OpenAI is building its own chip — and calling it Jalapeño
Partnering with Broadcom, the maker of ChatGPT unveiled its first AI processor. The goal: faster answers and less reliance on others.
OpenAI wants to stop hitching a ride on everyone else’s chips. The company unveiled Jalapeño, its first processor built specifically for artificial intelligence, in partnership with Broadcom. The idea is easy to say and hard to do: speed up the models’ answers and make them more reliable and cheaper. First deployment is promised for late 2026.
Bold name aside, the move makes sense. Today, training and running AI models leans heavily on Nvidia’s chips — pricey and fought over like gold. Designing your own processor is how you win some independence, trim costs and avoid being hostage to a single supplier.
What’s at stake
If it works, it’s less “computer thinking very slowly” and more instant answers — and, deep down on the bill, potentially more affordable AI services for everyone. It’s also another sign that the AI race is no longer only about software: it’s now a silicon war too.
Illustrative · Photo: Andrew Neel / Pexels