Sharp is banking on the growing popularity of 3-D technology to show off its display panel strengths to keep growth going for the Japanese electronics maker, its president said yesterday.
Sharp Corp will start mass-producing a high-definition 3-D camera for mobile devices this fiscal year through next March, which will allow people to take 3-D photos and 3-D video on their smart phones, other cellphones and digital cameras to watch on 3-D TVs in their living rooms, Sharp president Mikio Katayama said.
He said that 3-D TVs as well as TVs with LED backlight were proving far more successful than cautious initial expectations, resulting in a shortage of panel supplies — and big opportunity for manufacturers like Sharp.
Sharp, which makes Aquos TVs, is among the leaders in both kinds of technology in LCDs, although it faces growing competition from South Korean and Taiwanese companies.
“We see the increasing demand for 3-D cameras and displays as a big opportunity for Sharp,” Katayama told reporters at the company’s Tokyo office.
The popularity of LED TVs is increasing as ecological concerns grow around the world because they are more energy-efficient than older kinds of flat-panel TVs.
Osaka-based Sharp is also introducing a new color technology for TVs called Quattron that it says make for brighter and clearer imagery while consuming less power.
Sharp started selling Aquos TVs with the Quattron technology is the US and Europe last month.
It plans to release the product in Japan and other markets later this year.
The New Taiwan dollar is on the verge of overtaking the yuan as Asia’s best carry-trade target given its lower risk of interest-rate and currency volatility. A strategy of borrowing the New Taiwan dollar to invest in higher-yielding alternatives has generated the second-highest return over the past month among Asian currencies behind the yuan, based on the Sharpe ratio that measures risk-adjusted relative returns. The New Taiwan dollar may soon replace its Chinese peer as the region’s favored carry trade tool, analysts say, citing Beijing’s efforts to support the yuan that can create wild swings in borrowing costs. In contrast,
Nvidia Corp’s demand for advanced packaging from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) remains strong though the kind of technology it needs is changing, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said yesterday, after he was asked whether the company was cutting orders. Nvidia’s most advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chip, Blackwell, consists of multiple chips glued together using a complex chip-on-wafer-on-substrate (CoWoS) advanced packaging technology offered by TSMC, Nvidia’s main contract chipmaker. “As we move into Blackwell, we will use largely CoWoS-L. Of course, we’re still manufacturing Hopper, and Hopper will use CowoS-S. We will also transition the CoWoS-S capacity to CoWos-L,” Huang said
VERTICAL INTEGRATION: The US fabless company’s acquisition of the data center manufacturer would not affect market competition, the Fair Trade Commission said The Fair Trade Commission has approved Advanced Micro Devices Inc’s (AMD) bid to fully acquire ZT International Group Inc for US$4.9 billion, saying it would not hamper market competition. As AMD is a fabless company that designs central processing units (CPUs) used in consumer electronics and servers, while ZT is a data center manufacturer, the vertical integration would not affect market competition, the commission said in a statement yesterday. ZT counts hyperscalers such as Microsoft Corp, Amazon.com Inc and Google among its major clients and plays a minor role in deciding the specifications of data centers, given the strong bargaining power of
INDUSTRY LEADER: INDUSTRY LEADER: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), a major chip supplier to Nvidia Corp and Apple Inc, yesterday said it aims to grow revenue by about 25 percent this year, driven by robust demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips. That means TSMC would continue to outpace the foundry industry’s 10 percent annual growth this year based on the chipmaker’s estimate. The chipmaker expects revenue from AI-related chips to double this year, extending a three-fold increase last year. The growth would quicken over the next five years at a compound annual growth rate of 45 percent, fueled by strong demand for the high-performance computing