count?
palmotea 8 hours ago [-]
> Chinese tech dominance is inevitable and anything the US tries to do to contain it will just hasten the inevitable.

Only if we let our business leaders and economists make the decisions.

maxdo 7 hours ago [-]
It's already done - they have unmatched engineering capabilities.

Whatever resources you are thinking they are much better.

- math and engineers- soft/hard. they are #1 in the world, and their education system is ready to produce in 2-3 years even more in any domain.

- electricity for ai, they are producing nuclear plants and solar like candies.

- semiconductor industry - NVIDIA + TSMC is really the last frontier. They are leaders everywhere else.

The US is run by lawyers, China is run by engineers.

Unfortunately for the software/AI industry, this likely means the same outcome as every other industry China has dominated: displacement.

If you work in software and you're complaining about your situation now... this is just the beginning. China will capture major market share, and AI will transform what remains.

The US can't even ban TikTok, let alone address the broader presence of Chinese cameras, drones, and other devices packed with AI and software. Meanwhile, the EU is eager to buy Chinese cars loaded with everything from software to chips and hardware.

you all can see a capitulation messages from western media:

US made phone will cost 30% more or 60% whatever. Basically refusing any attempt to protect the market and invest into engineering power etc.

Just to remind you how china got here. They place crazy restictions, they ban google, car manufactures, etc. and stimlate stimulate invest for decades.

Now this strategy pays off, and we will be with no jobs.

palmotea 7 hours ago [-]
> It's already done - they have unmatched engineering capabilities.

Nothing is ever done.

The US and West won't be able to return to its period of unrivaled technological dominance, but it's not inevitable that they will be dominated either.

But to avoid domination it has to 1) abandon its suicidal fixation in neoliberalism, 2) abandon its lazy assumption of technological dominance so it can start learning and investing in lost capabilities, and 3) kick business and consumer interests out of the driver's seat.

There's actually some progress being made on 1 & 2, but unfortunately not so much on 3.

> you all can see a capitulation messages from western media:

> US made phone will cost 30% more or 60% whatever. Basically refusing any attempt to protect the market and invest into engineering power etc.

Honestly, I think that is actually one of short-sighted partisan politics, not some kind of capitulation. Trump likes tariffs and advocates for bringing manufacturing back to the US, and nowadays liberals first and foremost oppose Trump and everything he stands for. They lost the last election in part due to inflation they caused, and now they're trying to win the next one on inflation they can pin on Trump.

rapsey 7 hours ago [-]
Neither the US nor EU have enough of a functioning political system capable of such reforms. China dominance is inevitable baring a complete political overhaul of the west. This would take a civil war.
smokefoot 12 hours ago [-]
Chinese semiconductor dominance is not imminent and US containment has been somewhat effective. I don’t think that will hold on a generational timeline, but it will be hard to overcome.
brookst 11 hours ago [-]
You don’t think the export controls on Nvidia chips accelerated Chinese investment in ML processors and therefore their independence -> dominance in the space?
yorwba 7 hours ago [-]
The export controls made it difficult for Chinese companies to acquire large numbers of GPUs, which prevented them from expanding business models that rely on buying more GPUs to serve more customers, which means that Chinese companies have much, much lower budgets for GPU procurement than their American counterparts. https://chinai.substack.com/p/chinai-323-the-ai-deflation-of...

So a new homegrown chip would have to capture a very large share of this relatively small market to make significant volume. That makes it rather risky for profit-driven investors.

Politically directed investment probably increased, but in the end the private sector also needs to be on board.

rapsey 6 hours ago [-]
The market size for chinese chips is much like EVs. The entire world outside of the US. Like I said, Chinese dominance is inevitable.
yorwba 6 hours ago [-]
Most of the rest of the world can buy Nvidia if they want to. And I don't think the EV comparison works, since China already had a large domestic market and established ICE car companies who could afford to electrify some of their lineup and slowly gain market share this way.
rapsey 6 hours ago [-]
That is not at all the case. Biden export controls for nvida chips are still in place. China also has a large domestic market for chips. The rest of the world would gladly buy competitive Chinese chips.
Workaccount2 7 hours ago [-]
Building SOTA semiconductors is more art than science. All the best artists are in Taiwan.

You don't just buy (or copy) and ASML litho and turn it on. Just like you don't buy a horsehair brush and start painting Picassos. It's even more difficult than that because there are something like ~1000 sub processes and each one needs a world renowned artist in that specific art to get it done.

Its the reason why even Samsung can't match TSMC despite having the same tools and capital.

smokefoot 6 hours ago [-]
Or intel … but I think Samsung comes considerably closer. I’m not close to it.
rapsey 11 hours ago [-]
Semiconductor lead is inevitably going to fall within the decade. So will the military hopes of ever protecting Taiwan.
sho 7 hours ago [-]
> So will the military hopes of ever protecting Taiwan.

I don't think there are too many military analysts who would claim that the USA could "protect" Taiwan if China was really determined. The USA still retains the ability to significantly increase the cost, both militarily and economically, of an invasion, and relies on this - successfully, to date - as a deterrent.

I think most people recognize however, even in Taiwan, that in terms of pure practical facts on the ground, not even the world-beating US military can overcome geography. Taiwan is 100 miles off China's cost, Guam is 2800 miles away. It is difficult for me to imagine anything, barring some incredible technological advantage that the USA shows no sign of possessing, that could outweigh such a tremendous home-turf advantage.

