Tag: Microsoft

  • Escobar Reveals China’s Bold Leap into the Global AI Arena

    Escobar Reveals China’s Bold Leap into the Global AI Arena

    Huawei’s New AI Beast: The Ascend 910 D Is on the Horizon

    Picture a super‑charged brain in silicon – that’s Huawei’s latest creation, the Ascend 910 D. Late next month, the tech giant is set to put this powerhouse through its paces, testing everything from deep‑learning models to everyday smart‑home commands.

    Why the 910 D Gets the Spotlight

    • Speed that’ll make your coffee machine jealous. It’s designed to crunch terabytes of data in the blink of an eye.
    • Power‑efficient. Like a bicycle upgraded to a hoverboard – it goes far without draining the battery.
    • Ready for next‑generation AI services. Think self‑driving, facial recognition, and predictive analytics.

    Meanwhile, the 910C Is Already Rolling Out

    By early May, the older sibling, the Ascend 910C, will start hitting the shelves of countless Chinese tech firms. While they’re busy setting up their own AI pipelines, Huawei’s engineers are finalising the 910D’s firmware, ensuring it’s flawless before launch.

    What Everyone’s Saying

    Technophiles are buzzing like a soda‑pop machine at a soda festival. “It’s like we’re finally stepping into the future,” says one excited developer. And with the new processor, it’s no wonder the buzz is louder than a honey‑filled hummingbird.

    In a Nutshell

    Huawei is juggling two high‑performance AI chips: the Ascend 910C making a splash in May, and the Ascend 910D slated for a full-fledged test run next month. The countdown has begun, and the tech world is ready to witness a new chapter in artificial intelligence.

    Huawei’s Bold Power‑Play: A New Chapter in the GPU Showdown

    Why Huawei is Pumping Up the Competition

    • The Ascend 910D promises a hefty performance bump over Nvidia’s fan‑favorite H100.
    • Now there are no stutters in the race to build the next‑gen of processors.
    • Huawei + SMIC are turning “impossible” tech – using Deep Ultraviolet Lithography (DUV) where only EUV had dared – into a new norm.

    Breaking the U.S. Playbook

    • SMIC’s 5 nm DUV chips are more pricey than EUV‑driven ones, but they’re ≥ 100% cheaper for China’s own design house.
    • Had Huawei had hands on EUV, it would be splashing 2–3 nm tech already.
    • U.S. sanctions have nudged China and Russia to hustle EUV out of their own labs – the future is roaring on that path.

    6G, AI, and Mahjong on the Horizon

    • Shanghai’s geeks swear – Huawei will switch on 6G networks before year’s end.
    • From being a smartphone king (the Mate 70 Pro + tops the charts running Harmony OS) to cloud computing, AI, and enterprise servers.
    • It’s not just “cool gadgets”; it’s a full‑blown push to become the core player in the AI infrastructure race.

    In Short

    Huawei’s new push isn’t a whisper; it’s a full‑on roar into the GPU and AI arenas. If you thought the tech war was a polite handshake, rethink it – the next chapter is all about bold moves, hush‑hush breakthroughs, and a future where China and Russia might just turn the tables.

    Ditching Any Reliance on American Technology

    Huawei’s 384‑Chip Power Surge vs. Nvidia’s Big‑Box Battle

    CLOUDMATRIX 384: The 384‑Chip Dream Machine

    Picture this: 384 Ascend 910C chips humming in a single rack, all wired together like a giant brain. Huawei’s CloudMatrix 384 isn’t just a big deal because of the sheer number of silicon slaves it controls; it’s because under the right conditions it does more work per watt than Nvidia’s flagship “72‑chip Blackwell” rig. The math looks good, the energy bill looks scary, and the brag sheet is already in the books.

    KIRIN X: The PC’s New Kid on the Block

    • Designed to take on Apple, AMD, Intel and Qualcomm—yeah, the list sounds familiar.
    • Runs Harmony OS instead of treading the America‑made path of Microsoft or Android.
    • China’s consumer army: 60% of global gadget sales, so if you want to buy a laptop, you’re probably looking at a Kirin X.
    • Not yet a direct HIT against Nvidia’s H100 GPU in pure horsepower, but it’s already the go‑to chip for any Chinese company that wants zero dependency on US tech.

    NVDA: THE GOUGAL CHIPPEN

    Nvidia’s story isn’t just one about chips; it’s a saga of a Taiwanese superstar, Jensen Huang, who turned the “American Dream” into a billion‑dollar reality. He sees AI as just software running on hardware—no sci‑fi super‑intelligence, just practical power.

