logo
Asia Pacific's AI Ambitions Hinge on Next-Generation Networks, Reveals IDC Report

Asia Pacific's AI Ambitions Hinge on Next-Generation Networks, Reveals IDC Report

Malay Mail29-04-2025
SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire - 29 April 2025 – A new IDC InfoBrief* commissioned by Expereo shows Asia Pacific (APAC) businesses pursuing artificial intelligence (AI) strategies are facing a critical turning point. The IDC InfoBrief, sponsored by Expereo, "Enterprise Horizons 2025: Technology Leaders Priorities: Achieving Digital Agility", highlights that limitations in current network infrastructure are a significant barrier to realizing AI's transformative potential in the region. However, these findings also present an opportunity for APAC organizations as they strive to maintain their competitive edge in the AI-driven economy.This IDC InfoBrief, based on a survey of 650 technology leaders across Europe, the US and APAC, opens with a striking finding:This surge in network investment shows companies now recognize that strong, flexible connectivity is fundamental for AI success. APAC businesses realize that their AI ambitions will be held back if their underlying network infrastructure cannot adequately manage the demands of AI workloads.However, the report also delivers a stark reality:This alarming statistic highlights a significant disconnect between APAC's AI ambitions and the reality of their existing network capabilities. Organizations find that their current networks lack the agility, capacity, and performance necessary to support the intensive demands of AI, effectively creating a bottleneck that can result in lost productivity, increased costs, and missed business opportunities."This prioritization of networking reflects a critical shift in perspective. APAC businesses understand that AI success depends on the ability to move data, connect systems, and deliver applications with speed and reliability," says. "With 9 out of 10 companies in APAC see their networks as a limiting factor, organizations must embrace more dynamic and agile solutions that can adapt to the evolving demands of AI. APAC has the ambition to lead in AI, but network infrastructure is the key to unlocking that potential. Organizations that prioritize network modernization will lead in the AI-driven future."Additional takeaways from the IDC InfoBrief include:1.This finding highlights the vulnerability of APAC businesses to network disruptions, which can have a cascading effect on AI-driven operations. In an AI-centric world, where applications are often mission-critical, network downtime can lead to significant revenue loss, damage to reputation, and erosion of customer trust.2.As networks grow more complex and skilled talent becomes scarcer, APAC organizations are turning to managed service providers for expertise and support. This trend underscores the importance of collaboration and highlights the value of partnering with experienced providers that can help businesses navigate the complexities of network transformation.3.APAC, with its focus on sustainable development, faces a unique challenge and opportunity. Modernizing network infrastructure can help contribute to sustainability goals by improving energy efficiency, reducing carbon emissions, and supporting environmentally responsible business practices.For the full *IDC InfoBrief, Enterprise Horizons 2025: Technology Leaders Priorities: Achieving Digital Agility, doc #EUR253271325​, March 2025, please visit: https://www.expereo.com/enterprise-horizons-2025 Hashtag: #Expereo
The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.
About Expereo
Expereo is a world-leading Managed Network as a Service provider that connects people, places, and things anywhere. Solutions include Global Internet, SD-WAN/SASE, and Enhanced Internet. With an extensive global reach, Expereo is the trusted partner of 60% of Fortune 500 companies. It powers enterprise and government sites in more than 190 countries, with the ability to connect to any location worldwide, working with over 2,300 partners to help customers improve productivity and empowering their networks and cloud services with the agility, flexibility, and value of the Internet, with optimal network performance.
Expereo was acquired in Feb 2021, by Vitruvian Partners which acquired a majority shareholding from Seven2.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump says Nvidia to give US cut of China chip sales
Trump says Nvidia to give US cut of China chip sales

Malaysian Reserve

timean hour ago

  • Malaysian Reserve

Trump says Nvidia to give US cut of China chip sales

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump on Monday confirmed reports that semiconductor giant Nvidia would pay the United States 15 percent of its revenues from sales of certain artificial intelligence chips to China. Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump argued that Nvidia's 'H20' chips are 'obsolete,' despite previously being targeted for export restrictions. He said that to lift the restrictions, he had agreed to a 15-percent cut from Nvidia: 'If I'm going to do that, I want you to pay us as a country something, because I'm giving you a release. I released them only from the H20.' The California-based company produces some of the world's most advanced semiconductors but cannot ship its most cutting-edge chips to China due to concerns that Beijing could use them to enhance military capabilities. Nvidia developed the H20 — a less powerful version of its AI processing units — specifically for export to China. That plan stalled when the Trump administration tightened export licensing requirements in April. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met with Trump at the White House last week and agreed to give the federal government the cut from its revenues, a highly unusual arrangement in the international tech trade, according to reports in the Financial Times, Bloomberg and New York Times. 'While we haven't shipped H20 to China for months, we hope export control rules will let America compete in China and worldwide,' a Nvidia spokesperson told AFP. The company spokesperson added: 'America cannot repeat 5G and lose telecommunication leadership. America's AI tech stack can be the world's standard if we race.' Investors are betting that AI will transform the global economy, and last month Nvidia — the world's most valuable company and a leading designer of high-end AI chips — became the first company ever to hit $4 trillion in market value. The firm has, however, become entangled in trade tensions between China and the United States, which are waging a heated battle for dominance to produce the chips that power AI. The United States has been restricting which chips Nvidia can export to China on national security grounds. After Huang's meeting with Trump, the Commerce Department on Friday started granting the licenses for chip sales, according to media reports. Silicon Valley-based AMD will also pay 15 percent of revenue on Chinese sales of its MI308 chips, which it was previously barred from exporting to the country. AMD did not respond to requests for comment. The move comes as the Trump administration has been imposing stiff tariffs, with goals varying from addressing US trade imbalances, wanting to reshore manufacturing, and pressuring foreign governments to change policies. A 100 percent tariff on many semiconductor imports came into effect last week, with exceptions for tech companies that announce major investments in the United States. 'It's a political tariff in everything but name, brokered in the shadow of heightened US-China tech tensions,' Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said. –AFP

