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  • Over the past few years, artificial intelligence has dominated startup funding, media coverage, and investor attention. But as AI valuations continue to rise, a new question is emerging: What happens when AI becomes a commodity? In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore why hard tech startups are gaining renewed attention amid growing concerns about an AI investment bubble. Unlike software-first companies that often rely on rapidly evolving AI models, hard tech startups build competitive advantages through engineering expertise, real-world deployment, operational reliability, and deep customer integration. These strengths are difficult to replicate—and increasingly valuable in uncertain markets. We examine how investors are rethinking startup defensibility, why switching costs matter, and how companies like Taiwan-based Droxotech demonstrate the power of engineering-driven innovation over hype-driven narratives. As AI continues to reshape industries, some of the most valuable companies may not be those building the loudest AI products—but those solving real-world problems with deep technical expertise. 🎙 In this episode, you'll learn: • What defines a hard tech startup • Why investors are asking tougher questions about AI startups • How engineering depth creates durable competitive advantages • Why customer lock-in matters more than ever • How Droxotech built value through execution and industrial trust • Why AI may become a force multiplier rather than the core moat If you enjoy exploring Taiwan's technology ecosystem, startups, semiconductors, AI infrastructure, and global innovation trends, make sure to follow Taiwan Tech Dispatch. 👉 Follow the podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, or your favorite podcast platform. 👉 Subscribe to Taiwan Tech Dispatch for more insights: https://whitehsu.blog 👉 Follow White Hsu on LinkedIn for weekly technology and startup analysis. https://www.linkedin.com/in/white-hsu-63b14737/ --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • For more than a decade, Taiwan's technology industry was closely tied to Apple's success. The rise of the iPhone created enormous opportunities for Taiwanese manufacturers, but it also concentrated growth around a single customer and a single product category. Today, the situation is very different. Artificial intelligence has created a new technology cycle driven by GPUs, AI servers, advanced packaging, hyperscale data centers, and massive infrastructure investments. Taiwan now sits at the center of this transformation. In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore how Taiwan evolved from an Apple-dependent manufacturing powerhouse into one of the world's most important AI infrastructure partners. We discuss: • The rise of Apple's influence on Taiwan's economy • The limitations of the smartphone-centered growth model • Why AI infrastructure represents a structural shift rather than a temporary trend • TSMC, CoWoS, AI servers, cooling systems, and power infrastructure • How Taiwan's strategic importance in the global technology ecosystem is being redefined Taiwan is no longer defined by the iPhone cycle. It is helping define the AI era. 🎧 Subscribe to Taiwan Tech Dispatch for more insights into Taiwan's technology ecosystem, startups, semiconductors, AI infrastructure, and economic transformation. 📖 Read more articles: https://whitehsu.blog 📬 Subscribe to the Taiwan Tech Dispatch Newsletter: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 👔 Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/white-hsu-63b14737/ --Hosting provided by SoundOn

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  • Taiwan’s startup fundraising environment has become increasingly cautious in recent years. So why did FunRaise — a startup founded in 2025 — successfully close a NT$100 million angel round only five months after launch? In this episode, we explore why investors are no longer simply betting on market demand or real estate growth. Instead, they are betting on something deeper: the data infrastructure layer behind commercial real estate. This episode discusses: Why fragmented industry data has become a strategic assetHow PropTech is evolving into DataTechThe rise of AI-driven vertical intelligence platformsWhy “Think First, AI Second” may define the next generation of AI-native startupsWhat this means for Taiwan’s startup ecosystem and long-term innovation landscapeFunRaise’s story reflects a broader shift happening across global venture capital: capital is returning to