The building where Saeed Amidi runs his global venture empire was once one of the most important semiconductor facilities on the West Coast. Philips Electronics operated a fabrication plant here in Sunnyvale, California, employing 8,000 people at its peak. Then, like much of America's chip manufacturing base, it moved to Asia — to Taiwan, to Korea, to the supply chains that would come to define the global electronics industry for the next three decades.
Three days at Plug and Play's Silicon Valley May summit left me with a clear takeaway: the technology industry is undergoing a structural shift, not just another hype cycle. Here are the five trends that stood out from the conversations, keynotes, and startup pitches I observed on the ground.
Airoha Technology is sharpening its strategy around global networking and edge AI chips, aiming to expand its customer base and strengthen its competitive moat. The MediaTek subsidiary is targeting infrastructure, audio, and positioning markets with products already shipping, in production, or advancing through development milestones that could matter to users and operators worldwide.
Quanta said demand for artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure would be very strong in 2026 as the company pushed deeper into servers and wearable devices, and that it was expanding production in the US, Mexico, and Thailand. The remarks were made at the company's shareholders' meeting on May 29, where leadership framed AI as a major growth opportunity while reiterating a cautious approach that prioritizes profitable execution.
Foxconn has said its quantum computing work is drawing international attention, but the main challenge remains turning research into a commercial business. The company's quantum efforts could take about three years to reach an inflection point, with broader business potential expected around 2030, which may matter for industries and researchers worldwide.
Foxconn said its latest results highlight how technology manufacturing groups are reshaping supply chains for global customers. The company reported record earnings in 2025, raised dividends to a new high, and set a more ambitious profit target, signaling stronger returns for shareholders and continued investment in artificial intelligence, electric vehicles, and semiconductors worldwide.
Chinese EV maker Xpeng reported a significantly wider net loss for the first quarter of 2026, as the traditional seasonal slowdown in China's auto market weighed heavily on vehicle sales and deliveries.
IBM and Red Hat are committing US$5 billion to Project Lightwell, a new enterprise security initiative designed to protect open source software supply chains as AI accelerates both software development and vulnerability discovery.
As AI moves from cloud environments into factories and physical systems, semiconductor design is being reshaped by new demands in speed, energy efficiency, and on-site learning. At a recent system-semiconductor seminar in South Korea, Seong-jun Jang, a research center director at the Korea Electronics Technology Institute (KETI), outlined four key architectural directions for future AI chips aimed at supporting industrial "physical AI."
Former US Pacific Army commander Charles Flynn led a defense and aerospace industry delegation to Taiwan and attended the 2026 Taiwan-US Defense Industry Forum organized by the Taiwan External Trade Development Council (TAITRA) on May 28. Relying heavily on US arms sales, Taiwan is stepping up its use of AI and unmanned systems to strengthen defense resilience in response to shifting Chinese military tactics.
Anthropic's post-money valuation has reached US$965 billion after its newest funding round, more than doubling its value since February 2026 and putting it past its rival ChatGPT as the two aim to reach IPO status this year.
Foxconn chairman Young Liu said the company is accelerating its move into electric vehicles, robotics, and smart cities, arguing that these businesses will drive its next phase of long-term growth.
Wiwynn Technology, a major server manufacturer for AI infrastructure, warned that shortages are emerging across a range of data-center components beyond memory, a shift that could slow global AI buildouts or push up costs over the coming years. Executives said demand for data-center hardware would remain strong for the next three to five years as large cloud and hyperscale customers continued to raise capital spending, and the company signaled the US would be a focal market for expansion.
Wistron told shareholders on May 29 that it expects artificial intelligence to be in the early stages of growth and could expand to more than 10 times its current scale, potentially accounting for over 10% of global GDP. The company disclosed at its shareholders' meeting that it had received authorization to issue up to 250 million new shares and to explore overseas depositary receipts to support anticipated increases in capital needs as revenue scales up.
Pegatron held its shareholders meeting on May 28, where market attention focused on the company's new artificial intelligence (AI) server business. The company's co-CEOs, Kuang-Chih Cheng and Kuo-Yen Teng, reiterated their earlier outlook that the business would achieve tenfold growth in 2026, adding that the group's long-term investments have gradually entered the harvest stage in recent years.
C2i Semiconductors has advanced its power management technology with the tape-out of a chip designed for AI infrastructure, while also securing fresh venture backing to expand development and scale production. The developments underscore growing investor interest in addressing power delivery bottlenecks in data centers, driven by accelerating AI workloads.
Apple is set to unveil its biggest Siri overhaul in nearly 15 years at its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 8, 2026, as the company seeks to narrow the gap with rivals including OpenAI, Google, and Samsung in the rapidly evolving AI market.
This graduation season, high-profile tech elites speaking at ceremonies celebrating the AI revolution have not been met with polite applause, but with hostility.
Foxconn said its AI server business is scaling rapidly as global cloud spending rises and demand for computing infrastructure spreads worldwide. Chairman Young Liu said the company is positioning for continued growth in racks, optics, and semiconductors, while also advancing work in satellites and quantum computing.
Nvidia's expanding recruitment activity in Vietnam signals a potential shift in the country's role within advanced AI infrastructure manufacturing, as Taiwanese server and EMS players continue to scale up production capacity in the region. The developments underscore Vietnam's growing importance in the global reconfiguration of AI hardware supply chains, particularly for high-end data-center systems and GPU-based servers.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) won a US$6 billion AI infrastructure agreement with Snowflake, announcing expanded deployment of its in-house Graviton CPUs and AI compute capacity as cloud providers shift focus beyond GPU-centric large language model workloads. Executives said the deal, reported by Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal, and CNBC, reflects a broader market move toward agentic AI that places growing compute demand on CPUs for orchestration, tool calls, and continuous data movement.
Dell reported a record first quarter for fiscal 2027, with revenue rising 88% to US$43.8 billion and diluted earnings per share climbing 214% to US$4.86. The company said demand was stronger than expected across all businesses and geographies as customers moved to secure supply in a difficult environment.
Dell reported a sharp jump in first-quarter revenue and profit, saying customers moved quickly to secure supply across both traditional and AI infrastructure. The company said revenue rose 88% to US$43.8 billion and diluted earnings per share climbed 214% to US$4.86, both records for the quarter.
Anthropic is expanding its leadership and operational presence in India as it scales adoption of its Claude AI models across startups and enterprises, appointing senior executives to lead growth, partnerships, and digital-native customer engagement in one of its fastest-growing markets.
As the global buildout of artificial intelligence infrastructure accelerates, Taiwan's technology industry has emerged as one of the most closely watched hubs in the world. Ahead of COMPUTEX 2026, Morgan Stanley held its Asia AI Summit in Taipei for the first time, underscoring the island's central role in the global semiconductor supply chain and the AI investment cycle.