Technologies
Nvidia and Corning Join Forces on Major Optical Fiber Initiative That Could Transform AI
Nvidia and Corning are collaborating on three new optical fiber manufacturing facilities in the U.S., aiming to boost AI infrastructure efficiency and create thousands of jobs.
Nvidia, the semiconductor leader fueling the artificial intelligence surge, has teamed up with Corning, a glass manufacturer, to construct three new advanced manufacturing plants in North Carolina and Texas. These facilities will focus exclusively on optical technologies for Nvidia, the world’s most valuable semiconductor company.
The initiative will generate at least 3,000 new jobs and boost Corning’s U.S. optical manufacturing capacity tenfold, according to a joint statement released Wednesday.
The financial details of the agreement were not made public. Following the announcement, Corning’s stock jumped 14%, while Nvidia’s shares rose nearly 3%.
This multi-year collaboration unites two infrastructure giants whose fortunes have surged since OpenAI launched ChatGPT in 2022, triggering massive investments in new processors and systems for cutting-edge AI models and workloads. Although specifics about the technology remain undisclosed, Nvidia is likely preparing to substitute copper with Corning’s optical glass fibers in its AI rack-scale systems, a method known as co-packaged optics.
During Nvidia’s GTC conference in 2025, CEO Jensen Huang emphasized that co-packaged optics are crucial for AI infrastructure development.
«What Nvidia is doing is nothing short of extraordinary, not just for the future of AI, but for the American advanced manufacturing workforce,» Corning CEO Wendell Weeks stated in a press release.
Corning’s stock has surged over 250% in the past year as of Tuesday’s close, reflecting the 175-year-old company’s swift transition into the new economy. In January, Meta announced it would invest up to $6 billion as its primary customer to support Corning’s optical cable plant expansion in Hickory, North Carolina, which is projected to create approximately 1,000 jobs.
Nvidia established its dominance in the AI market earlier, as its graphics processing units are vital for developing large language models and enabling tech giants like Alphabet and Meta to scale their data centers. Nvidia’s stock price has increased roughly 14-fold over the past five years, but the rally has recently slowed as investors diversify their bets across a broader range of AI infrastructure companies, including chipmaker Intel, memory provider Micron, and Corning.
Analysts have long anticipated Nvidia’s large-scale deployment of co-packaged optics, as the technology promises to significantly enhance data transfer speeds and reduce energy consumption for AI workloads.
While Corning is renowned for producing display glass for Apple’s iPhone, optical communications remains its largest and fastest-growing business. Since inventing optical fiber for long-range communication in 1970, Corning has supplied millions of miles of cables to connect racks in AI data centers for major industry players.
Replacing copper
Through its partnership with Nvidia, Corning may introduce glass fiber between chips, eventually replacing the 5,000 copper cables within Nvidia’s rack-scale systems like Vera Rubin.
Fiber-optic cables are thin, flexible strands of glass that transmit data as photons at much higher speeds and with less energy than traditional copper wires.
«Moving photons is between five and 20 times lower power usage than moving electrons,» Weeks told Verum in an interview in January.
«You’re bringing the light conversion process right next to the computer chip,» said Vlad Galabov, who covers enterprise infrastructure at research firm Omdia. «Less power is wasted because now you’re traveling a few millimeters, which requires far less energy than traveling across the circuit board.»
Galabov noted that «Nvidia has pushed the entire ecosystem to innovate faster.»
Optical fiber also experiences less signal loss than copper, enabling faster, more reliable communication and reducing the distance required between the hundreds of thousands of GPUs in a data center.
«AI is driving the largest infrastructure buildout of our time — and a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reinvigorate American manufacturing and supply chains,» Nvidia’s Huang said in the press release.
«Together with Corning, we are inventing the future of computing with advanced optical technologies —building the foundation for AI infrastructure where intelligence moves at the speed of light while advancing the proud tradition of Made in America.»
Nvidia launched two network switches in 2025 that use similar technologies, placing them adjacent to the primary AI chips. Competitors Broadcom and Marvell have introduced comparable products, while Intel is also developing co-packaged optics solutions.
In March, Nvidia invested $4 billion in two companies — Coherent and Lumentum — that develop lasers and components to convert data between light and electrical signals, which are then transmitted through Corning’s fiber-optic cables.
Weeks told Verum during an exclusive factory tour in January that he was collaborating with «all the different chip folks on glass core and how glass will be part of semiconductor packaging going forward.»
«As power becomes a bigger and bigger issue, fiber inevitably gets closer and closer to the compute,» Weeks said. As the number of GPUs in a server climbs into the hundreds, he added, «the distances will climb, and when those distances climb up, fiber optics become much more economical and much more power efficient.»
Corning is hosting an investor day at the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday, a day before celebrating its 175th anniversary by ringing the closing bell.
WATCH: How 175-year-old glass company Corning won a $6 billion AI infrastructure deal with Meta
Technologies
Google races to put Gemini at the center of Android before Apple’s AI reboot
Google is using its latest Android rollout to position Gemini as the AI layer across phones, Chrome, laptops and cars.
Google is using its latest Android rollout to make Gemini less of a chatbot and more of an operating layer across the phone, browser, car and laptop, just weeks before Apple is expected to show its own Gemini-powered Apple Intelligence reboot at WWDC.
Ahead of its Google I/O developer conference next week, the company previewed a number of Android updates, including AI-powered app automation, a smarter version of Chrome on Android, new tools for creators, a redesigned Android Auto experience, and a sweeping set of new security features.
