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8 stories about H200
China has granted Nvidia permission to sell its most powerful H200 artificial intelligence chip in the country, a surprising reversal that could reshape the geopolitical battle over advanced computing technology and undercut months of American export restrictions designed to slow Beijing's AI development. The approval marks a significant crack in the Biden administration's carefully constructed semiconductor embargo, suggesting that economic pressures and market realities may be eroding one of Washington's most consequential technological barriers against China. For Nvidia, the world's dominant AI chipmaker, the decision opens a lucrative market that had been largely closed off—but it also raises urgent questions about whether American security officials will tolerate the deal.
14 sources
Two key Democratic lawmakers warned that the Trump administration’s first approval for exports of Nvidia Corp.’s H200 AI chips to China risks harming US national security and called for bipartisan ...
Huawei's Atlas 350 AI chip claims 2.8x performance advantage over Nvidia's (NVDA) H20, threatening $30B revenue potential as NVDA stock slides 3.28%.
Using these new TensorRT-LLM optimizations, NVIDIA has pulled out a huge 2.4x performance leap with its current H100 AI GPU in MLPerf Inference 3.1 to 4.0 with GPT-J tests using an offline scenario.