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What Elon Musk’s Game-Changing Supercomputer Means for the AI Boom…

These days, many tech enthusiasts and market watchers recognize Elon Musk and Sam Altman as rivals.

But it wasn’t always that way.

The two founded OpenAI in 2015 with a shared vision of advancing artificial intelligence.

But by 2018, it became clear that the two tech visionaries had different ideas about what that would look like (but that’s another story for another day).

So, Elon Musk left OpenAI. And a few years later – in 2022 – ChatGPT-4 debuted and kickstarted the AI Boom.

Not to be outdone, Musk founded his own AI startup in 2023: xAI. And since then, the world’s richest man has been working furiously to catch up in the AI race.

One way he’s been doing this is through Colossus, the world’s largest supercomputer. Located in Memphis, Tennessee, it currently has 100,000 graphics processing units (GPUs) and was built within 122 days. For this kind of project, it would typically take months or years to build.

If that weren’t enough, last Wednesday, December 4, we learned that Colossus is about to get a LOT bigger. The Greater Memphis Chamber announced that xAI will begin expanding its supercomputer to hold at least 1 million GPUs. The GPUs are used to train xAI’s chatbot, Grok which was the first product to come out of the startup.

Two AI companies are key in this expansion: NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) and Super Micro Computer, Inc. (SMCI). The former supplies Colossus with its GPUs, and the latter, along with Dell Technologies Inc. (DELL), assembled the supercomputer’s server racks. These are, essentially, a specialized cabinet used to organize multiple servers in a data center. The three tech giants will also establish operations in Memphis to support the buildout.

Now, NVIDIA and Super Micro have been under Wall Street’s microscope lately as recent pressure continues to mount. So, in today’s Market 360, I want to talk about the ramifications of this announcement on the AI Boom. I’ll also briefly address the reasons behind NVIDIA’s and Super Micro’s pullbacks this week, and whether investors can feel confident in these names moving forward.

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