MIT engineers build compact chip factory for shipping containers

Engineers from MIT have developed a compact semiconductor factory that fits inside shipping containers. The design aims to slash chip manufacturing costs significantly.

MIT engineers built a compact chip factory as part of efforts by a startup to house an entire semiconductor production line in shipping containers. The approach targets dramatic reductions in manufacturing expenses for chips.

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Illustration of Tesla's Terafab, the largest chip factory, with Optimus robots, solar satellites, and Elon Musk announcing the project.
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Tesla announces massive Terafab chip factory

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Tesla has announced Terafab, described as the largest chip manufacturing facility ever, in collaboration with SpaceX and xAI. The facility aims to produce 1TW of chips per year to support ambitious projects like solar-powered satellites and millions of Optimus robots. Elon Musk stated it requires thousands of acres and over 10GW of power.

Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan announced that the company will work closely with Elon Musk to support the Terafab project. The initiative involves a joint chip development and fabrication effort by SpaceX and Tesla. A photo shows the executives shaking hands last weekend.

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The start-up Black Semiconductor has begun building its own chip factory in Aachen. This marks the first time a young company has taken this step in Germany.

China is testing a prototype nuclear reactor that can be carried on a truck and generate up to 10 megawatts of energy, enough to power a medium-sized AI data centre, a leading scientist said. The reactor, in development for several years, is described as the “world’s first 10-megawatt vehicle-mounted nuclear power unit”.

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Shanghai is shifting from scale expansion to capacity enhancement to build an international shipping center during the 15th Five-Year Plan period from 2026 to 2030.

A new perception chip is set to bring spatial intelligence to next-generation wearables. The device promises real-time understanding of the world in slim designs like Aviator glasses.

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A US company has developed autonomous ocean platforms to handle AI computing demands with wave-generated electricity. Panthalassa announced $140 million in funding last week for the project.

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