Apple Seeks to Buy Chinese-Made Memory Chips by Lobbying US
18 Articles
18 Articles
In 44 minutes, Apple raised the prices of iPads and MacBooks by hundreds of euros. The cause: a global shortage of memory chips. What's the story? A story about 650 billion dollars in expensive AI promises, high-level friendships, and an iPhone 13 that can easily last another two years. "This actually makes absolutely no sense."
Watch Apple Lobbies US to Buy Chinese-Made Memory Chips
Apple Inc. is in negotiations to purchase chips from Chinese semiconductor makers ChangXin Memory Technologies Inc. and Yangtze Memory Technologies Co. to help reduce the impact of a global memory shortage. Bloomberg's Minmin Low has the context.
Apple seeks to buy Chinese-made memory chips by lobbying US
Apple Inc. is in negotiations to purchase chips from two Chinese semiconductor makers on a Pentagon blacklist to help reduce the impact of a global memory shortage that’s forced the company to raise prices across its product line. The iPhone…
Apple may also currently be negotiating with two Chinese companies that the US government has designated as dangerous entities.
Apple Is Looking at Blacklisted Chinese RAM Suppliers to Fight the Memory Shortage
Securing a steady stream of internal smartphone components is becoming an absolute headache for consumer electronics brands. A prolonged global memory chip crisis has forced hardware manufacturers to scramble for alternatives to keep production lines moving. However, Apple‘s latest strategy to circumvent the squeeze might be its riskiest logistical move in recent memory. According to Bloomberg, Apple is actively holding sourcing talks with two p…
Apple is considering risky alternative RAM suppliers amidst memory crunch
The ongoing memory chip crisis is forcing companies to scramble with new ideas to procure their desired RAM quantities, and Apple is apparently considering a risky move. According to a new Bloomberg News report, Cupertino is currently in talks with two Chinese companies, ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) and Yangtze Memory Technologies (YMTC), but there’s a small issue. Both companies are currently on the United States Department of Defense Se…

Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 67% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium









