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Depseek must delay its next AI model due to low efficient huawei chips

The new Deepseek Chinese company, which had created surprise in early 2025, will now face the sanctions of the United States against IA chips.

While at the beginning of the year, Nvidia and OpenAi tremble thanks to its superior capabilities, Deepseek, Chinese artificial intelligence, has now been late for its competitors. The fault of China’s policies wishing their companies to use local components, especially in terms of new technologies.

According to the Financial Times, Depseek was forced to delay the launch of a new advanced model against the inability of Huawei fleas (Ascend) to compete with that of the US NVIDIA. This explains why the R2 model, an expected moment for May 2025, was not made available, and that a simple update of the R1 model was launched in June.

Huawei fleas that have a lower performance

The development of ia fleas in China became difficult after US sanctions directed to the country. Sanctions that took a commercial war rhythm, to the point that Nvidia had to draw a line on the sale of their fried potatoes for several months in the country, before it was finally authorized by the Trump government to market them, but under the coverage of an important 15%tax.

Deepseek also had to deal with the very compatible desire of the Chinese authorities to use fleas designed by Huawei, prohibitions of Western societies due to its proximity to the XI Jinping regime and suspicion of espionage.

According to the connoisseurs of the file, Huawei fleas suffer significant stability and latency problems when they are connected to each other. The software suite is also involved. Therefore, this provides generalized technical seeds as part of “inference”, this key step in a generative AI that allows predicting and generating answers.

Despite the presence of Huawei engineers in Deepseek, the problem still does not seem solved. However, the implementation is hopeful to be able to publish it “in the coming weeks,” explains the Financial Times.

Remember that beyond your skills, Depseek doesn’t see a good eye. In question, the sending of data to China and the censorship that operates with certain results considered contrary to Chinese propaganda.

The two companies did not want to comment on these statements.

Author: Sylvain Trinel
Source: BFM TV

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