The race to scale AI capacity is moving fast across Europe, with the U.K. and Norway emerging as new hubs and U.S. chipmakers drawing fresh bets from rivals.
AI Infrastructure Newsletter
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Enterprises may be racing to adopt AI, but the challenges are coming into sharper focus as risks and real-world consequences surface.There are some weird, wild and very personal questions that …
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China announced a ban on Nvidia’s custom RTX Pro 6000D chips for the Chinese market, marking a turning point in the race for AI dominance: Faced with being cut off …
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If the AI boom were a theme park, Nvidia has made a second deal for fast-pass access to compute capacity — first through a $1.5 billion agreement with AI cloud …
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Talk about large-scale: Yesterday, Alphabet became the fourth company ever to reach a $3 trillion market value, joining Nvidia, Microsoft, and Apple. It’s no coincidence that so much of their …
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The pace of investment in AI infrastructure is accelerating worldwide, with billions pouring into new ventures, massive cloud agreements, and record levels of data center construction.
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The not-usually-so-contentious trade and tech relationship between the U.S. and South Korea is top of mind this week, with the convergence of several developments.
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AI infrastructure continues to drive eye-popping numbers: Right now, the headliner is Microsoft’s deal for GPUs from Nebius (which was spun out of Russian internet company Yandex two years ago).
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Today’s top new focuses largely on AI expansion: Mistral rakes in a 1.3 billion Euro investment in support of European AI sovereignty, while LG lands a deal to provide cooling …
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AI infrastructure is rapidly evolving across multiple fronts, as shown our top stories for today, which underscore both the supply constraints and massive investment commitments happening in the space.