SpaceX plans to launch 1 million orbital AI data centers. |
That’s why the company plans to raise $75 billion in an IPO in June. And smart investors are buying shares at a deep discount to the upcoming IPO price. |
Go here to claim your shares today. |
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) is betting on orbital AI data centers with a new partnership with Starcloud (private). |
Starcloud is a startup that plans to build a constellation of space-based data centers. |
Nvidia is a key partner — providing chips, technical support, and a coveted spot in its Inception program. And last November, Starcloud launched a satellite carrying a single Nvidia H100 GPU — the most powerful chip ever sent to space. |
From orbit, it trained an AI model on the complete works of Shakespeare. It also ran Google's Gemini model in space. Both were firsts in history. |
One Nvidia executive called it "a giant leap toward a future where orbital computing harnesses the infinite power of the sun." |
Now the market is paying attention. |
Starcloud raised $170 million in March at a $1.1 billion valuation — making it the fastest Y Combinator startup ever to reach unicorn status in just 17 months. One month later, the company is in talks to raise an additional $200 million at a $2.2 billion valuation. |
The valuation doubled in 30 days. |
Want to invest in SpaceX right before the IPO? Go here to get started. |
The team behind it is serious. The CEO studied at Harvard, Wharton, and Columbia and previously worked on satellite projects for national space agencies at McKinsey. The chief engineer is a former SpaceX Starlink engineer who also spent 20 years at Microsoft building large GPU clusters — and holds 25 patents. The CTO designed deployable solar arrays at Airbus. |
The investment thesis is straightforward. |
Data centers on Earth use huge amounts of power and water. They face increasing scrutiny and regulatory red tape. Six states are currently working to block all new AI data center projects. |
Space offers unlimited solar energy, passive cooling into the vacuum, and zero permitting headaches. |
Starcloud estimates its orbital data centers will deliver power at around $0.05 per kilowatt-hour — a fraction of terrestrial costs. |
The next satellite — Starcloud-2 — launches later this year. It carries an Nvidia Blackwell chip, an AWS server blade, and the largest deployable radiator ever flown on a private satellite. The company expects it to be cash-flow positive and 100 times more powerful than Starcloud-1. |
Partners already lined up for commercial workloads include Crusoe, AWS, Google Cloud, and Nvidia itself. |
Jensen Huang made the broader vision clear at GTC in March. He unveiled Nvidia's Vera Rubin Space-1 chip — engineered specifically for orbital computing — and called space "the final frontier" for AI infrastructure. |
Nvidia is supplying the chips. Starcloud is building the data centers. SpaceX is the launch partner. |
That's a serious lineup for a company that’s less than two years old. |
Starcloud shows that AI leaders are getting onboard with orbital data centers. |
Elon Musk is rushing to launch his own space-based AI data centers. That’s the primary reason that SpaceX is raising $75 billion from investors – in order to fund this massive project. |
The IPO valuation could top $1.75 trillion – making it the most expensive company to go public. |
That’s why I’m showing regular investors how to secure a stake – just 60 days before the stock goes public. |
Here’s how you can invest now. |
Ian Wyatt |
0 التعليقات:
إرسال تعليق