Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Semiconductor”
GIGABYTE's COMPUTEX 2026 Showcase Signals Taiwan's Pivot to AI Infrastructure Export
Taiwan’s technology sector has long derived strategic value from its position in semiconductor fabrication. What COMPUTEX 2026 makes visible is a second-order ambition: that Taiwan intends to compete not merely as a components supplier but as an end-to-end architect of AI infrastructure — from silicon to deployed operational systems.
GIGABYTE Technology’s showcase under the theme “Future Landing” is organized around a supply-chain logic rather than a product catalog. The company presents three operational states — Ready, Deployable, and Happening — that map to the full lifecycle of AI infrastructure: systems validated before shipment, modular clusters engineered for rapid field deployment, and AI actively running in production environments. The framing is deliberate. It positions GIGABYTE not as a hardware vendor but as an infrastructure integrator capable of compressing the timeline between procurement and operational readiness.
ASE Holdings Honors Top Suppliers at Annual Supplier Day, Eyes AI and HPC Demand Surge
ASE Technology Holding Co., Ltd. held its annual Supplier Day in Taichung on April 24, recognizing outstanding partners across its subsidiary network — ASE, SPIL, and USI — and presenting awards to the top performers of 2025. More than 100 supplier representatives attended the event, themed around the concept of Innovation of Synergy.
The ceremony was as much a strategic briefing as an awards function. COO Dr. Tien Wu framed the moment plainly: global semiconductor revenue is projected to surpass one trillion dollars by 2026, driven by AI and high-performance computing demand. He pointed to edge applications — drones, robotics — as the next growth vector beyond cloud data centers, and positioned Taiwan’s integrated semiconductor ecosystem as structurally well-suited to sustain its global role. The subtext, in a period of supply chain fragmentation and geopolitical pressure, was resilience through depth.