fundamentals, domain expertise, and durable data moats. If you enjoy deep analysis on Taiwan’s technology ecosystem, startups, AI infrastructure, and global innovation trends: 👉 Follow Taiwan Tech Dispatch 👉 Subscribe on Substack 👉 Connect with White Hsu on LinkedIn and X Substack: https://whitehsu.substack.com/ LinkedIn Newsletter: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 WordPress Blog: https://whitehsu.blog/ --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • Foxconn’s acquisition of Luxgen may look like a small move in a small market. But beneath the surface, it reveals something much bigger. In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we break down why Foxconn is not trying to win Taiwan’s EV market — but instead building a full-stack EV platform capability. By operating Luxgen as a real-world automotive brand, Foxconn is closing the most critical gap in its EV strategy: the ability to run an end-to-end system — from manufacturing to sales, service, and customer accountability. This move closely mirrors what Google did with Pixel — not to dominate smartphone sales, but to validate Android as a platform. Luxgen, in this context, becomes Foxconn’s first-party “reference EV.” We also explore why Taiwan serves as the ideal testing ground, and how this strategy strengthens — rather than conflicts with — Foxconn’s partnerships with global automakers, especially in Japan. This is not a bet on car sales. It is a bet on platform credibility — and long-term control in the global EV ecosystem. ---- 🎧 Connect with me on LinkedIn: Search for White Hsu 📡 Follow Taiwan Tech Dispatch on: YouTube / Spotify / Apple Podcasts --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • Taiwan’s birth rate has hit record lows — and this is no longer just a demographic story. It is a structural challenge that directly impacts one of the world’s most talent-driven technology ecosystems. In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore: • Why Taiwan has entered a phase of natural population decline • How a shrinking talent pipeline is already affecting tech companies • The chain reaction across wages, hiring, and startup growth • Why global talent competition is becoming unavoidable • And what Taiwan must do to stay competitive When figures like Elon Musk start talking about Taiwan’s population trends, it signals that this issue has reached global attention. This episode breaks down why demographics are now a technology issue — and what it means for the future of Taiwan’s role in the global tech landscape. -------------- 🔗 Stay Connected 📩 Subscribe to my LinkedIn Newsletter for regular insights on Taiwan’s technology ecosystem 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 📊 For deeper analysis and premium reports, explore Taiwan Tech Intelligence on Substack 👉 https://whitehsu.substack.com/ 🎧 Follow Taiwan Tech Dispatch on YouTube, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts to stay updated on future episodes --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • Taiwan is already a highly cashless society — but not in the way many people assume. While e-payment accounts are widely adopted, credit cards still dominate the majority of transaction value. In this episode, we explore why Taiwan’s payment ecosystem evolved along a card-first path, how mobile wallets often still rely on card infrastructure, and why e-payments remain focused on small-value transactions. We also compare Taiwan’s digital payment landscape with China, South Korea, Japan, and Singapore to better understand how historical financial infrastructure shapes consumer behavior. Understanding Taiwan’s payment ecosystem provides a deeper perspective on how technology adoption is influenced by incentives, regulation, and legacy systems. Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/whitehsu/ Read the original article: https://whitehsu.blog/2025/12/15/taiwan-cashless-credit-cards-e-payments/ Subscribe to Taiwan Tech Dispatch on: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Follow the podcast for more analysis on Taiwan’s technology ecosystem, startups, supply chains, and digital economy. --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • Taiwan climbed from #21 to #16 in the Global AI Index, marking one of the fastest improvements in the region. But the ranking itself only tells part of the story. In Episode 41 of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore the structural forces behind Taiwan’s AI competitiveness — and the critical gaps that still prevent Taiwan from entering the global Top 10. Taiwan already plays a central role