
Michael Dell
Founder, chairman and CEO of Dell Technologies, where he leads one of the world’s largest technology infrastructure companies and is a prominent voice on enterprise AI infrastructure, AI factories, and data center supply chains.
AI Infrastructure Is Shifting From Accelerator Racks to Distributed Agent Systems
At Dell Technologies World, Nvidia chief Jensen Huang and Dell CEO Michael Dell argued that enterprise AI is moving from experimental promise to operational infrastructure, with agentic systems driving a sharp increase in compute demand. Huang said agents change the workload from single prompt-response transactions to long-running loops of reasoning, planning and tool use, while Dell framed the response as a pragmatic push toward distributed, “unmetered” intelligence across PCs, data centers and cloud-scale systems.
Google Turns TPU Capacity Into a Blackstone-Backed Neocloud
Bloomberg Technology’s Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow frame Google’s new venture with Blackstone as an attempt to turn Google’s TPU capacity into an AI cloud business outside Google Cloud. Bloomberg Intelligence’s Mandeep Singh argues the structure could help Google meet external demand for its chips by shifting more of the data-center burden to Blackstone, creating a TPU-based rival to Nvidia-centered neocloud providers.
AI Infrastructure Demand Is Still Outrunning Dell and Nvidia’s Supply Chain
Dell Technologies chief executive Michael Dell and Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang told Bloomberg’s Ed Ludlow that enterprise demand for local AI factories is outpacing supply even as the AI infrastructure supply chain expands rapidly. Dell argued that companies are seeking on-premises systems because AI can produce order-of-magnitude workflow gains, while Huang said the build-out is only beginning and could strain supply for at least a decade, with memory remaining a live constraint.