
Shari Liss
Vice President of Global Workforce Development & Initiatives at SEMI, where she oversees the SEMI Foundation and leads workforce development programs for the microelectronics and semiconductor industry. She previously served as CEO of Ignited and has more than 25 years of experience in education, STEM career awareness, and workforce development.
AI Competition Shifts From Models to Chips, Power, and Supply Chains
Bloomberg Technology framed the latest AI race less as a contest over individual products than as a fight over infrastructure constraints, from Nvidia chip export politics and U.S. semiconductor labor to cloud spending, energy, memory and data-center capacity. Ed Ludlow, Caroline Hyde and Bloomberg reporters treated Donald Trump’s discussion of Nvidia’s H200 chips with Xi Jinping as emblematic of that shift: significant for markets, but short of any clear export deal. The program’s interviews with Goldman Sachs’ Eric Sheridan, OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar and Figma CEO Dylan Field similarly argued that compute, distribution and ownership of the stack are becoming the decisive limits on AI growth.
U.S. Chip Expansion Needs 150,000 More Workers
SEMI’s Shari Liss told Bloomberg Technology that the main constraint on US semiconductor expansion is no longer just fab construction, but the workforce needed to operate it. She said CHIPS Act investments are creating rapid domestic growth that will require about 150,000 additional workers, from fab technicians and engineers to researchers and business roles, and that the US must build regional training pipelines and student awareness fast enough to support the manufacturing capacity it wants to bring home.