in the global AI infrastructure stack, from semiconductors and advanced packaging to AI servers and cooling systems. Government strategy has also supported steady progress through national AI programs, compute investment, and education initiatives. However, major structural challenges remain. Taiwan still faces shortages in senior AI talent, a relatively weak commercial software ecosystem, and limited upstream AI development capability. These factors constrain Taiwan’s ability to move from AI deployment leadership toward AI innovation leadership. This episode also examines how Taiwan’s startup ecosystem reflects both strength and constraint. Because Taiwan’s domestic market is relatively small, many AI startups must think globally from Day 1 — creating both resilience and a longer path to scale. Taiwan’s position in the global AI supply chain is already indispensable. The next phase of Taiwan’s AI journey will depend on talent development, software capability, ecosystem maturity, and global ambition. Subscribe to Taiwan Tech Dispatch on Spotify or YouTube to stay updated on future episodes. Follow the Taiwan Tech Dispatch LinkedIn Newsletter for deeper analysis on Taiwan’s technology ecosystem and global industry trends. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/white-hsu-63b14737/ --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • The global AI race is no longer just about models, chips, or software. It has become a battle for infrastructure — and that battle is now happening in Taipei. In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore how two of the world’s most powerful technology companies — Google and Nvidia — are both expanding their AI hardware presence in Taiwan. From Google’s largest overseas AI hardware R&D center in Shilin, to Nvidia’s engineering hub in Nangang and its new overseas headquarters project, NVIDIA Constellation, in Beitou–Shilin Technology Park — Taipei is quietly becoming the ground zero of the global AI compute war. We break down: Why Taiwan is critical to AI infrastructureThe real competition between TPUs and GPUsHow Taiwan’s supply chain is shaping the future of AIAnd why this rivalry could be a long-term win for Taiwan🎯 If you enjoy deep dives into Taiwan’s technology ecosystem and global tech strategy: 👉 Subscribe to Taiwan Tech Dispatch on YouTube** or Spotify** 👉 Connect with me on LinkedIn: White Hsu 👉 Read more and subscribe to my Newsletter at: Taiwan Tech Dispatch Taiwan is no longer just part of the supply chain. It is becoming the center of gravity in the AI era. --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • In September 2025, European ride-hailing unicorn Bolt officially launched in Taiwan. At first glance, it might seem like just another mobility platform entering a competitive market. But Bolt is not playing the traditional ride-hailing game. Instead of relying on heavy subsidies and price wars, Bolt is testing a driver-first platform model built around structural incentives and long-term sustainability. In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore how Bolt’s strategy differs from competitors like Uber, and why Taiwan may be the perfect testing ground for new platform economics in East Asia. We also discuss what this launch reveals about Taiwan’s broader role in the global technology ecosystem. From regulatory clarity to digital readiness and consumer openness, Taiwan is increasingly becoming a strategic entry point for global startups looking to expand into Asia. Connect with me on LinkedIn Search for White Hsu to follow my latest analysis on Taiwan’s technology ecosystem, startups, and global industry trends. Subscribe to my newsletter Taiwan Tech Dispatch – where I share deeper insights on Taiwan’s tech industry, startups, and geopolitical economy. Follow the podcast Subscribe to Taiwan Tech Dispatch on YouTube or Spotify so you don’t miss future episodes exploring Taiwan’s role in global innovation. You can also read the original article behind this episode on my blog: whitehsu.blog --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • For more than a year, headlines suggested that Foxconn’s breakthrough into Japan’s auto industry would come through Nissan. But the real entry point wasn’t a passenger-car giant. It was Mitsubishi FUSO. In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore why Foxconn’s 50–50 joint venture with Mitsubishi FUSO — focused on electric buses — may be far more strategically significant than most observers realize. This isn’t another MOU. This isn’t exploratory dialogue. This is real EV production inside a Japanese factory. We break down: • Why passenger-car negotiations in Japan stalled • How BYD’s pricing pressure reshaped the commercial vehicle market • Why Mitsubishi FUSO needed Foxconn’s EV platform and capital • How this JV changes Foxconn’s bargaining power with Nissan • And what this means for Japan’s long-term EV transition Japan’s EV door didn’t open where everyone expected. But it opened exactly where Foxconn needed it. If you’re interested in Taiwan’s role in global manufacturing, EV supply chains, and Asia’s shifting industrial balance, this episode is for you. 