Apple reportedly once considered Intel as a partner for iPhone chip production, but per TSMC’s founder, the company didn’t impress Tim Cook.
TSMC founder Morris Chang has revealed that Apple CEO Tim Cook rejected Intel as an iPhone chip manufacturing partner in 2011, and told him
Chinese research lab DeepSeek just upended the artificial intelligence (AI) industry with its new, hyper-efficient models. DeepSeek's innovation could shrink demand for AI data center chips, which might hurt suppliers like Nvidia.
TSMC founder says Apple chose TSMC over Intel as their custom chips supplier was because "Intel just does not know how to be a foundry."
Apple is expanding its US-made chip roster, but according to TSMC’s CEO, the most modern chips will continue being manufactured elsewhere.
The release of DeepSeek’s cost-effective AI model sent shockwaves through the markets on Monday, hitting the technology sector, particularly AI and semiconductor stocks, hard. The Magnificent Seven stocks,
The Trump tariffs could financially hit Apple's chip production partnership with TSMC, after the President insisted the import taxes will be applied to semiconductors and other specific industries in the near future.
Taiwan’s government will soon look at whether it needs to help its domestic industry over threats by President Donald Trump to put tariffs on semiconductors, Premier Cho Jung-tai said on Wednesday.
How Apple's M-series chips push Qualcomm & MediaTek to innovate in 2025 with custom designs, AI, and advanced manufacturing.
The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq treaded water on Wednesday, as losses in tech heavyweights Apple and Nvidia limited broader gains and investor focus turned to the U.S. Federal Reserve's interest-rate decision,
The stock markets are bracing for a volatile day as losses in tech giants Apple and Nvidia might prevent broader gains. The focus shifts to the U.S. Federal Reserve's interest-rate decision. Meanwhile,
Qorvo, a key Apple supplier reported strong earnings and guidance, but the stock dropped after the company warned of flat sales to its “largest customer.”