
China's AI industry is aggressively shifting toward domestic hardware, specifically integrating Huawei Ascend chips to mitigate reliance on NVIDIA and navigate compute constraints. While frontier models in the U.S. prioritize massive scale, Chinese labs are focusing on efficient, smaller models that run locally on edge devices, offering a strategic alternative to cloud-dependent architectures. The broader AI stack faces significant physical bottlenecks, including energy supply, fiber optics, and manufacturing quality, rather than just chip availability. China leverages its existing industrial base—ranging from renewable energy infrastructure to robotics manufacturing—to build a robust, self-sufficient AI ecosystem. This development path emphasizes practical, real-world application and rapid iteration, contrasting with the U.S. focus on massive digital-only models and highlighting the critical role of physical supply chain integration in achieving long-term technological competitiveness.
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