👉 For deeper structural analysis, subscribe to my LinkedIn Newsletter: Taiwan Tech Dispatch https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 I share behind-the-scenes insights on Taiwan’s technology ecosystem and global strategy every week. --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, White Hsu examines one of the most important geopolitical and industrial questions of our time: Can the United States truly rebuild what Taiwan spent thirty years constructing? As Washington intensifies its reshoring policies under President Trump’s renewed administration, semiconductor manufacturing has become central to national security strategy, industrial policy, and global supply chain negotiations. While the U.S. can relocate certain chip production capacity, replicating Taiwan’s dense semiconductor ecosystem is an entirely different challenge. In this episode, we explore: • Why Taiwan’s chip dominance has drawn renewed U.S. political attention • The structural limits of reshoring advanced semiconductor production • The workforce and tacit knowledge gap • Why geographic clustering matters more than subsidies • What production can realistically move — and what cannot • The emerging dual-hub future of the global semiconductor industry https://whitehsu.blog/2025/11/17/taiwan-chips-us-pressure-limits/ If you enjoy strategic deep dives into Taiwan’s technology economy and global geopolitics, follow Taiwan Tech Dispatch on your preferred podcast platform, and subscribe to the newsletter for long-form analysis. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore why major institutions have sharply different forecasts for Taiwan’s economic growth — and what those differences reveal about how AI is reshaping Taiwan’s economy. While organizations like the IMF project moderate growth, local economists and regional institutions see something much bigger taking shape: an AI-driven multiplier effect that amplifies investment, employment, wages, and reinvestment across Taiwan’s tightly integrated technology ecosystem. This episode breaks down: Why GDP forecasts for Taiwan differ by more than two percentage pointsWhat the “AI multiplier effect” really means in plain languageWhy Taiwan’s AI supply chain creates stronger economic spillovers than most global models assumeAnd why 2025 may represent not just growth, but a structural re-rating of Taiwan’s economy📖 Read the full article: https://whitehsu.blog/2025/11/07/taiwan-ai-multiplier-effect-gdp-forecast/ 🎧 Follow and subscribe to Taiwan Tech Dispatch: SpotifyYouTube📩 Subscribe to the newsletter for deeper analysis and long-form insights: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 This is not an episode about short-term predictions — it’s about understanding the system beneath the numbers. --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • For the past decade, no local mobile payment startup in Taiwan has achieved profitability. In this episode, we explore how Autopass broke that cycle—not by competing for users, but by becoming the neutral infrastructure behind the entire mobility payment ecosystem. Starting from its B2C parking app “Car Ma-ji,” Autopass made a bold pivot to a B2B2C platform strategy inspired by TSMC: don’t compete, empower. By positioning itself as a “shovel-maker” rather than a gold miner, Autopass now serves banks, e-wallets, fuel chains, and mobility platforms without threatening any of them. We also examine why mobility payments offer a uniquely attractive battlefield, how Autopass monetizes through APIs and point-redemption spreads, and why Japan is the next critical test beyond Taiwan’s TAM limits. ---- 🔗 Read the full article (with charts and deeper analysis): https://whitehsu.blog/2025/11/12/autopass-tsmc-strategy-shovel-maker/ 📬 Subscribe to the Taiwan Tech Dispatch Newsletter: https://whitehsu.blog/ --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • In 2025-2026, Taiwan officially crossed USD 40,000 GDP per capita, placing it among high-income economies. But for many people living and working in