Facebook Pixel Today, CHIPS.Tomorrow, Everything. | Fortune US – business – Lesen Sie diese Geschichte auf Magzter.com

Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Today, CHIPS.Tomorrow, Everything.

Fortune US

|

April - May 2024

Why the CHIPS Act is rewriting the rules for every big American business.

- GEOFF COLVIN

Today, CHIPS.Tomorrow, Everything.

THE U.S., WHERE computer chips were invented, hasn’t manufactured leading-edge chips since 2017. From then until now, the world’s fastest, most valuable chips, the kind that power OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Apple’s newest iPhones, and the world’s biggest super computers, have been made only in Taiwan and South Korea. But sometime next year, if all goes as planned, the U.S. will reclaim global leadership when Intel starts producing in volume a next-generation chip in the U.S. The chip technology, which Microsoft has already committed to use as the foundation for Intel-made proprietary chips, probably won’t be fully matched elsewhere for at least many months.

The dramatic turnaround owes much to the CHIPS and Science Act, which was signed into law in 2022 to revive semiconductor manufacturing in the U.S. Some $52 billion in grants is being disbursed to companies, led by Intel. Subject to reaching milestones in coming years, Intel could receive a grant of up to $8.5 billion, plus up to $11 billion in government loans and a 25% tax credit on a planned $100 billion in investment. A senior administration official said Intel's package of subsidies would likely be the largest in the program. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, who oversees most of the program, explains its rationale succinctly: "We cannot allow ourselves to be overly reliant on one part of the world for the most important piece of hardware in the 21st century."

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Fortune US

Fortune US

COMPANIES ARE INUNDATING CUSTOMERS WITH SURVEYS-AND GETTING WORSE RESULTS

ONE WEEK LAST AUTUMN, I hit my customer feedback limit. I had seen my doctor and done some online shopping.

time to read

5 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

Fortune US

IT'S TIME TO TAKE TETHER SERIOUSLY

THE LEADER IN CRYPTO STABLECOINS HAS $15 BILLION IN THE BANK, U.S. EXPANSION PLANS—AND A CEO WITH A DARK VISION OF THE FUTURE.

time to read

15 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

Fortune US

THE BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY OF HOTELS: HOW A NUMBERS GUY MADE HYATT A LUXURY GIANT BY MATT HEIMER

WITH ITS V-SHAPED BASE and sloping windows that cantilever outward over the Chicago River, the 54-story skyscraper that houses Hyatt Hotels' headquarters is a “statement” building that awes tourists and architecture buffs alike.

time to read

4 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

Fortune US

GOOGLE'S AI PIONEER AND HIS DRUG-DESIGN MOONSHOT

DEEPMIND COFOUNDER DEMIS HASSABIS HAS ALREADY WON A NOBEL PRIZE AND A KNIGHTHOOD FOR HIS INSIGHTS INTO HUMAN BIOLOGY. HIS AI STARTUP ISOMORPHIC LABS COULD DELIVER EVEN BIGGER BREAKTHROUGHS.

time to read

10 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

INSIDE TODAY'S AI DATA CENTERS

THE DATA CENTER is getting a makeover. The nondescript industrial buildings once hummed away largely behind the scenes, powering the various facets of our online lives.

time to read

2 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

Fortune US

HOW NETFLIX SWALLOWED HOLLYWOOD

IT'S A STORY SO GOOD it could have been a screenplay. In 2000, Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph sat down across from John Antioco, then CEO of video rental giant Blockbuster, and pitched him on acquiring their still unprofitable DVD-by-mail startup, Netflix, which at the time had around 300,000 subscribers.

time to read

5 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

Fortune US

THE AI DATA CENTER BOOM PITS RURAL AMERICA AGAINST SILICON VALLEY BILLIONS

FACING A PROPOSAL FOR A MASSIVE FACILITY IN THE ARIZONA DESERT, LOCALS FIND THEMSELVES IN A BATTLE THEY NEVER WANTED-OVER ENERGY, WATER, LAND, AND WHO GETS TO DECIDE HOW THE AI ERA TAKES SHAPE.

time to read

12 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

INVEST LEARNING TO LOVE BONDS

MANY INVESTORS regard bonds as the frumpier cousins to stocks. Their prices rarely pop or plummet. They usually deliver a lower return, and—aside from a glamorous cameo in the 1980s thriller Die Hard— they are not part of popular culture in the same way as, say, GameStop or Tesla shares. They are, though, a critical part of any well-managed portfolio, and with the stock market looking particularly frothy, this may be more true than ever.

time to read

3 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

Fortune US

Where Senior Care Comes First

What began as one family's health crisis has grown into Alignment Healthcare, a company serving hundreds of thousands of seniors with innovative solutions.

time to read

1 mins

February - March 2026

Fortune US

Fortune US

HOW VICTORIA'S SECRET GOT ITS SEXY BACK

DETERMINED NOT TO REPEAT THE BRAND'S PAST MISTAKES, CEO HILLARY SUPER IS SHEDDING THE BODY-SHAMING AND THE PERFORMATIVE BOX-CHECKING—BUT NOT THE WINGS, GLAMOUR, AND GLITTER.

time to read

11 mins

February - March 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size