When Algorithms Start Using City-Level Electricity
Artificial intelligence requires massive computing power and electricity. Discover why AI data centers are creating a global energy challenge.
Artificial intelligence requires massive computing power and electricity. Discover why AI data centers are creating a global energy challenge.
Rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are forcing cloud companies to rethink where their infrastructure lives. As risks around regional conflicts grow, tech giants are increasingly shifting data center investments toward India and Singapore, two emerging hubs for global cloud and AI infrastructure.
The Israel–Iran conflict is exposing new vulnerabilities in the global tech industry, from cloud data center attacks to cybersecurity risks and shifting infrastructure strategies.
India is no longer just consuming AI infrastructure — it’s starting to host it. A new $2 billion AI compute hub powered by Nvidia’s latest Blackwell chips signals a strategic shift that could reshape enterprise AI costs, latency, and global compute geopolitics.
India is hosting global AI leaders, attracting data-centre investments, and offering long-term incentives to tech companies. But becoming a true AI superpower requires more than ambition — it requires compute, capital, and control over core technology.
Nvidia’s Rubin platform is not a routine GPU upgrade. It marks the next phase of the AI infrastructure race — one where compute power, energy, and capital will decide who survives the AI boom.
Microsoft isn’t just expanding its data center footprint — it’s redesigning the inside of it. Facing AI-scale compute demands and physical constraints, the company is reportedly planning to rewire and re-architect its data centers to use space more efficiently. This isn’t a cosmetic change. It’s infrastructure survival.
India just rolled out a generational incentive: a tax holiday through 2047 for foreign companies that deliver global cloud services from Indian data centers. It’s not just a budget headline—it’s India trying to turn “where your data lives” into a national advantage