Foxconn plans to spend another $569M through 2029 to expand its AI server manufacturing site in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, adding to $717M invested through 2024
Taiwanese company gets approval for more AI data center industry in Racine County TechPowerUp : Foxconn Wisconsin Plant Gets $569 Million Investment Approved Focus Taiwan : Foxconn to invest US$569 mi...
OpenAI, Oracle, and Vantage Data Centers plan to build a data center in Wisconsin called Lighthouse, costing $15B+ and set to open in 2028, as part of Stargate
OpenAI, along with Oracle (ORCL.N) and Vantage Data Centers, will develop a data center campus in Wisconsin, as part of the Stargate project …
Microsoft says it will bring a $3.3B data center in Wisconsin online in early 2026 and calls it “the world's most powerful AI datacenter”
The $3.3 billion project in Wisconsin is expected to come online in early 2026, said Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith.
Sources: OpenAI has agreed to rent additional computing power from Oracle, totaling ~4.5 gigawatts of US data center power, as part of its Stargate initiative
OpenAI is dead man walking then, Microsoft owns all the IP, and it burns $60+b in competitor venture capital. … @onefeincat : Enough power to send 3.71 Martys McFly back to 1985, and they're using it ...
A look at Foxconn's $2.5B “Project Elephant”, an upcoming factory on the outskirts of Bengaluru, its second-largest factory outside China, creating 40,000 jobs
The $2.5 billion “Project Elephant” will be the company's second-largest factory outside China and create 40,000 jobs. Bluesky: @liviohenrik , @rinachandran , and @restofworld.org X: @devanahalliblr ,...
Microsoft plans to invest $3.3B to build a data center in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, and train locals, alongside investing in a University of Wisconsin AI lab
Company has been on a global spending spree, trying to build infrastructure and goodwill for artificial intelligence
How Foxconn's initial plans for a heavily taxpayer-subsidized $10B mega plant in Wisconsin have devolved into a more modest factory with a robotic assembly line
Bruce Murphy / The Verge :