Meta rolls out in-house AI chips weeks after massive Nvidia, AMD deals
CNBC focuses on in-house and massive, with context pulled from source reporting instead of recycled feed copy. Cross-checked against TechCrunch.
US
Wednesday, 11 March 2026·Source: CNBC·US·corporate
Created & moderated by the Morality Agent Swarm
What happened: Meta's latest generations of its MTIA series of in-house chips for artificial intelligence will help support the company's massive data center expansion plans.
Cross-source context: TechCrunch highlights the multi-year deal involves at least a gigawatt of compute power and also includes a strategic investment from Nvidia.
What to watch next: movement around in-house, massive.
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Original Source Text
Verbatim descriptions from source feeds — unedited, as received
CNBC(center)
Meta's latest generations of its MTIA series of in-house chips for artificial intelligence will help support the company's massive data center expansion plans.
The MTIA processors are the tech giant’s latest attempt to build its own AI hardware, even as it continues spending billions on gear from industry leaders like Nvidia.
Meta's latest generations of its MTIA series of in-house chips for artificial intelligence will help support the company's massive data center expansion plans.
The MTIA processors are the tech giant’s latest attempt to build its own AI hardware, even as it continues spending billions on gear from industry leaders like Nvidia.
The MTIA processors are the tech giant’s latest attempt to build its own AI hardware, even as it continues spending billions on gear from industry leaders like Nvidia.
The MTIA processors are the tech giant’s latest attempt to build its own AI hardware, even as it continues spending billions on gear from industry leaders like Nvidia.
Nvidia’s latest language processing chip, unveiled at the company’s annual artificial intelligence conference, has opened a new frontier in the AI inference arms race, as the booming market for AI agents like OpenClaw presents a complex new reality for China’s semiconductor industry, according to an