• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

NVIDIA & Partners to Produce American-made AI Supercomputers in US for First Time

T0@st

News Editor
Joined
Mar 7, 2023
Messages
3,115 (3.91/day)
Location
South East, UK
System Name The TPU Typewriter
Processor AMD Ryzen 5 5600 (non-X)
Motherboard GIGABYTE B550M DS3H Micro ATX
Cooling DeepCool AS500
Memory Kingston Fury Renegade RGB 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR4-3600 CL16
Video Card(s) PowerColor Radeon RX 7800 XT 16 GB Hellhound OC
Storage Samsung 980 Pro 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME SSD
Display(s) Lenovo Legion Y27q-20 27" QHD IPS monitor
Case GameMax Spark M-ATX (re-badged Jonsbo D30)
Audio Device(s) FiiO K7 Desktop DAC/Amp + Philips Fidelio X3 headphones, or ARTTI T10 Planar IEMs
Power Supply ADATA XPG CORE Reactor 650 W 80+ Gold ATX
Mouse Roccat Kone Pro Air
Keyboard Cooler Master MasterKeys Pro L
Software Windows 10 64-bit Home Edition
NVIDIA is working with its manufacturing partners to design and build factories that, for the first time, will produce NVIDIA AI supercomputers entirely in the U.S. Together with leading manufacturing partners, the company has commissioned more than a million square feet of manufacturing space to build and test NVIDIA Blackwell chips in Arizona and AI supercomputers in Texas. NVIDIA Blackwell chips have started production at TSMC's chip plants in Phoenix, Arizona. NVIDIA is building supercomputer manufacturing plants in Texas, with Foxconn in Houston and with Wistron in Dallas. Mass production at both plants is expected to ramp up in the next 12-15 months. The AI chip and supercomputer supply chain is complex and demands the most advanced manufacturing, packaging, assembly and test technologies. NVIDIA is partnering with Amkor and SPIL for packaging and testing operations in Arizona.

Within the next four years, NVIDIA plans to produce up to half a trillion dollars of AI infrastructure in the United States through partnerships with TSMC, Foxconn, Wistron, Amkor and SPIL. These world-leading companies are deepening their partnership with NVIDIA, growing their businesses while expanding their global footprint and hardening supply chain resilience. NVIDIA AI supercomputers are the engines of a new type of data center created for the sole purpose of processing artificial intelligence—AI factories that are the infrastructure powering a new AI industry. Tens of "gigawatt AI factories" are expected to be built in the coming years. Manufacturing NVIDIA AI chips and supercomputers for American AI factories is expected to create hundreds of thousands of jobs and drive trillions of dollars in economic security over the coming decades.




"The engines of the world's AI infrastructure are being built in the United States for the first time," said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. "Adding American manufacturing helps us better meet the incredible and growing demand for AI chips and supercomputers, strengthens our supply chain and boosts our resiliency."



The company will utilize its advanced AI, robotics and digital twin technologies to design and operate the facilities, including NVIDIA Omniverse to create digital twins of factories and NVIDIA Isaac GR00T to build robots to automate manufacturing.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
Seeing the droid with the NVIDIA hardhart is funny for some reason. Would be funny to see a droid holding a GPU or something. eh, eh, NVIDIA marketing team?
 
” everybody’s too smart” AI production to be reduced… lol.
 
I wonder how long the AI buzzword will keep being used before we give these things a more generalized, standardized name. Because I'm starting to get sick of hearing "AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI" and it gets confusing sometimes because X can be called AI but isn't actually AI (like that one 'AI' water pump someone pointed out once on this forum that had no AI in it.)
 
If these are additional lines, that would add to the supply of GPUs. That's really good news for now and the future to have another advanced fab online.
 
American-Made We Go :love:
 
If these are additional lines, that would add to the supply of GPUs. That's really good news for now and the future to have another advanced fab online.
The recent driver debacle and comment by Mike Johnson saying that men need to stop 'Playing video games all day' and get to work: 'They're Draining Resources' sprang to mind. That David Chalmers Book "Reality+: Virtual Worlds and the Problems of Philosophy" also sprang to mind. A difference of degree and not of kind perhaps?!
 
Last edited:
Back
Top