TECHOLAM logo
Explore Home AI Gaming GPU Laptops Mobile PC PC Components
Tesla's AI6.5 Chip Shifts to Intel Amid Geopolitical Pressure
TA
Featured ai 2 min read

Tesla's AI6.5 Chip Shifts to Intel Amid Geopolitical Pressure

Tesla is reportedly moving production of its AI6.5 chip from TSMC to Intel, driven by U.S. government pressure. The shift could reshape supply chains and impact Tesla's AI ambitions.

Last updated 36 minutes ago • Tesla's AI6.5 Chip Shifts to Intel Amid Geopolitical Pressure
26
Latest Posts
10
Trending Items
10
Popular Items
7
Topics
Ad Slot: home_leaderboard

Highlights

More Latest

A CPU and RAM sticks displayed on a white surface, showcasing computer hardware components.

Intel’s Scrap-To-SKU Strategy: Turning Defective Chips into Marketable Processors

As CPU demand surges, Intel is repurposing edge dies from its silicon wafers—previously discarded due to yield issu...

intel smartphone

ARC Raiders Expands Horizons with New Platforms and Uncharted Gameplay

The upcoming ARC Raiders update is set to transform the game's ecosystem, introducing advanced platform support, a...

MSI Vector 16 HX AI: A High-Performance Laptop for Small Businesses with a New Price Drop

MSI Vector 16 HX AI: A High-Performance Laptop for Small Businesses with a New Price Drop

The MSI Vector 16 HX AI, equipped with an RTX 5070 Ti GPU, offers powerful performance for small businesses looking...

Aosu's 2K Solar Security Cameras Challenge Budget Surveillance with High-Definition Performance

Aosu's 2K Solar Security Cameras Challenge Budget Surveillance with High-Definition Performance

Two solar-powered security cameras from Aosu deliver 2K resolution at $170, eliminating electricity costs while off...

GPT-5.5 Advances: Performance, Efficiency, and Enterprise Readiness

GPT-5.5 Advances: Performance, Efficiency, and Enterprise Readiness

OpenAI's GPT-5.5 introduces significant performance improvements and efficiency gains, positioning itself as a more...

Assassin's Creed Hexe Faces Development Uncertainty Amid Reports of Team Reduction

Assassin's Creed Hexe Faces Development Uncertainty Amid Reports of Team Reduction

Reports suggest Ubisoft has reduced the development team for Assassin's Creed Hexe, potentially affecting its 2027...

Kingston's Gen 5.0 SSD: A Leap for AI, But Compatibility Questions Linger

Kingston's Gen 5.0 SSD: A Leap for AI, But Compatibility Questions Linger

Kingston has introduced a 30.72 TB Gen 5.0 SSD that delivers 14 GB/s speeds, but adoption hinges on widespread supp...

The hidden cost of AI-powered phones: performance vs. battery life

The hidden cost of AI-powered phones: performance vs. battery life

A new generation of smartphones promises AI agents, but the engineering tradeoffs could leave IT teams scrambling t...

LineShine Supercomputer Achieves 2 ExaFlops Milestone with All-Chinese Chip Design

LineShine Supercomputer Achieves 2 ExaFlops Milestone with All-Chinese Chip Design

China's LineShine supercomputer is set to reach a peak performance of 2 exaflops, powered entirely by domestically...

Intel's Driver Update Pushes Arc iGPUs into AI-First Territory

Intel's Driver Update Pushes Arc iGPUs into AI-First Territory

A new Intel driver update allows systems to allocate up to 93% of system memory to Arc integrated GPUs, positioning...

Browse Sections

AI

View
Tesla's AI6.5 Chip Shifts to Intel Amid Geopolitical Pressure
Tesla's AI6.5 Chip Shifts to Intel Amid Geopolitical Pressure

Gaming

View
Discord Nitro Now Includes a Stripped-Down Xbox Game Pass for $9.99
Discord Nitro Now Includes a Stripped-Down Xbox Game Pass for $9.99

GPU

View
AMD's RX 9050: A Budget-Friendly Option with a Twist
AMD's RX 9050: A Budget-Friendly Option with a Twist

Laptops

View
HP OmniBook 5 redefines ultraportable performance at $699
HP OmniBook 5 redefines ultraportable performance at $699

Mobile

View
apple chipset
The race to 2nm: Qualcomm and MediaTek's high-stakes bet on efficiency

PC

View
The Power Supply Dilemma: Why 2026’s PC Builders Are Still Getting It Wrong
The Power Supply Dilemma: Why 2026’s PC Builders Are Still Getting It Wrong