ARM is reacting to the ongoing strict export restrictions the U.S. government is placing on China. Essentially, the United States is trying to stop China from receiving advanced CPU technology. The goal is to stop the Chinese government from having the resources to manufacture their own high-end semiconductors. Because ARM’s Neoverse V series architecture has a performance that is too high to be approved for sale by the U.S. and U.K. governments. Alibaba is one of ARM’s biggest Chinese customers and was to use the Neoverse V in its T-Head chip division.
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With the Neoverse not available for sale, ARM has simply decided to pull all sales from China. It is worth remembering that the company does not build processors but instead builds design platforms that other companies use to build their own chipsets. Neoverse V2 is the latest and most advanced platform. It is thought to have been developers – at least partly – in the United States. The platform is under the Wassenaar Arrangement, an accord made of 42 nations that prevents technology from being leveraged for military purposes. Importantly, ARM is not saying it does not want to sell the platform, but rather it cannot. The company would need an export license from the U.S. and U.K. and is unlikely to get it. Tip of the day: The Windows Clipboard history feature provides the functionality across device, space, and time, letting you copy on one computer and paste the text days later on a different PC. All of it is possible via the Windows 10 clipboard manager, which lets you view, delete, pin, and clear clipboard history at will. In our tutorial we show you how to enable the feature, clear clipboard history, and enable/disable clipboard sync to meet your preferences. You can also create a clear clipboard shortcut for quick removal of stored content.