Qualcomm rules the smartphone chip market but has barely made a dent in AI.
That gap might be about to close.
The Information reports that Qualcomm is in talks to buy Tenstorrent - one of the most-watched AI chip startups in the industry, and one of the few credible challengers to Nvidia.
The Reported Deal
The Information broke the story, with no terms disclosed and no deal final.
Tenstorrent builds AI chips designed to compete with Nvidia inside data centers - the buildings where most of the world's AI models actually run.
That ambition has pulled in over $1 billion from high-profile backers, giving the startup the runway to take on Nvidia directly.
For Qualcomm, a deal would mark a sharp pivot from its core business of powering most Android phones.
Its Snapdragon chips dominate smartphones and have started powering Windows laptops, yet the company has been notably absent from the AI data center boom.
That's the market where Nvidia has built a near-monopoly - and where every chipmaker now wants in.
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Why Tenstorrent
The short answer: Jim Keller.
Keller is one of the most respected chip designers alive, with a hand in some of the most successful processors of the last two decades at Apple, AMD, Tesla, and Intel.
He now runs Tenstorrent.
The longer answer is the company's bet on RISC-V - an open-source chip design that anyone can use and modify.
Nvidia's AI dominance runs on a closed, proprietary stack, while Tenstorrent is trying to build the opposite.
The bet: chipmakers and AI companies want a more open alternative they can shape themselves.
RISC-V matters because it lowers the cost of designing custom chips - exactly what big tech buyers like Amazon, Google, and Meta want as they design their own AI silicon.
And Tenstorrent is already proving the pitch can land, signing licensing deals with companies like LG and Hyundai for its chip technology.
All of which is why buying Tenstorrent would hand Qualcomm both the talent and the technology to make a real run at the AI chip market.
What To Watch
No deal is done yet, and talks can fall apart - especially since The Information reports a price range of $8 billion to $10 billion, and a startup with Tenstorrent's profile won't come cheap.
The bigger question is what Qualcomm does with it - because building an AI data center business from scratch takes years.
Buying one is faster, but only if the integration works.
For Qualcomm investors, a deal would signal the company is finally willing to spend big to break into AI, even if it means short-term costs for a long-term shot at the fastest-growing chip market.
The smartphone chip leader wants a seat at the AI table, and this is how it plans to get one.
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