Blackstone and Google have partnered to launch an AI cloud service company keeping in consideration the demand for AI computing services.
The partnership, which is all set to offer competition to Nvidia’s dominance in AI chips, will see Blackstone making an initial investment of $5 billion and Google offering its data center capacity, operations and networking along with its custom Tensor Processing Units (TPUs).
The business intends to bring its initial 500 megawatts of data center capacity online by 2027 and grow its scale as the demand for AI computing rises globally.
Benjamin Treynor Sloss, who has been with Google for over 20 years and managed their global data center operations, has been appointed CEO of this new company.
“We believe this is an once-in-a-generation opportunity to build AI infrastructure at scale,” said Blackstone’s President and Chief Operating Officer Jon Gray. Kurian, CEO of Google Cloud, also added that this partnership will now meet the growing demand for high-performance computing solutions for today’s AI projects.
This announcement comes as countries around the world invest heavily in developing artificial intelligence based thorough the investments from “companies” as well as financial institutions who are fighting to get the computing power needed to drive further artificial intelligence innovations.
What are Google’s TPU?
In recent times, Google has introduced their series of 8th TPUs and introduced two new technologies; one is a specific AI chip (TPU 8i) and the other for training large-scale AI models (TPU 8t).
Google’s TPUs are developed entirely for workloads that include training and inference to execute model development associated with advanced AI systems and drive the development of advanced AI models required for advanced AI workloads.
Popular among major AI laboratories, financial service organizations, and enterprises that conduct complex computing tasks globally, Google’s TPUs currently provide the processing power for Google Gemini AI-powered models, demonstrating their utility as well as highlighting how Google’s partnership reflects their growing objective of competing against Nvidia’s share of the AI chip market.



