(Reuters) – Nvidia (NVDA.O) uveiled on Friday the first U.S.-made Blackwell wafer, produced at TSMC’s (2330.TW) semiconductor manufacturing facility in Phoenix, as demand for AI chips accelerates.
Companies have been racing to meet the broader AI industry’s voracious appetite for computing power as they develop AI technology that meets or exceeds human intelligence.
The move “bolsters the U.S. supply chain and onshores the AI technology stack that will turn data into intelligence and secure America’s leadership for the AI era,” Nvidia said in a blog post.
It also aligns with President Donald Trump’s efforts to strengthen U.S. technology and manufacturing leadership.
TSMC’s Arizona facility will produce advanced technologies including two-, three- and four-nanometer chips, as well as A16 chips, that are essential for applications like AI, telecommunications and high-performance computing, Nvidia said.
There has recently been a flurry of mega deals between AI firms and chipmakers such as Nvidia, AMD (AMD.O) and Broadcom (AVGO.O) to build data center capacity.
TSMC, the world’s biggest producer of advanced chips, raised its full-year revenue forecast on Thursday on a bullish outlook for AI spending after posting a record profit that blew past market estimates.
Related Topics
‘ ;
r_text[1] = ” ;
r_text[2] = ” ;
r_text[3] = ” ;
r_text[4] = ” ;
r_text[5] = ” ;
r_text[6] = ” ;
var i = Math.floor(r_text.length * Math.random());
document.write(r_text[i]);