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NEWS: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced today that the company is working on a new chip/computer ...

By Sawyer Merritt
Posted March 17, 2026

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About the Creator

Sawyer Merritt is a prominent technology journalist and Tesla enthusiast known for breaking news on X (formerly Twitter) about Tesla, SpaceX, and AI advancements. His style is direct, fast-paced, and focused on delivering concise updates from official announcements, earning him high credibility among tech followers for accurate, timely reporting. With millions of followers, he often amplifies insider scoops from events like Nvidia keynotes.

What's This About?

The post reports Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announcing the development of 'Nvidia Vera Rubin Space-1,' a new chip/computer system designed for orbital data centers in space. Huang highlights unique challenges like cooling via radiation only, as space lacks conduction and convection, with Nvidia's engineers tackling these issues. This ties into Nvidia's broader Vera Rubin platform, including advanced GPUs like Rubin CPX for massive AI context processing and high-performance racks[1][2][4].

🔥Why It's Trending

This post is trending due to the bold vision of space-based data centers merging AI infrastructure with space tech, amplified by Nvidia's dominance in AI chips amid skyrocketing demand. Timing aligns with recent CES 2026 announcements where Huang confirmed Vera Rubin in full production, sparking excitement around 2026 launches[3][5]. Its futuristic appeal resonates as AI races forward, drawing comparisons to SpaceX innovations.

💡Fun Facts

  • 1Nvidia's Vera Rubin NVL144 CPX platform delivers 8 exaflops of AI performance and 100TB of fast memory in one rack, 7.5x more powerful than prior systems[1].
  • 2The Rubin CPX GPU is specialized for million-token AI contexts, like coding and video generation, slashing inference costs[1][4].
  • 3Vera Rubin chips entered full production by early 2026, with availability in the second half[3][5].
  • 4Space cooling relies solely on radiation, a key engineering hurdle for orbital data centers mentioned by Huang.
  • 5The platform features six new chips, including Vera CPU with 88 Olympus cores and NVLink 6 for 3.6 TB/s GPU bandwidth[2][6].

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NEWS: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced today that the company is working on a new chip/computer ...