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The Trump administration urged the US Supreme Court to allow federal agencies to layoff thousands of employees by halting a ...
according to a recent Bloomberg report citing sources familiar with the matter. Intel is planning to cut over 20% of its workforce, amounting to over 21,000 employees, this week as part of a ...
It’s already been a tumultuous year for the U.S. semiconductor industry. The semiconductor industry plays a sizable role in the “AI race” that the U.S. seems determined to win, which is why this ...
Both new Surface devices carry the “Copilot+ PC” designation Microsoft gives to high-end computers with a so-called neural ...
"Because we can no longer rely on [the U.S. Agency for Global Media] to disburse our funds as Congress intended, we will have to begin mass layoffs and let entire language services go dark in the next ...
According to The Indian Express, April witnessed the most severe wave of tech layoffs this year, with 19 companies ...
If April’s estimates hold true, they’d mark a significant retreat from March, where preliminary estimates showed a ...
There are fears among staff at the Kildare chip manufacturing plant that up to 1,000 jobs are at risk of being cut.
According to a Bloomberg report, citing people aware of the development on April 23, Intel is set to lay off more than 20 per cent of its staff to reduce bureaucracy in the struggling company.
Layoff or "workforce reductions" are happening, due to cost-cutting, triggered in part by shifts in geopolitics (think tariff wars). The tech layoff wave is still kicking in 2025, as per a TechCrunch.