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Dec 3
Intel taps Amkor in Korea for advanced chip packaging
Intel is reportedly outsourcing the advanced packaging of its artificial intelligence semiconductors to Amkor Technology Inc.'s facility in Incheon, South Korea, marking the first time the US chip giant has relied on an external partner for this critical process, according to South Korea's ET News.
Micron Technology has announced plans to exit its consumer business, marking one of its most significant strategic shifts in years as the company prioritizes advanced memory chips used in artificial intelligence data centers. The move underscores tightening global supply conditions and highlights how soaring demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) is reshaping investment priorities across the semiconductor industry.
Intel's decision to retain its networking unit marks a significant shift in CEO Lip-Bu Tan's turnaround strategy, signaling a move away from asset sales as fresh government and corporate investments strengthen the company's finances. The reversal underscores Intel's bet that tighter integration will be critical to regaining competitiveness in AI and data infrastructure.
Quanta Computer vice chairman and president C.C. Leung warned on December 3, 2025, that persistent memory shortages and rising costs could become the most significant risk to the artificial intelligence hardware market in 2026, even as competition between Nvidia and custom chip developers continues to intensify.
China is turning to advanced chip packaging and near-memory computing in an effort to build competitive artificial intelligence processors using mature manufacturing technologies, according to recent remarks from one of the country's leading semiconductor experts.
To meet the rising power management demands of AI data centers, power semiconductor company Eris Technology has begun deploying AI power components, and its subsidiary Yea Shin Technology has already developed 800V energy-efficient AI power chips. In addition, the supply chain disruptions triggered by the Nexperia dispute have prompted Eris to report increased demand from multiple customers. Though product certification will take time, the benefits from order shifts are expected to materialize in 2026.

Tokyo Electron Limited (TEL) sought to clarify its position after Taiwan's High Prosecutors Office indicted its subsidiary, Tokyo Electron Taiwan Ltd., over alleged supervisory failures tied to a confidential-information leak. TEL itself has not been indicted.

Innoscience said at midday on December 3 via the Hong Kong Stock Exchange that it had prevailed in its US patent dispute with Infineon, marking a decisive turn in a long-running GaN intellectual property battle. The US International Trade Commission delivered the key ruling, closing a case that had drawn industry-wide attention.
AMD and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) are expanding their long-standing partnership with a new plan to deliver open, rack-scale infrastructure for the AI era. HPE becomes one of the first adopters of AMD's "Helios" architecture, a full-stack, Ethernet-based platform built to streamline and accelerate the deployment of large AI clusters.

Nvidia CFO Colette Kress said at the UBS Global Technology and AI Conference in Arizona that the company's potential investment agreement with OpenAI of up to US$100 billion has not been finalised.

Pat Gelsinger describes himself as a born-again Christian who lives "at the intersection of faith and technology." For the former Intel CEO, reviving American semiconductor manufacturing isn't just a business strategy—it's a mission he believes he was called to fulfill. This conviction has driven him to donate nearly half of his income to charity and maintain strict self-discipline, waking at 4 a.m. each morning. But the same unwavering sense of purpose that guides his personal life now shapes his vision for the industry, one that fundamentally challenges how foreign companies like TSMC are investing in the US.
Optical communication filter maker East Tender Optoelectronics Corp. (EOC) completed a board restructuring in March 2025, positioning itself to capture booming opportunities in AI, semiconductors, high-speed computing, satellite communications, and advanced packaging. The company is shifting from its traditional optical filter business toward integrated solutions spanning optics, networking, AI, lasers, and semiconductor materials, aiming to transform from a component supplier into an integrated optoelectronic solution provider.
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