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Nvidia’s Huang finds frustration in trade fight

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October 29, 11:05 am

Tech In Brief
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Tech Across the Globe

Apple displays: The iPhone maker is planning to introduce new OLED screens to the MacBook Air, iPad mini and iPad air models. The display technology — organic light-emitting diode — has been used by the iPhone since 2017. 

Chip trade war: Tareq Amin, chief executive officer of Saudi Arabia’s Humain, said the AI startup wouldn’t purchase equipment from China’s Huawei Technologies — blacklisted by the US — as it seeks to gain clearance to buy advanced chips from American companies.

Adobe defense: CEO Shantanu Narayen said the creative arts software maker is being undervalued as Wall Street focuses on chips and AI training infrastructure.

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Revalued

The Bot Company, a robotics startup, is set to raise $250 million in a funding round that will value the company at more than $4 billion — doubling the valuation from earlier this year. The startup, which is working on robots to handle everyday chores for people, was co-founded by Kyle Vogt, who previously founded and led the self-driving car company Cruise.

Must Read

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang located his tech conference in Washington as a signal to US policymakers about the importance of opening global markets to his company’s leading chips for artificial intelligence work, Ian King reports in today’s Tech In Depth. But even Huang’s typical high-energy effort, evident in a day that included his keynote address at the event, hasn’t yet succeeded in overcoming the China-US trade fight, King writes. 

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