    Huang’s China View

    China is a massive market; by 2022 it was 26% of Nvidia’s sales, now down to 13% because of technology export controls. The US stopped selling the most advanced A100 and H100 chips, but Nvidia slapped “modified” labels and kept the flow going. By mid‑2023 the black market in Shenzhen was selling A100s for double the price.

    Strategic Shirt Shopping

    Huang’s trip to Beijing was less about a “leather jacket” and more about the fact that the Chinese market matters 10 billions to Nvidia. He basically said, “Let’s keep selling the chips; let’s keep the Chinese customers happy.” And then the tariffs came, erasing that cheerful outlook.

    Thinking AI, the Real World

    He’s told us that AI can’t think for itself without human guidance, but he also hints that “reasoning” might be two to three years away—meaning, we might get an AI that thinks like a human in the near future. A perfect storm of optimism and reservation.

    CHINA’S SUPERIORITY IN CHIP LAND

    • US National Security Council says it’s “too dangerous” for China to buy Nvidia’s high‑end chips.
    • Huawei can produce something comparable to the H20, so it’s not a funnel into the US market.
    • To give you the bottom line: Nvidia can’t keep the China market for itself–once Trump pulled the tariffs it dried up faster than a laptop screen in summer.
    • While the competition at the top is relentless, the real game is about getting your own supply chains AAA-level secure outside of the US.

    FINAL TAKE‑AWAY

    Huawei’s 384‑chip CloudMatrix is a showcase that big power isn’t just about the highest numbers—it’s about power per watt and seizing the market. Kirin X, meanwhile, is proving that both PC users and Chinese OEMs can ditch U.S. software dependencies. Nvidia, on the other hand, is stuck with a losing slide into China because of U.S. tariffs.

    All in all, the real “AI elephant” in the digital room is the tug‑of‑war between American chip dominance and China’s rising self‑sufficiency. The answer? Wired, caffeinated, and ready for change—because chips aren’t the only thing that matters; it’s also how you arrange your supply chain and your software ecosystem.

    How China Is Opening a Digital “Pandora’s Box”

    Huawei’s New Drive: A Tale of Tech Triumph

    Picture this: a steaming pot of digital battle drafts swirling in China’s high‑tech kitchens. Huawei’s latest offering—yes, the Ascend 910D—is proof that the Chinese tech corps can crunch uphill obstacles for breakfast. Even before Trump‑style sanctions slapped the market, the record was clear: Huawei eats massive challenges with a side of indigenously‑crafted talent, cutting‑edge engineering, and a dash of national pride.

    Outpacing the Big Guns

    Catch the moment in 2019 when Huawei’s Ascend was already outperforming Nvidia. Fast forward to now: two administrations saw fit to ban the chip, and guess what? China’s chip research is already light years ahead of the US. Look at the ranking of universities—

    • Chinese Academy of Sciences tops the list.
    • Tsinghua University: a top‑two contender.
    • University of Electronic Science & Technology: number four.
    • Nanjing, Zhejiang, and Beijing universities also hold strong positions.

    And just a fortnight ago, a sea‑of‑silence in Shanghai whispered that Huawei could catch up with US giants in two years; now, with the 910D launch, the chatter’s quick‑sanded into one year to overtake Nvidia and even outrun current ASML lithography machines.

    The Decoupling Dance

    It’s all subtle moves now toward a US‑China tech decoupling. For years, Nvidia has ruled the AI hardware realm with the H100 chip as the holy grail. Their GPUs lit the minds of Chinese mammoth tech corporations—Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu, ByteDance—and the world’s most advanced AI systems.

    Guess what? That might not be the case for long. China’s master plan is to create a self‑sufficient AI hardware ecosystem, and a key keystone will be the restriction of rare‑earth mineral exports to the US. Once done, Huawei will be able to accelerate its ascent like never before.

    DeepSeek’s 1‑Trillion‑Dollar Windbreak

    Remember the DeepSeek R1 that smashed off more than $1 trillion from Wall Street in just three months? That’s the stamp of a tech revolution. DeepSeek R2 is on the horizon; training was 97 % cheaper than OpenAI’s models—yes, all engineered on Huawei’s Ascend GPU platform, not on a Nvidia beast.

    From CERN to Silicon: Quantum Bird’s Perspective

    Quantum Bird, that big‑wigged physicist who once roamed CERN’s halls, says the story is about a new chapter of indigenous chip engineering in China—plus a potential extension into Russia and India. “It’s a multi‑faceted rewrite of pattern recognition and machine learning in the ‘AI’ storyline,” he muses.

