

Led by Nvidia, the AI industry has plans to reindustrialise America
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. BEFORE CO-FOUNDING Nvidia, the pioneer of artificial-intelligence (AI) chips, Jensen Huang was a busboy at Denny’s, a restaurant chain. He playfully reminded people of this on October 28th while delivering water to panellists at his firm’s first big jamboree in Washington, DC.
From busboy to billionaire, Mr Huang is now also in service to President Donald Trump. Shortly after he made a keynote speech peppered with tributes to the president, he flew to South Korea to accompany him as he prepared for trade talks with China. Many people look askance at the way the tech elite has cosied up to the president.
But the boss of the world’s most valuable firm, who once kept his distance from politics, says he is “incredibly proud" that Nvidia is contributing to Mr Trump’s new White House ballroom. Moreover, he is doubling down by pledging to help President Trump reindustrialise America. That may be mostly calculated to win the president’s support in convincing China to reopen its market to Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs).
It also involves significant rebranding of existing plans. Yet it is meaningful, nonetheless. It begins with chipmaking.
In mid-October, nine months after the president told Mr Huang that he wanted to reshore manufacturing, TSMC, a Taiwan-based semiconductor maker, produced a wafer for Nvidia’s most advanced GPU, called Blackwell, at its Arizona fab. Mr Huang said Blackwell’s processors, memory and packaging will all soon be made in America—though it is likely to take a long time before production happens at scale. His efforts extend to robotics.
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