The CEO of Super Micro Charles Liang said he had collaborated with Elon Musk XAI to build the Colossus Data Center in only 122 days


  • Super Micro Computer, a Fortune 500 Silley Tech Giant CEO Charles Liang said on Thursday that this makes highly efficient servers and data centers, and puts their attention to expanding in the areas of the Middle and East Coast and hopes to stay away from high prices due to President Trump’s tariff. The company recently made a partnership with Xai and its Grok team to create a data center in Tennessee.

Super Micro Computer is looking to convert the page after a hard display through a set of accounting problems and financing. The manufacturer of the data center is working on a $ 40 billion revenue target, and CEO Charles Liang announced the expansion plans of its campus in San Jose to new locations in the Middle West and the East Coast. He added that Super Micro is in talks with potential partners in the Middle East. Liang spoke at the Humanx AI conference in Las Vegas this week.

Memphis description Data centerShe said that the company gathered its shelves in San Jose before charging components for customers who can “connect and operate”. The company is a major part of the Ecological Organization of Amnesty International, and its wealth has increased along with those in NVIDIA, Openai, Anthropic and others as a demand for the data center servers needed to operate and train artificial intelligence models. Liang, who founded the company in 1993 with five people before growing to become a player worth 23 billion dollars, and the CEO of Nvidia Jensen Huang works as a friend, and Super Micro servers packed with NVIDIA’s desired graphics units.

In fact, 750,000 square feet are new Xai Colossus Cluster The company said at the recently that the Super Micro team that was built for the Elon Musk’s Xai Grok team is 100,000 NVIDIA H100. Case study.

“It took only from Elon and Super Micro 122 days,” said Liang, adding that it will usually take a year or more to build this data center. “He paid me a lot, and has high standards.”

Despite the aftermath of the Chinese Deepseek and Manus Ai, which will refer with companies that will return to spending, Liang said that what is happening now is that the dynamic environment in technology is a “balance”.

However, in the end, he expected the demand to rise during the five years to the next ten years as companies are looking for the best most efficient products.

“This mutation of artificial intelligence was very large and Amnesty International is now very strong,” said Liang. “But Amnesty International can be more powerful, much faster, more intelligent and easier to use …. There is more space for artificial intelligence growth.”

He also pointed out that President Trump’s tariff by 25 % on steel and aluminum imports is unlikely to be meaningful to the company because it has kept its US -based operations. Liang said the company was also planning to take advantage of its mark in Taiwan. One of the main contracts manufacturers, ABLECOM, is located in Taiwan alongside its distributor, compuware. The executive chiefs of the two companies, Steve Liang and Bill Liang, respectively, are the brothers of Charles Liang.

These transactions and other relevant parties led to a short seller a report Last year, last year, other accounting red flags that put Super Micro in the retina in financial reports in which they delayed the annual financial deposits of 10-k and the Chapter. The auditor of its auditor resigned in the middle of the participation and the partial and the partial was at risk of being removed from Nasdak, which was the second time that something like this happened.

Last month, Super Micro issued late annual financial reports and said that her former accounting company was responsible for the delay. Since then, the company has been subjected to at least five lawsuits and is facing an investigation from the Ministry of Justice, the Securities and Stock Exchange Committee. Super Micro collaborates with the organizers.

This story was originally shown on Fortune.com

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