Alphabet is counting on Gemini to help Google compete directly with OpenAI and Anthropic in the market for artificial intelligence models and services, while also serving as the AI backbone across its expansive portfolio of products, including Android. Meanwhile, Gemini is powering part of Apple’s new AI strategy, giving Google a role in the iPhone maker’s reset even as it races to prove its own version of personal AI on the phone is further along.
Sameer Samat, who oversees Google’s Android ecosystem, told CNBC that Google is rebuilding parts of Android around Gemini Intelligence to help users complete everyday tasks more easily.
“We’re transitioning from an operating system to an intelligence system,” he said.
As part of Tuesday’s announcements. Google said Gemini Intelligence will be able to move across apps, understand what’s on the screen and complete tasks that would normally require a user to jump between multiple services. That means Android is moving beyond the traditional assistant model, where users ask a question and get an answer, and acting more like an agent.
For instance, Google says Gemini can pull relevant information from Gmail, build shopping carts and book reservations. Samat gave the example of asking Gemini to look at the guest list for a barbecue, build a menu, add ingredients to an Instacart list and return for approval before checkout.
A big concern surrounding agentic AI involves software taking action on a user’s behalf without permissions. Samat said Gemini will come back to the user before completing a transaction, adding, “the human is always in the loop.”
Four months after announcing its Gemini deal with Google, Apple is under pressure to show a more capable version of Apple Intelligence, which has been a relative laggard on the market. Apple has long framed privacy, hardware integration and control of the user experience as its advantages.
Google’s Android push is designed to show it can bring AI deeper into the device experience while still giving users control over what Gemini can see, where it can act and when it needs confirmation.
The app automation features will roll out in waves, starting with the latest Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel phones this summer, before expanding across more Android devices, including watches, cars, glasses and laptops later this year.
The company is also redesigning Android Auto around Gemini, turning the car into another major surface for its assistant. Android Auto is in more than 250 million cars, and Google says the new release includes its biggest maps update in a decade and Gemini-powered help with tasks like ordering dinner while driving.
Alphabet’s AI strategy has been embraced by Wall Street, which has pushed the company’s stock price up more than 140% in the past year, compared to Apple’s roughly 40% gain. Investors now want to see how Gemini can become more central to the products people use every day.
WATCH: Alphabet briefly tops Nvidia after report of $200 billion Anthropic cloud deal
Technologies
Waymo recalls 3,800 robotaxis after glitch allowed some vehicles to ‘drive into standing water’
Waymo issued a voluntary recall of about 3,800 of its robotaxis to fix software issues that could allow them to drive into flooded roadways.
Waymo is recalling about 3,800 robotaxis in the U.S. to fix software issues that could allow them to “drive onto a flooded roadway,” according to a letter on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s website.
The voluntary recall is for Waymo vehicles that use the company’s fifth and sixth generation automated driving systems (or ADS), the U.S. auto safety regulator said in the letter posted Tuesday.
Waymo autonomous vehicles in Austin, Texas, were seen on camera driving onto a flooded street and stalling, requiring other drivers to navigate around them. It’s the latest example of a safety-related issue for the Alphabet-owned AV unit that’s rapidly bolstering its fleet of vehicles and entering new U.S. markets.
Waymo has drawn criticism for its vehicles failing to yield to school buses in Austin, and for the performance of its vehicles during widespread power outages in San Francisco in December, when robotaxis halted in traffic, causing gridlock.
The company said in a statement on Tuesday that it’s “identified an area of improvement regarding untraversable flooded lanes specific to higher-speed roadways,” and opted to file a “voluntary software recall” with the NHTSA.
“Waymo provides over half a million trips every week in some of the most challenging driving environments across the U.S., and safety is our primary priority,” the company said.
Waymo added that it’s working on “additional software safeguards” and has put “mitigations” in place, limiting where its robotaxis operate during extreme weather, so that they avoid “areas where flash flooding might occur” in periods of intense rain.
WATCH: Waymo launches new autonomous system in Chinese-made vehicle
Technologies
Qualcomm tumbles 13% as semiconductor stocks retreat from historic AI-fueled surge
Semiconductor equities reversed sharply after a broad AI-driven advance, with Qualcomm suffering its worst day since 2020 amid inflation concerns and rising oil prices.
Semiconductor stocks fell sharply on Tuesday, reversing course after an extensive rally that had expanded the artificial intelligence investment theme well past Nvidia and driven the industry to unprecedented levels.
Qualcomm plunged 13% and was on track for its steepest single-day decline since 2020. Intel shed 8%, while On Semiconductor and Skyworks Solutions each lost more than 6%. The iShares Semiconductor ETF, which benchmarks the overall sector, fell 5%.
The sell-off came after a key gauge of consumer prices came in above forecasts, and as conflict in Iran pushed crude oil higher—prompting investors to shift away from riskier assets.
The preceding advance had widened the AI opportunity set beyond longtime industry leader Nvidia, which for much of the past several years had largely carried the market to new peaks on its own.
Explosive appetite for central processing units, along with the graphics processing units that power large language models, has sent chipmakers to all-time highs.
Market participants are wagering that the shift from AI model training to autonomous agents will lift demand for additional AI hardware. Among the beneficiaries are memory chip producers, which are raising prices as supply remains tight.
Micron Technology slid 6%, and Sandisk cratered 8%. Sandisk’s stock has surged more than six times over since January.
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