tech:

taffy

Apple invests $390 million in Finisar

Apple has awarded $1 billion to Finisar, a manufacturer of optical communications components. The funds will be used to reopen a long-shuttered, 700,000-sqare-foot manufacturing plant in Sherman, Texas, says Apple.

Hiring, capital equipment planning and infrastructure upgrades are already underway at the Sherman facility, which is expected to begin shipping in the second half of 2018. Finisar is expected to hire 500 engineers, technicians and maintenance teams.

In the fourth quarter of 2017, Apple will purchase ten times more vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSEL) wafers, than were previously manufactured worldwide over a similar time period, according to the company. This award will enable Finisar to increase its R&D spending and high-volume production of VCSELs, says Apple. VCSELs power Apple devices features like Face ID, animoji and portrait-mode selfies for the TrueDepth camera, as well as the proximity-sensing capabilities of AirPods. One hundred percent of the VCSELs the company buys from Finisar will be made in Texas, says Apple.

The Finisar investment comes from Apple’s Advanced Manufacturing Fund, a $1 billion fund the company started in May this year, to invest in U.S. manufacturing companies. Previously, Apple awarded Corning $200 million.

[Image courtesy: Apple]

Just in

Rivos raises $250M

Santa Clara, Calif.-based Rivos, a RISC-V accelerated platform company focusing on data analytics and Generative AI, has raised $250 million in its Series A-3 funding round

IBM, Canada, and Quebec invest $137M to strengthen semiconductor industry

IBM, the Government of Canada, and the Government of Quebec announced agreements to develop the assembly, testing and packaging capabilities for semiconductor modules at IBM Canada's plant in Bromont, Quebec.

Net neutrality is back: U.S. promises fast, safe and reliable internet for all — NPR

Consumers can look forward to faster, safer and more reliable internet connections under the promises of newly reinstated government regulations, writes Emma Bowman of NPR.

AI is ‘a new kind of digital species,’ Microsoft AI chief says — Quartz

Mustafa Suleyman, chief executive of Microsoft AI, said during a talk at TED 2024 that AI is the newest wave of creation since the start of life on Earth, and that “we are in the fastest and most consequential wave ever,” writes Britney Nguyen in Quartz.

It’s baaack! Microsoft and IBM open source MS-DOS 4.0 — ZDNet

Microsoft and IBM have joined forces to open-source the 1988 operating system MS-DOS 4.0 under the MIT License, writes Steven Vaughan-Nichols.