Samsung's chip division wants the top spot back: What's happening?
Samsung wants to become the world's largest vendor of chips again within three years as it locks horns with SK Hynix, Intel, and TSMC. Will it succeed?
Samsung wants to become the world's largest vendor of chips again within three years as it locks horns with SK Hynix, Intel, and TSMC. Will it succeed?
Radeon graphics solutions will be adopted in more Exynos chipsets, the South Korean tech giant said on Thursday.
Samsung is affirming its memory chip dominance through the launch amid the downturn in the chip market.
The tech giant's latest DRAM boasts a top speed of 7.2Gbps, which means it can process 60GB per second.
The processor packs Samsung's own Xclipse GPU based on AMD RDNA 2 architecture that the South Korean company says will offer a console-level gaming experience in smartphones.
The South Korean memory maker will execute some of its spending plan earlier than scheduled to secure chip production equipment.
Samsung has designated neural processing units as being core technologies in artificial intelligence and will hire 2,000 people in the area by 2030 as part of its goal to lead in logic chip businesses.
SK Telecom, Samsung Electronics, and Cisco will collaborate to develop and launch 5G-based smart office services.
It is currently in 15 WeWork offices, with three more expected to have the Samsung DeX hot desks by the end of July.
The new $6 billion line in Hwaseong will produce semiconductors under 7-nanometers for use in next-generation mobiles and servers when it begins operation in 2020.