    He sets up an animation of divergence by pointing out that Nvidia’s “computational beasts” are built for workloads typical of Western‑developed AI models, whereas DeepSeek’s methodology opens up “possibilities for performance leaps using modest hardware, exceptional math, and fresh calculus flows.”

    The bottom line? “Nvidia’s fear landfall,” as Huáo presents, is a Pandora’s box Wyatt might have opened earlier than anticipated. We’re looking at a rumored technological astrology of long‑term divergence—if the architectures diverge in the specific applications that govern AI, Nvidia’s global monopoly could face a serious downgrade, relegating them to a niche-defined market.

    Future Outlook: Huawei and Global Majority

    While Huawei is thriving in its core Chinese market, the company will continue to win sectors spread across the Global Majority—from BRICS to BRI. Its first‑class market and financial health mean the probability of swift success remains high.

    At the end of this saga, we see a tale of resilient innovation, a clear disregard for old status quos, and a hopeful prospect for fresh and groundbreaking development—wrapped in a sense of awe, humor, and unabashed optimism.

    Talents in the tech arena are still beating to an ever‑changing rhythm—one big, declarative rhythm that will dictate the course of the next decade of international tech.

  • The dividing wall between social and traditional media is fast coming down – Love or hate social media, ignore it at your peril

    The dividing wall between social and traditional media is fast coming down – Love or hate social media, ignore it at your peril

    Whether you go into it kicking and screaming, the elephant in the room of any robust media profile, is, dare I say it, social media.

