While training has been the focus, inference is where AI's value is realized. Training clusters need large amounts of power. Optimized inference workloads that run over and over again on new data, on the other hand, should ideally use as few IT resources and power as possible.
Caterpillar generators are a hot commodity among developers of computer data centers, despite challenges in some of the machinery maker's other business lines. Power-generat
President Trump recently announced that several companies in the private sector are teaming up to invest up to $500 billion into infrastructure for artificial intelligence (AI). The Stargate project,
This week's announcement by President Donald Trump of a massive private-sector investment to build more AI data centers casts a spotlight on a relatively small and nimble class of cloud computing firms positioned to play a bigger role in the tech sector.
The social-media giant plans to spend between $60 billion and $65 billion, the latest sign of tech companies’ accelerating investments into artificial intelligence.
Stargate's first data center campus, located in Abilene, will be about 875 acres, but only says it will create at least 57 jobs.
The result was Athenic AI, a company that uses AI to run data analytics for enterprises across all of their data sources. Zhao, the founder and CEO, said that Athenic’s products are designed to be a central nervous system of an organization’s databases that can be used by anyone in the company regardless of their coding or data experience.
Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance is planning to build what could become the world’s largest data center in Jamnagar, India, with a capacity of 3 gigawatts to capitalize on surging AI demand.
Nebius is poised to capitalize on the AI megatrend, leveraging unique engineering strengths & Nvidia's backing. See why NBIS is one of the AI megatrend winners.
We recently compiled a list of the 35 Most Important AI Stocks for 2025 According to JPMorgan. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Super Micro Computer, Inc.
The growing demand for artificial intelligence has led asset managers to increase their planned investments in data centers, according to a new survey by global professional services firm KPMG released Jan. 30.