Nvidia, AMD to pay US 15% of AI chip sales to China
Nvidia, AMD to pay US 15% of AI chip sales to China

Free Malaysia Today

timean hour ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Nvidia, AMD to pay US 15% of AI chip sales to China

Nvidia reached a historic US$4 trillion valuation last month as investors bet on AI transforming the global economy. (Exness pic) WASHINGTON : US semiconductor giants Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices have agreed to pay the US government 15% of their revenue from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, according to media reports Sunday. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met with US President Donald Trump at the White House on Wednesday and agreed to give the federal government the cut from its revenues, a highly unusual arrangement in the international tech trade, according to reports in the Financial Times, Bloomberg and the New York Times. According to the Financial Times, the artificial intelligence chips that are part of the agreement with the US government are Nvidia's 'H20' and the 'MI308' from Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). Nvidia did not deny the reported deal when approached for comment. 'We follow rules the US government sets for our participation in worldwide markets,' a spokesperson told AFP. 'While we haven't shipped H20 to China for months, we hope export control rules will let America compete in China and worldwide.' The company spokesperson added, 'America cannot repeat 5G and lose telecommunication leadership. America's AI tech stack can be the world's standard if we race.' AMD did not immediately respond to enquiries for comment. Investors are betting that AI will transform the global economy, and Nvidia – the world's leading semiconductor producer – last month became the first company ever to hit US$4 trillion in market value. The California-based firm has, however, become entangled in trade tensions between China and the US, which are waging a heated battle for dominance to produce the chips that power AI. The US has been restricting which chips Nvidia can export to China on national security grounds. 'Political tariff' Nvidia said last month that Washington had pledged to let the company sell its H20 chips to China, which are a less powerful version that the tech giant specifically developed for the Chinese market. The Trump administration had not issued licenses to allow Nvidia to sell the chips before the reported White House meeting. On Friday, however, the commerce department started granting the licences for chip sales, the reports said. Silicon Valley-based AMD will also pay 15% of revenue on Chinese sales of its MI308 chips, which it was previously barred from exporting to the country. The deal could earn the US government more than US$2 billion, according to the New York Times report. The move comes as the Trump administration has been imposing stiff tariffs, with goals varying from addressing US trade imbalances to wanting to reshore manufacturing to pressuring foreign governments to change policies. A 100% tariff on many semiconductor imports came into effect last week, with exceptions for tech companies that announce major investments in the US. 'It's a political tariff in everything but name, brokered in the shadow of heightened US-China tech tensions,' Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said.

Zetrix unveils AI chatbot for Muslims with DeepSeek's knowhow
Zetrix unveils AI chatbot for Muslims with DeepSeek's knowhow

Free Malaysia Today

timean hour ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Zetrix unveils AI chatbot for Muslims with DeepSeek's knowhow

DeepSeek is one of a surge of Chinese developers offering low-cost models to speed AI adoption. (EPA Images pic) KUALA LUMPUR : A Malaysian company has designed an AI large language model for Muslims based on open-source AI knowhow from China's DeepSeek, one of the latest efforts to target a market of some two billion people. Zetrix AI Bhd plans to unveil its 'NurAI' chatbot for Malaysian users tomorrow, offering guidance in Malay, Indonesian, Arabic and English on a plethora of matters from dining to legal advice based on Sharia or Islamic values. In the coming months, it will feature AI avatars of Islamic scholars offering advice on lifestyle, health and financial services matters. Its answers draw on Sharia, the comprehensive system of Islamic laws that governs everything from meal preparation to banking. To build the model, Zetrix relied on approaches first popularised by DeepSeek's V3 model. The Hangzhou-based company worked with the Malaysian team to build its own mixture of experts architecture – a system by which queries are split between a network of so-called experts within the model. It generates faster results while reducing computational cost. A team of about 10 DeepSeek researchers also helped Zetrix reduce memory usage, said Fadzli Shah, head of AI development at Zetrix AI. 'It's an affirmation that innovative AI can blossom outside the tech hotspots of US and China,' said Shah. 'The breadth of technology advances were available to use through DeepSeek because the start-up innovated and bettered western AI models.' DeepSeek is one of a surge of Chinese developers offering low-cost models to speed AI adoption worldwide – competing directly with models from US start-ups such as OpenAI and Anthropic. That wave of Chinese expansion is helping propel Beijing's tech diplomacy efforts beyond its borders. The NurAI model was built under the initiative of the Asean-China AI Lab, a government collaboration. DeepSeek's approach helped scale NurAI while staying fast and resource-efficient, Shah said. 'We learned a lot,' he said. Zetrix's model is an effort to give Muslim-majority nations and communities an alternative to western and Chinese AI models, Shah said. It will start with a free but limited version, as well as more comprehensive offerings at monthly subscription tiers of US$5 to US$50. Eventually, Zetrix hopes to take NurAI to other Muslim-dominated countries in the Middle East or Africa, with each country and every market training it with their own data. Zetrix is currently working on deploying the model within Malaysia's Sharia-based courts system to automate administration functions, and is gathering training data, including from scans of ancient manuscripts. Faith-based AI systems aren't new and others such as Ask AiDeen and Anakin cater to the Muslim population – hundreds of millions of people around the world. But Zetrix touts NurAI as a comprehensive large language model based on Islamic values, shaped by a supervisory board of Islamic scholars and clerics in Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei and elsewhere.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store