Taiwan, wages still feel stagnant—and the gap between economic growth and personal income is becoming harder to ignore. In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, host White Hsu explores Taiwan’s economic paradox: how a globally competitive, export-driven economy can generate massive GDP growth—while average wages lag behind. We dive into: Why high productivity doesn’t automatically translate into higher wagesHow this structure shapes Taiwan’s startup ecosystemThe hidden advantages—and long-term risks—for innovation and talentWhy Taiwan’s cost efficiency can be both a strength and a ceilingThis episode is not just about economics. It’s about Taiwan’s innovation identity—and what must change as Taiwan moves deeper into the high-income era. If you enjoy deep dives on Taiwan’s tech ecosystem, startups, and global strategy: 📩 Subscribe to my LinkedIn Newsletter — Taiwan Tech Dispatch Weekly insights on Taiwan, innovation, and the global tech economy. 🔗 https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • Taiwan is globally known for semiconductors and hardware manufacturing. But today, Taiwan is also trying to tell a different story — a startup story. In this episode of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we explore Startup Island Taiwan, Taiwan’s national startup brand, and why branding has become a strategic tool for startups competing on a global stage. This episode looks beyond individual companies and focuses on the bigger picture: how a unified national narrative helps Taiwanese startups gain visibility, credibility, and access to international markets. If you’re interested in startups, innovation policy, or how small economies compete globally, this episode offers a clear and grounded perspective from Taiwan’s startup ecosystem. 🎧 This episode also connects with Episode 30, which discusses why Taiwanese startups often struggle with global visibility from a founder-level perspective. 📩 Subscribe to my LinkedIn Newsletter — Taiwan Tech Dispatch I regularly share deeper analysis on Taiwan’s technology, startups, AI, and global expansion strategies. 👉 Subscribe here: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • In this special episode, I share reflections from my first English interview with an international broadcaster, where we discussed Taiwan’s semiconductor ecosystem and the global chip supply chain. What began as a casual Zoom conversation turned into a recorded interview for Radio Taiwan International (RTI) — without slides, without prepared answers, and entirely live. In this episode, I reflect on what it feels like to explain complex and sensitive technology topics to a global audience, and what this experience taught me about clarity, framing, and cross-border understanding. 🎧 Original RTI interview (Episode 7) https://www.rti.org.tw/en/programnews?uid=4&pid=93251 My segment on Taiwan and semiconductors begins around the 34-minute mark. 🎙 The interview was hosted by international journalist Julien Oeuillet, whose work focuses on geopolitics and global affairs at Radio Taiwan International. Host profile: https://www.rti.org.tw/en/host?uid=4&pid=311 ✍️ I also wrote a Newsletter reflecting on this experience: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/first-english-interview-what-taught-me-taiwans-story-white-hsu-ri3gc 📩 If you’d like to follow my ongoing thoughts on Taiwan, technology, and global industry trends, you’re welcome to subscribe to my LinkedIn Newsletter, Taiwan Tech Dispatch: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/taiwan-tech-dispatch-7355532535025586178 --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • In Episode 31 of Taiwan Tech Dispatch, we break down one of the most important — yet least understood — shifts in global technology: the robotics race. AI agents are improving fast, labor shortages are deepening, and the world is entering a new era where AI must not only think — but also act. That’s why robotics is becoming the next foundational platform after AI models. But here’s the surprising truth: The U.S., China, and Taiwan are not building the same robotics future. They’re building three completely different ones. In this episode, White Hsu explains: ** 🇺🇸 The U.S. Path — AI-first, high-capability general-purpose robots** 🇨🇳 The China Path — cost, scale, and vertical manufacturing dominance 🇹🇼 The Taiwan Path — supply-chain power, systems integration, and global trust We also explore why this divergence matters — and how Taiwan could replicate its AI server success to become the backbone supplier for the global robotics boom. 