Taiwan Aims to Double Chip and Gadget Sales to India Within Seven Years
Taiwan's tech titans are doubling down on India—literally. The island's semiconductor and electronics manufacturers just unveiled an ambitious seven-year plan to double hardware exports to the world's fastest-growing major economy.
The Subcontinent Surge
Forget gradual growth—this is strategic acceleration. Taiwanese firms are repositioning supply chains to capture India's booming demand, from smartphones to smart factories. They're building partnerships, not just shipping products.
Chips with Everything
Semiconductors form the bedrock of this expansion. As India's manufacturing sector matures, Taiwanese chipmakers see prime positioning opportunities—especially while Western competitors remain distracted by domestic subsidies.
The Finance Angle
Wall Street analysts might call this 'emerging market exposure.' Smart investors call it 'not putting all your chips in one basket'—especially when that basket keeps swinging between trade wars and rate hikes.
Bottom line: Taiwan's playing the long game while others chase quarterly results. Seven years is an eternity in tech, but patient capital builds empires.
Chip makers use smart software to cut power use
Companies that make computer chips are now using smart software to design chips that use less electricity. The world’s biggest chip manufacturer showed this new approach on Wednesday.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which makes chips for Nvidia, presented ways to make computer chips about 10 times more energy efficient at a meeting in Silicon Valley.
Nvidia’s top computer servers for smart technology can use as much as 1,200 watts when working hard. This equals the power that 1,000 American homes would use if running all the time.
The improvements come from new chip designs where smaller pieces called “chiplets” using different technologies get put together to make one complete computing package.
To use these new methods, chip design companies are relying more on smart software from companies like Cadence Design Systems and Synopsys. Both companies showed new products on Wednesday that they made while working closely with TSMC.
For some hard jobs in chip design, the software tools from TSMC’s partners found better answers than the company’s own human workers – and they did it much faster.
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