It is very hard to come up with a realistic, or even semi realistic, scenario in which China does not end up with Taiwan if it really wanted it.

sampullman 11 hours ago [-]
That's a very pessimistic take, or optimistic I guess, depending on perspective.

Looking at the Chinese semiconductor development trajectory, and considering that TSMC won't be sitting on their hands, "within a decade" seems really unlikely.

rapsey 10 hours ago [-]
Taiwan and China are not like north and south korea. People move between countries freely. Many TSMC engineers have moved to the mainland.

China has immense engineering capability and is replicating the entire western semiconductor supply chain within its borders.

They have the money, the engineering capability, the will and full support from the government. It is inevitable.

sampullman 9 hours ago [-]
I am aware, I live in Taiwan. While TSMC engineers can be poached "move between countries freely" is not true because moving from China to Taiwan is not so easy.

The key word you mention is "replicating." They'll be chasing for a while still, and it's not clear that they'll be able to leap ahead. Copying is much easier than real innovation.

windexh8er 11 hours ago [-]
I was under the impression, for years, that the US had the appropriate government, scientists and engineering in place to protect the castle. However given what I've seen in the last few years - I agree that it seems inevitable China will surpass the US in the next decade and will hold both cards and a grudge.

It's amazing how China has doubled down into STEM and green energy while the US has done exactly the opposite. The CHIPS Act propped up a company further driven into the ground by Pat Gelsinger. The last few administrations have had no focus on driving innovation and technology - only propping up the Tech Bro market making money off of attention and ads. Maybe, just maybe, the US should stop electing geriatric and short term gains ignorance?

The US needs to dig its head out of its ass if it wants to continue to be recognized as the global power it once was.

slaw 8 hours ago [-]
In my opinion 2008 is the year when the US started to fade as a center of innovation and global power.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemon_socialism

impossiblefork 10 hours ago [-]
Taiwan could be protected if they were given practical control of nuclear weapons or similar, i.e. nuclear weapons sharing.

Securing Taiwanese independence is going to be necessary for the EU to ensure that there isn't a US microchip monopoly, and the only way the EU can do this is by the aforementioned means.

sharpshadow 7 hours ago [-]
Zelensky at the MSC 2022: “If … results do not guarantee security for our country, Ukraine will have every right to believe that the Budapest Memorandum is not working and all the package decisions of 1994 are in doubt”[0]. 4 days later Russia invaded Ukraine. At the time it was said that Ukraine pursuing nuclear weapons was the last straw, but who know really.

If Taiwan is going to place nuclear weapons on its territory the conflict would probably escalate quickly.

0. https://kyivindependent.com/zelenskys-full-speech-at-munich-...

impossiblefork 7 hours ago [-]
Could well be a trigger. This is a reason to do it quickly by having already existing, tested nukes handed over for use by the threatened state.

There is a problem with this kind of reasoning though. It's like, somebody shows up 'try to grab my gun and I'll shoot' but the thing is, he might shoot anyway, and if you grab the gun, maybe you'll get hold of it.

When someone threatens something, that's not reason for stepping down, passivity or anything like that, it's reason to immediately risk everything on an attack to take away the thing he has that allows him to threaten you. By threatening something he only demonstrates that he must be attacked immediately.

I like an example I gave earlier with hostages. It's Monday, someone has taken a hostage and threatens to kill unless left alone. The next day he's taken another, he has the same threat. On friday, he has five. Now, you realise you should have attacked on Monday when your attack only risked one death.

So today, the question might be 'why didn't we start building nukes last year?'

impossiblefork 10 hours ago [-]
I think it wasn't.

The EU + US is reasonably close to what China appears to be planning as its long-run population, so if the US and the EU had a real partnership and co-operated effectively they could probably have kept up with China.

Now of course, that isn't what's happened and I think even under Biden there were strong efforts to limit competition from the EU and to disadvantage its industry, so it was always going to go this way, but with a real effort I think something different could have been achieved.

libertine 9 hours ago [-]
The current administration wants the EU to collapse, so we're very far away from that reality.
impossiblefork 7 hours ago [-]
Yes.
pjmlp 11 hours ago [-]
See Huawei and Xiaomi everywhere else outside US, or how encryption standards went down in the days of PGP book with the printed code.
papageek 11 hours ago [-]
Tries to do to contain.. like letting u.s. companies pump trillions into the Chinese economy?
ajsnigrutin 11 hours ago [-]
Let's be fair, US export controls are one of the reasons that China is ramping up research/development of such tech (especially AI now).

Considering the amount of sanctions coming from US (and EU), it's no wonder that "the rest of the world" is trying to "build their own" <thing> now.

rapsey 10 hours ago [-]
Yep that is what I meant.
narrator 12 hours ago [-]
Dialectical Materialism much?
marshyj 6 hours ago [-]
If China is ok spending a few years catching up on chips then they must not think that "AGI" or a serious takeoff of AI is near.
yatopifo 3 hours ago [-]
They seem to be highly pragmatic. Rather than chasing AGI, they are more interested in what can be done with today's technology. Any breakthrough towards AGI will inevitably leak quickly, so they'll be able to catch up as long as the foundation is ready. In a bicycle race, it can be quite beneficial to travel behind the leader and enjoy a reduction in drag forces. Perhaps that's their guiding principle.
kamikazeturtles 5 hours ago [-]
Does any normal person think "AGI" is real?

I thought that was just the marketing strategy execs employed to get regulatory capture and convince all the AGI pilled researchers to work for them