Looks like the much-anticipated partnership isn't set in stone just yet. NVIDIA's Chief Financial Officer dropped an interesting update during their recent earnings call—the chip giant and OpenAI haven't locked down a final deal.
Yep, you heard that right. Despite all the buzz around AI infrastructure and the massive compute power OpenAI needs for their models, the two tech heavyweights are apparently still hammering out the details. No definitive agreement on the table as of now.
This matters more than you might think. NVIDIA's been the go-to supplier for AI training chips, basically powering the entire generative AI boom. OpenAI, on their end, burns through computing resources like there's no tomorrow. So everyone figured a long-term partnership was inevitable.
But here's the thing—deals at this scale involve insane complexity. We're talking supply commitments, pricing structures, maybe even custom chip designs. These negotiations don't wrap up overnight.
What's this mean for the broader AI and crypto infrastructure space? Well, compute availability affects everything from AI agent development to decentralized AI networks. If major players like OpenAI face supply uncertainties, it could ripple across the entire ecosystem.
For now, it's a waiting game. Both companies clearly need each other, but apparently they're not rushing to sign on the dotted line just yet.
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AirDropMissed
· 17h ago
Another round of negotiations... NVIDIA and OpenAI are still competing with each other.
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ImpermanentTherapist
· 19h ago
Wait, these two big companies still haven't finalized it? I thought it was already settled... Anyway, negotiations of this scale are never that fast. There are tons of messy things to discuss, like pricing, supply, and custom chips.
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GateUser-e87b21ee
· 12-04 15:51
Damn, these two giants still haven't reached an agreement? I thought it was already a done deal. Now this is getting interesting.
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PessimisticOracle
· 12-02 15:24
No way, it's going to fail again? These two giants are still arguing... It's ridiculous to think that with such tight Computing Power they can still waste it.
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FlippedSignal
· 12-02 15:14
Here's another "almost" great show, these two are really good at pretending... I guess we'll have to wait until the actual signing day.
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ForeverBuyingDips
· 12-02 15:12
Wow, this deal is still not done? I thought it was a done deal already...
Wait, does this mean GPU chips might continue to rise in price? My wallet hurts for three seconds.
But speaking of which, these two giants need each other so badly, they're just pretending to negotiate on the price, they'll sign eventually.
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BlockDetective
· 12-02 15:09
Ngl, this deal is still not finalized, which is a bit surprising. I thought NVIDIA and OpenAI had already figured it out... Anyway, that's how big companies operate; it's normal for negotiations to drag on for half a year or even a year.
Looks like the much-anticipated partnership isn't set in stone just yet. NVIDIA's Chief Financial Officer dropped an interesting update during their recent earnings call—the chip giant and OpenAI haven't locked down a final deal.
Yep, you heard that right. Despite all the buzz around AI infrastructure and the massive compute power OpenAI needs for their models, the two tech heavyweights are apparently still hammering out the details. No definitive agreement on the table as of now.
This matters more than you might think. NVIDIA's been the go-to supplier for AI training chips, basically powering the entire generative AI boom. OpenAI, on their end, burns through computing resources like there's no tomorrow. So everyone figured a long-term partnership was inevitable.
But here's the thing—deals at this scale involve insane complexity. We're talking supply commitments, pricing structures, maybe even custom chip designs. These negotiations don't wrap up overnight.
What's this mean for the broader AI and crypto infrastructure space? Well, compute availability affects everything from AI agent development to decentralized AI networks. If major players like OpenAI face supply uncertainties, it could ripple across the entire ecosystem.
For now, it's a waiting game. Both companies clearly need each other, but apparently they're not rushing to sign on the dotted line just yet.