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May 4
Foxconn shoots for the stars — and Starlink's playbook
Foxconn's Hon Hai Research Institute has launched its second-generation low-Earth-orbit satellites, PEARL-1A and PEARL-1B, from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. The mission has entered an on-orbit validation phase as part of a satellite networking strategy.
Tron Future Tech's successful Ka-band downlink verification for T.MicroSat-1 and T.MicroSat-2 signals progress toward global low-earth-orbit (LEO) communication services, validating Taiwan-made ground terminals and hosted payloads and underscoring potential improvements in satellite rapid-redeployment and space computing reliability for international partners and operators.
Ubiqconn Technology said it moved into the Shalun Artificial Intelligence Industrial Zone and established an R&D base to create Taiwan's first application ecosystem for a collaborative control platform for unmanned vehicles. The company announced this month its relocation to southern Taiwan to strengthen research and development in unmanned vehicles and edge computing, and to support the government's Big South New Silicon Valley initiative.
As AI reshapes industries from healthcare to finance, companies far beyond Silicon Valley are racing to stake their claim — and some of the most ambitious bets are coming from unexpected corners. Sun Yad Construction, a Taiwan-based firm best known for real estate development, is one of them.
Amid shifting geopolitics, collaboration between Europe's electronic warfare expertise and Taiwan's leading supply chain capabilities could materially change how democratic allies counter unmanned threats. Accelerated cooperation on counter-drone system integration promises shorter supply chains, faster deployment, and improved resilience, with implications for defense procurement, interoperability, and deterrence strategies worldwide.
Foxconn's two second-generation low-earth orbit satellites — PEARL-1A and PEARL-1B — launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 from Vandenberg Space Force Base on May 3, riding as part of a CAS500-2 rideshare mission. The satellites are designed for a five-year orbital mission.
The rapid rise in low Earth orbit satellite launches is reshaping global supply chains, opening opportunities — and risks — for Taiwanese component makers in connectors, battery modules, and cables. Their early foothold could influence downstream costs, certification hurdles, and manufacturing footprints worldwide, affecting satellite program timelines, sourcing strategies, and investment decisions.
As wireless communication applications surge, demand for quartz components and filters is rising in tandem, with manufacturers actively expanding into the low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite sector. An industry insider says ground receiving stations currently drive the strongest demand for filters and quartz parts, forecasting a market explosion by 2027 as satellite communication users grow.
Memory maker Macronix (MXIC) is emerging from an operational slump in the first quarter of 2026, driven by explosive revenue growth in embedded multi-media cards (eMMCs) as major global players exit the multi-level cell (MLC) NAND segment. The company reported a quarterly increase of 94% and an annual surge of 3,993% in eMMC sales.
Coretronic Intelligent Robotics Corp. (CIRC), a subsidiary of Coretronic Corp., has long attracted attention for its drone business. Although the company is facing delays with Taiwan's largest-ever drone procurement project, other government agencies — such as the Coast Guard, police, and fire departments — estimate their combined drone demands at around NT$1 billion (US$31.7 million).
On April 29, Amazon told investors on its first-quarter 2026 earnings call that AWS continued to accelerate, while the company doubled down on its custom chip business and pushed forward with plans for the Amazon low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite service, including the planned acquisition of Globalstar. Executives framed the moves as complementary elements of a broader strategy to capture a wave of demand driven by generative AI, even as they flagged memory and storage supply pressures and elevated capital spending tied to cloud and satellite buildouts.
Universal Microwave Technology, a Taiwanese maker of satellite and millimeter-wave components, reported record quarterly revenue and profit, driven by surging demand for low-Earth orbit satellite equipment.