SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 368.29+0.6%Nov 7 4:00 PM EST

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (151869)9/4/2023 4:00:48 AM
From: TobagoJack   of 217591
 
Besides this Message 34399445

Bloomberg just commissioned below, and is in the denial stage

Bloomberg actually believes Team Huawei did gimmicky-release of Huawei Mate 60 Pro launch using 2019 stockpiled Kirin 9000 chips even though we are talking Kirin 9000S of this day

My source says Team Huawei shall have as many as need of Kirin 9000S by October of this year, meaning next month, in time for Chinese Lunar New Year self-gifting.

Whom to put faith in? I dunno, but can use 2 box sets of Huawei Mate 60 Pro + Huawei Watch Ultimate, one set unopened for deep-storage and another to play with. Unclear how I might engage with the satellite communications function as such supposedly only for subscribers in mainland China.

I wait for yearend and see if sat comm feature available here in backward HK.

:0)))

bloomberg.com

Huawei Teardown Shows Chip Breakthrough in Blow to US Sanctions

The company’s Mate 60 Pro is powered by SMIC’s 7nm chips, according to analysis that TechInsights conducted for Bloomberg News

By Vlad Savov and Debby Wu

4 September 2023 at 14:38 GMT+8

Huawei Technologies Co. and China’s top chipmaker have built an advanced 7-nanometer processor to power its latest smartphone, a sign Beijing is making early progress in a nationwide push to circumvent US efforts to contain its ascent.

Huawei’s Mate 60 Pro is powered by a new Kirin 9000s chip that was fabricated in China by Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp., according to a teardown of the handset that TechInsights conducted for Bloomberg News. The processor is the first to utilize SMIC’s most advanced 7nm technology and suggests the Chinese government is making some headway in attempts to build a domestic chip ecosystem, according to the research firm.


The Huawei Mate 60 Pro.Photographer: James Park/Bloomberg

Much remains unknown about SMIC and Huawei’s progress, including whether they can make chips in volume or at reasonable cost. But the Mate 60 silicon raises questions about the efficacy of a US-led global campaign to prevent China’s access to cutting-edge technology, driven by fears it could be used to boost Chinese military capabilities.

With its export controls last year, the US administration tried to draw a line at preventing China from getting access to 14nm chips, or about eight years behind the most advanced technology. The US had also blacklisted both Huawei and SMIC. Now China has demonstrated it can produce at least limited quantities of chips five years behind the cutting-edge, inching closer to its objective of self-sufficiency in the critical area of semiconductors.

“It's a pretty important statement for China,” TechInsights Vice Chair Dan Hutcheson said. “SMIC’s technology advances are on an accelerated trajectory, and appear to have addressed yield-impacting issues in their 7nm technology.”

The teardown by TechInsights -- which has spent decades investigating the electronic innards of hundreds of devices for some of the world's biggest tech firms -- represents the most authoritative analysis of the Mate 60 Pro's components since its abrupt introduction ignited a frenzy of speculation. Huawei quietly released the phone online last week without detailing key specifications, like the processor design or the wireless connection speeds. It came during a visit to China by US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, whose agency imposed many of the key export controls on China.


A specialist at TechInsights disassembles a Huawei Mate 60 Pro smartphone.Photographer: James Park/Bloomberg


The Mate 60 Pro is powered by a new Kirin 9000s chip that was fabricated in China by SMIC.Photographer: James Park/Bloomberg

The phone has sparked speculation because Huawei is at the center of Washington-Beijing tensions, the target of sanctions over allegations it aids China’s military. Once the world’s biggest telecommunications provider, it’s been pulling out the stops to research alternatives to American circuitry since the Trump administration added Huawei to its Entities List in 2019.

The Mate 60 advance could reset the contest for tech supremacy, as it suggests Huawei is able to come close to, though not quite match, the fastest mobile devices using a chip that’s designed and produced in China. Testing by Bloomberg News showed the Mate 60 Pro capable of cellular speeds on a par with 5G devices like Apple Inc.’s latest iPhones.

It also raises questions about SMIC’s compliance with US rules stipulating that any company intending to supply Huawei using American technology — which is present throughout SMIC’s operations — must obtain Washington’s approval.

Representatives for Huawei and SMIC did not respond to several requests for comments about the phone’s specs since its release last week. Huawei has said only that the Mate 60 Pro is the most powerful Mate device yet. The Commerce Department did not respond to queries about whether SMIC’s supply of 7nm chips to Huawei violates sanctions.


The SMIC chip.Photographer: James Park/Bloomberg

Even at its most advanced, Chinese chipmaking has a performance gap to make up, as the main processor in the Mate 60 Pro is two generations behind the latest technology, according to the teardown by TechInsights, whose findings lent weight to unsubstantiated reports posted by amateur technicians, bloggers and influencers on Chinese social media.

Apple’s current iPhones are built at 4nm and next week it will introduce a new flagship iPhone powered by a 3nm chip.

Shenzhen-based Huawei and Shanghai-based SMIC may already be approaching the ceiling of what they can achieve without more advanced chipmaking machinery. To move beyond 7nm, iPhone supplier Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. utilizes extreme ultraviolet lithography machines from ASML Holding NV. China is completely prohibited from importing those machines.

It is unclear how many units of the new device Huawei intends to produce. The Mate 60 Pro sold out almost immediately and appears to have been available in very limited quantities. It was welcomed with an outburst of patriotic fervor across Chinese social media, and national outlets like CCTV and the Global Times lauded it as a symbol of China’s irrepressible spirit.

Huawei’s consumer business took a heavy blow after the company was cut off from chipmakers like TSMC three years ago, when its smartphones were the clear growth driver for one of China’s biggest tech manufacturers. Its consumer sales are now less than half the size they were before the sanctions took effect, and the company has shifted its focus to developing technology for enterprise, cloud and automotive applications.

Analysts at Jefferies, including Edison Lee, cautioned that Huawei’s Mate 60 may not signal the kind of progress in chips as it first appears. They wrote that selling out of Huawei's phones in hours suggests limited inventory. They also suggested that Huawei may be powering some Mate 60s with chips from TSMC, which it had stockpiled before the US cut off such purchases.

In a report entitled “Huawei Mate 60 Pro: More Myths Than Fact,” the Jefferies team said it thinks China can produce only a “very small” volume of 7nm chips.

— With assistance by Yuan Gao
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext