Jim Keller, who is known as the "chip master" in Silicon Valley, said today that Taipei has great talents and can make system crystals, etc. Tenstorrent, who serves as the executive, will set up an office in Taipei and recruit engineers su...
Jim Keller, who is known as the "chip master" in Silicon Valley, said today that Taipei has great talents and can make system crystals, etc. Tenstorrent, who serves as the executive, will set up an office in Taipei and recruit engineers such as small chips.
Keller came to Taiwan to participate in the SEMICON Taiwan 2025 International Semiconductor Exhibition and held a lecture in the "Master Forum". As soon as he opened the scene, Tenstorrent is a special factory for AI computers, supporting high-level AI computers, Taiwan can produce system crystals, etc., so he decided to join this team.
Keller said that Tenstorrent will set up an office in Taipei, and Taipei has great talents, and Tenstorrent will launch small chip engineers in Taiwan, etc. Since everything in Tenstorrent is open, you can clearly know what the company does without joining the company, and you will be very confident in it.
He pointed out that Tenstorrent has been in its eight years and has started shipping its products. LG is one of its customers and TVs also have AI processors. The establishment of Tenstorrent has a sense of mission, mainly adopts RISC-V, and uses ordinary dynamic random access memory (DRAM) to create high-performance AI, helping everyone afford AI.
Keller said that the Tenstorrent processor is 6 nanometers of TEU, with a development cost of about 80 million US dollars. He hopes to cooperate with small chips in the future to make AI computer design more interesting.
Keller was formerly the senior vice president of Intel's Silicon Engineering Group, the vice president of Tesla's automatic driving and the chief core architect of Ultramicro (AMD). He leads in leading multiple chip designs that transform the world and enjoys the title of "chip master" in Silicon Valley.
Extended reading: Jim Keller, a chip master, assists RISC-V with new creation, former Intel elites create breakthrough CPUs