📘 You can also Read the full article: https://whitehsu.blog/2025/10/27/three-paths-robotics-us-china-taiwan/ 🔗 Follow White Hsu / Taiwan Tech DispatchBlog: whitehsu.blogLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/white-hsu-63b14737Newsletter: Taiwan Tech DispatchYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WhiteHsu_TWSpotify: Taiwan Tech Dispatch Podcast --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • Taiwan’s startup ecosystem has always been vibrant — but strangely invisible. ** For years, global investors struggled to access reliable data about Taiwanese startups. No unified database, no verified funding records, and no clear way to benchmark Taiwan against other APAC markets.** That changed with Findit — Taiwan’s first centralized, public, Crunchbase-like startup database. In this episode, I break down: Why Taiwan lacked startup visibility for over a decadeHow data opacity hurt Taiwan’s position in the global innovation mapWhat Findit finally solves — and why it’s a structural upgradeHow visibility leads to capital flow, talent mobility, and global recognitionWhat this means for Taiwan’s future as an emerging APAC innovation hubFindit is not just a website. It is Taiwan’s long-missing infrastructure for discoverability — and a turning point that could redefine how the world sees Taiwan’s startups. If you want to understand the next phase of Taiwan’s innovation story, this episode is essential. 📘 You can also Read the full article: https://whitehsu.blog/2025/10/22/findit-taiwan-startup-database-crunchbase/ 🔗 Follow White Hsu / Taiwan Tech DispatchBlog: whitehsu.blogLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/white-hsu-63b14737Newsletter: Taiwan Tech DispatchYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WhiteHsu_TWSpotify: Taiwan Tech Dispatch Podcast --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • Taiwan rarely makes global headlines for software unicorns — but that may be about to change. In this episode, we explore the surprising rise of Owlting, a Taipei-born platform that has crossed the unicorn valuation threshold and is preparing for a Nasdaq listing. But this story is bigger than one company. Owlting represents a new pattern in Taiwan’s startup landscape: cross-border business models, multi-vertical platforms, and globally understood revenue engines. In this episode, we break down: Why Taiwan historically produced few software unicornsHow Owlting expanded into travel-tech, fintech, and blockchainWhy U.S. investors finally took noticeThe “New Unicorn Equation” defining Taiwan’s next generation of startupsHow AI, geopolitics, and capital flows are reshaping Taiwan’s role in AsiaWhat this means for founders, investors, and the Taiwan ecosystemTaiwan may finally be entering its soft-tech unicorn era — and Owlting could be one of the first signals of a much larger shift. 📘 You can also Read the full article: https://whitehsu.blog/2025/10/19/owlting-taiwan-newest-unicorn-nasdaq/ 🔗 Follow White Hsu / Taiwan Tech DispatchBlog: whitehsu.blogLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/white-hsu-63b14737Newsletter: Taiwan Tech DispatchYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WhiteHsu_TWSpotify: Taiwan Tech Dispatch Podcast --Hosting provided by SoundOn

  • When Nissan rejected Foxconn’s proposal to acquire the Oppama factory, many headlines framed it as a failed negotiation. ** But is it really the end of the story? Or just the beginning of a longer game?** In this episode, we break down: What actually happened in the Foxconn × Nissan talksWhy Japan’s automakers hesitate to accept outside helpThe striking parallels with Foxconn’s earlier negotiations with SharpHow “dignity negotiations” shape business outcomes in JapanWhy Foxconn’s strategic withdrawal may set up a stronger second roundWhat this means for the future of Taiwan–Japan industrial collaborationJapan’s first “no” has never been the final answer — not with Sharp, and possibly not with Nissan either. This episode explores how Foxconn is playing a long-term, cross-cultural strategy in one of the world’s most complex industries. 🎧 A deep dive into Japan’s EV pressures, corporate pride, and the unseen art of waiting for the right moment. 📘 You can also Read the full article: https://whitehsu.blog/2025/10/15/foxconn-nissan-sharp-japan-negotiations/ 🔗 Follow White Hsu / Taiwan Tech DispatchBlog: whitehsu.blogLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/white-hsu-63b14737Newsletter: Taiwan Tech DispatchYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WhiteHsu_TWSpotify: Taiwan Tech Dispatch Podcast--Hosting provided by SoundOn