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AI Fever Grips Taipei at Electrifying Computex 2025

Silicon Stars Take Center Stage

At Computex 2025 in Taipei, global tech giants and rising upstarts converged to showcase the next wave of artificial intelligence breakthroughs—most notably, blisteringly fast AI chips. Among the standouts, Nvidia’s Jensen Huang unveiled the company’s most powerful AI GPU yet, while competitors like AMD and Intel also launched next-gen silicon built specifically for deep learning and inferencing. The underlying message: AI may have been born out of software revolutions, but its future runs on exceptional hardware. Attendees scrambled to see real-time demos of generative AI models processing complex tasks in record time, including live video generation and multi-language translation on the fly. Between keynote fanfare and packed exhibit halls, it became clear that AI chips are now at the very heart of global tech strategy.

All Eyes on Taiwan

Taiwan asserted its role as the world’s semiconductors nerve center, not just as a manufacturer but as a core innovator. From seasoned giants like TSMC to newer challengers, local firms presented custom silicon and AI infrastructures courting U.S. and Asian tech conglomerates. Government officials shared ambitions to deepen AI R&D and production capacity, attracting global investment despite geopolitical pressures. The combination of geopolitical relevance, manufacturing excellence, and AI-savvy engineering is positioning Taiwan as an indispensable player in the tech supply chain. Industry observers noted that behind every AI hardware leap stood a Taiwanese logic board, lithography tool, or chip design solution.

Capital Chases the Future

Investor buzz around AI was palpable, with

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