SEMI Country 1: Recovering Taiwan’s place in the AI age

Chuan Lin, the original Taiwanese premier from 2016 to 2017, when questioned,” May the AI wave become a bubble?” There are no indications of a balloon in my opinion. Perhaps you’re thinking about the dot-com bubbles, but did the internet bubble actually burst? Internet companies fell in the spring of 2000, and many companies shut along. The internet wave, however, did not vanish; it also expanded its horizons after the iPhone’s release in 2007. The various connections between big data, cloud services, and more serve as the current wave of AI.

We do not anticipate an AI bubbles, but we do notice the development of new business opportunities and the formation of new oligopolistic structures. The only trustworthy feature of all technology is the ability to understand new technology, which is inherent to all systems. Taiwan does seem modest and entirely focused on manufacturing, but it is both adaptable and unbreakable.

Some businesses, perhaps internet giants, may experience a balloon, but Taiwan’s manufacturing-focused production system won’t be the exception. Every person must place their close products in front of them, and every grouping computing controller and cloud service provider ( CSP) needs a complete set of tools, starting from motherboards to servers. Hardware may be insufficient, but technology may get replaced.

Despite having a bird in hand, Japanese businesses frequently experience unease in the fragile international environment. Gina Raimondo, the US’s secretary of commerce, once said that Taiwan’s stability guarantees a secure international business. Taiwan, a democratic outlet in the Western Pacific, must acknowledge the magnitude of the responsibility it carries.

In order to attempt to divide the world into three eras, I draw on 40 years of industry studies experience and personal involvement to compare and learn different study techniques from a business college. Based on the traditional nationwide power of the technological age, the modern national power of the information age, and the forward-looking nationwide power of the IoT era, I also explore the possible scenarios and responses that the international community might face in various eras.

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The extract from Colley Hwang’s most recent book,” Semi-Land: Trump Storm, and the Island of No Value,” is here. The e-book type is now accessible for order on and .

Jack Wu edited the content.

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