Is It Time to Forget about Huawei?
By Barbara Jorgensen, EETimes
August 21, 2019
Silence is deafening. When asked about the latest delay to a full-scale Huawei trade ban, most chip and component manufactures declined to speak to us. The 90-day extension announced earlier this week by the U.S. Commerce Department purportedly allows suppliers and customers to disengage from the Chinese telecom giant with minimal disruption.
But here's a frightening question to confront: Is it time for the U.S. tech companies to forget about ever seeing another big Huawei design opportunity ever again? The US chip industry is certainly not giving up on China, but Huawei — and by extension China — is inclined to give up on the United States.
The U.S. government, citing national security concerns, has all but barred Huawei products from the United States. American tech companies can still sell to Huawei under a special license, but that’s set to expire in mid-November.
Tech vendors were forced, however, to discuss Huawei during recent earnings conference calls. Out of $70 billion that Huawei spent buying components in 2018, some $11 billion went to U.S. firms including Qualcomm, Intel and Micron Technology.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- LPDDR6/5X/5 PHY V2 - Intel 18A-P
- ML-KEM Key Encapsulation & ML-DSA Digital Signature Engine
- MIPI SoundWire I3S Peripheral IP
- ML-DSA Digital Signature Engine
- P1619 / 802.1ae (MACSec) GCM/XTS/CBC-AES Core
Related News
- How bad is IP theft in China? And what can you do about it?
- PLDesignLigne Guest blog: Mike Santarini -- EDA: Get serious about FPGA... your survival may depend on it
- Sony-Inside Huami Watch: Is It Time for FD-SOI?
- China, Huawei Hit Q'Comm Where it Hurts
Latest News
- QuickLogic Accelerates Space Innovation with Secure, Customizable eFPGA Hard IP
- SkyWater Technology and QuamCore Announce Collaboration to Fabricate Digital Superconducting Controller for Scalable Quantum Computing
- Aion Silicon Expands Barcelona Design Center to Meet Surging Demand for ASIC and SoC Solutions
- UMC Reports Sales for October 2025
- Arm Q2 FYE26 revenue surpasses $1 billion for third consecutive quarter