Jensen Huang says a design flaw with Nvidia's Blackwell chips has been fixed — with TSMC's help
Date: 2024-10-24
Nvidia's much-anticipated Blackwell AI chip appears to be back on track.
CEO Jensen Huang said Nvidia had fixed a design flaw with the chip with the help of Taiwanese tech firm TSMC, per Reuters.
That will be a relief for tech giants like Meta and Google, which are desperate to acquire Nvidia's new AI chips.
Nvidia seems to have fixed a design flaw in its next-gen AI chip, thanks to a little help from TSMC.
CEO Jensen Huang said on Wednesday the chip giant and its Taiwanese partner had fixed an issue in its much-anticipated Blackwell AI chips, per a report from Reuters.
"We had a design flaw in Blackwell. It was functional, but the design flaw caused the yield to be low. It was 100% Nvidia's fault," said Huang, in comments reported by Reuters.
The Nvidia boss said that TSMC, which is the world's largest chipmaker, helped the tech company recover from that yield deficiency and resume manufacturing of Blackwell "at an incredible pace."
Huang also reportedly denied media reports that the delays in Blackwell production had caused tension between Nvidia and TSMC, calling them "fake news."
TSMC's intervention appears to have put Blackwell's production back on track. Huang told a Goldman Sachs conference in September that the chip was in full production, and shipping was set to start in Q4.