    React to the news agenda, or alternatively push out your own practive content, using both traditional media and social media is fast becoming a given.
    The Berlin Wall that divided the country from 1961 to 1989 eventually came crashing down. And so too will the wall that still divides traditional media and social media.
    As King Soloman, who reigned Israel from 970 to 931 BCE, once said: “This Too Shall Pass”.
    Traditional media outlets that publish by both analogue and digital is one thing. Like The Guardian, who back in 2011, announced their adoption of a ‘digital first’ strategy. That’s still traditional media as far as I’m concerned.
    But instead I’m talking about equally harnessing social media in all it’s various guises – as well as pushing your profile into traditional media outlets like TV, radio, newspapers and magazines and their online equivalents.
    No mean feat.
    TikTok, once for pre-pubescent kids to sing into hair brushes – is now used by the World Economic Forum.
    Wakelet.
    YouTube.
    Twitter.
    SnapChat.
    Instagram.
    Linkedin.
    The works….
    In terms of reverse-engineering a mainstream media profile, there’s no one as formidable as KSI, which stands for ‘Knowledge Strength Integrity’.
    KSI’s real name is Olajide Olayinka Williams “JJ” Olatunji.
    Born in 1993 in Watford, it all started out in 2008 when KSI started providing gaming commentary videos of the FIFA video game series.
    As of September 2022, he had over 40,000,000 subscribers and over 8 billion views across his three YouTube channels. 88.6% of KSI’s followers are young males.
    Who would think, one individual whose harnessed social media – namely YouTube – would have more media reach today than the BBC, ITV, GB News and TalkTV?
    In May 2020, The Guardian sat up and took notice with the headline ‘KSI: Money Gravitates Towards Me’ stating ‘KSI is as recognisable to teenagers as Tom Hanks is to the rest of us’.
    Today he owns ten properties around England worth over £10 million.
    The Sunday Times estimates he makes over £12,000,000 per year. In 2020. The Times rank KSI as Britain’s biggest influencer.
    This is the same man that used referred to girls as ‘sluts ’in his content. He was widely criticised for his self-described ‘rape face’ in 2012 and 2013.
    Microsoft even cut ties with him and he was banned from Eurogamer events after third party allegations of sexual harassment of female staff.
    But today, a more grown up KSI is both a social media and traditional media crossover Superstar.
    And he’s pretty much the CEO of all of businesses that he’s leveraged off his profile.
    Becoming a Professional Boxer generated $8.5 million from pay per view and $3.5 million for ticket sales.
    In 2015, he published his biography titled KSI: I Am A Bellend.
    His solo album Dissimulation was released on 22nd May 2020 debuting at No. 2 on the charts. His second album went straight in at No. 1. He owns his own music company called ‘The Online Takeover’ and has been signed to BMG, Atlantic Records and MORE.
    He’s also a comedy actor, featuring in the British comedy film, Laid in America (2016).
    The Sidemen are like his family business. They own their own food company called ‘Sides’.
    Prime Hydration is a drink company created with his boxing rival Logan Paul and they are official sponsors of Arsenal Football Club.
    The Sidemen who he is a part of also own XIX Vodka and a restaurant chain known as Sides.
    But most interestingly, he’s now properly crossed over into traditional media. – even though he’s totally born of YouTube.
    He did The Great Stand Up To Cancer Bake Off. He appeared on an episode of BBC’s Blue Peter in July 2021. He was on Channel 4’s Celebrity Gogglebox from 2020-21.
    Then there’s the one and only British YouTube fitness sensation, Joe Wicks, The Body Coach.
    The Lockdown was good to Joe where he have us his daily diet of remote-fitness classes via YouTube. His Twitter is now 428,100 followers. YouTube is 2.81 Million subscribers. Instagram is 4.5 Million Followers. Facebook is 4.5 Million Followers.
    Joe Wicks MBE became ‘Dr Joe’ at a Graduation Ceremony at St Mary’s University, Twickenham in July 2022, receiving an honorary doctorate in Sport and Exercise Science. He’s now as much a darling of traditional media as Jamie Oliver – becoming a true household name.
    Another entrepreneur whose stepped from the social world and embraced the traditional media world is Steven Bartlett. Steven Bartlett’s Twitter is at 212,000 followers. Linkedin is 847,258 followers. YouTube is 482,000 subscribers. He founded Social Chain. Now he’s on BBC Dragons’ Den is an investor.
    Social media is exposing and hanging out to dry some of the pre-internet icons – or at least showing they’re somewhat ‘challenged’ by the social media world.
    Some winners and some losers. A quick audit.
    Lord Sugar has used his mainstream TV profile to build a big fan base on Twitter and delivers them his brand of nonsense witticisms. On Instagram he’s less prolific.
    Twitter
    @Lord_Sugar
    Chairman of Amshold Group, owner of @Amscreen and Amsprop.
    Born March 24 Joined June 2010
    3,110 Following
    5.2M Followers
    Instagram
    # lord_sugar
    Verified
    803 posts
    176K followers
    869 following
    Alan Sugar
    Chairman of Amshold Group. Owner of @Amscreen and Amsprop. Host of The BBC Apprentice. amsvest.co.uk
    Robert De Niro, one of the biggest stars in the world had one brief foray with social media. Below is his first and last tweet, which was on May 16, 2014.
    Robert De Niro
    @Rob_D_Niro
    Official Twitter Account of Robert DeNiro / Actor, director, producer, voice actor & father.
    Joined May 2014
    0 Following
    10.9K Followers
    May 16, 2014
    Hello Twitter! Unfortantly its official and I’ve given into the blue bird! #myfirstTweet #RobertDeNiro #official #sharethenews
    Rupert Murdoch, the most powerful media tycoon in the world had a burst on Twitter, but then was never to be seen or heard from again since March 2016.
    @rupertmurdoch
    Joined December 2011
    125 Following
    670.5K Followers
    3:31 PM · Mar 4, 2016·Twitter for iPad
    No more tweets for ten days or ever! Feel like the luckiest AND happiest man in world.
    The most daunting aspect of starting out on social media is the sheer scale of content production and distribution that is required.
    Production of content. Then scheduling. The ask is enormous.
    It’s the modern equivalent to making the film, Ben Hur.
    President Barack Obama may look like he’s getting idea popping into his head and posting it on social media.
    But its actually a team of around 50 people handling his personal social media posts.
    Back in 2009, Barack Obama was one of the first people to truly embrace the power of social media properly. Back then he had 115,000 Twitter followers and used 14 social media channels. Today, he has 133 million Twitter followers.
    Canva simplifies the process of designing beautiful posts and then resizing them for all the different size requirements.
    Then there’s a flood of AI tools that now author a multitude of pithy posts en masse, all spell checked, nothing plagarised that could upset Google’s algorithms.
    So rather than a team of 50 to keep up with Obama on social media, you can keep up much easier with AI augmentation. ‘Yes you can’.
    The key when unleashing ‘augmentation’ of your social media activity, is to still give it your own defined style and feel.
    Everyone, armed with AI tools is starting to look and sound very much the same even though their supposed ‘high quality content’ is prolific.
    There’s a soup of samey ‘high quality’ well-designed social media content out there.
    Remember to always adhere to the single minded proposition and your ‘sales objectives’ when planning.
    But particularly for social media, there should be around 30 themes or hubs with all the content falling within it– whether it’s article links, videos, retweets falling in a repeating fashion into each of these hubs.
    Wakelet is the world’s best tool for organising all the these content pillars and storing online all the tweets, PDFs, PJpegs, MP4s you find and want to push out across all your social channels later.
    Well timed out and scheduled regularity builds an organised pattern and slowly but surely pushes the single-minded proposition which sits behind it all.