
Nvidia to resume H20 GPU chip sales to Beijing, launches China-compliant model
According to a company blog post, Nvidia is filing applications to resume H20 sales with the United States government and expects to get the licenses soon. Deliveries are expected to begin shortly thereafter.
The company announced a new RTX Pro GPU designed specifically for China. Nvidia described the model as "fully compliant" and suitable for digital twin AI applications in sectors such as smart factories and logistics.
The chipmaker's CEO Jensen Huang met with US President Donald Trump and policymakers in Washington and later with officials in Beijing, as part of efforts to promote AI cooperation and highlight Nvidia's support for open-source research and global AI development, the company said.
In May, Reuters reported that the company was planning to release a downgraded version of its H20 artificial intelligence chip for China following US export restrictions on the original model.

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CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
Trump says Coca-Cola to switch to cane sugar in US
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Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Trump softens tone on China to secure a summit and trade deal with Xi
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Government and industry officials in those regions have gotten the message that Washington's strategy is subject to change, people familiar with the matter said. A half-dozen tech industry officials who've interacted with Mr Trump's team on China said they often leave meetings wanting details only to see core goals evolve in later discussions. Surprise reversals In many cases, those in charge of China tech policy have made decisions without involving offices that historically have played a role. Restrictions imposed in May on sales of chip design software to China – which have since been reversed – were part of a raft of Commerce Department measures that came as a surprise to many within the administration, Bloomberg has reported. The decision on H20 chips was also tightly held, people familiar with the matter said. Other actions that have been under consideration for months – including sanctions on Chinese chip giants and an effort to slap curbs on Chinese tech subsidiaries – have been delayed as officials pursue a trade deal. But Mr Trump is also known for reversing course on China often and sometimes quickly after taking a position – as was the case when he fulfilled Mr Xi's personal request to lift sanctions on Chinese telecom giant ZTE Corp. in 2018. He's also susceptible to criticism of his approach, which might indicate Mr Trump could change his tone yet again. 'President Trump is set on a China deal, but it may be short-lived,' said Dr Derek Scissors, a China expert at the American Enterprise Institute. 'The US trade deficit is well higher to date this year and the new budget will boost demand for imports in the fourth quarter. If a record 2025 trade deficit gets reported, all bets are off, including with China.' Beijing has made no secret it believes it has the upper hand. 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CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
Dollar on shaky ground as markets fret about Fed independence
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