Stay Ahead, Stay ONMINE

Altera launches Agilex 3 FPGAs for the intelligent edge

Altera is launching its latest family of Agilex FPGA 3 chips to help developers expand the boundaries of the intelligent edge. The Agilex 3 FPGA chips are now in production, said Sandra Rivera, CEO of Altera, in a press briefing. These devices are important for increasing intelligence at the edge and enabling AI proliferation. Altera’s field programmable gate array (FPGA) chips are programmable chips that have found a home in a wide variety of edge applications, including robotics, factory automation systems and medical equipment. Altera is targeting its latest Agilex FPGAs as well as its Quartus Prime Pro software, and FPGA AI Suite at the intelligent edge market. It’s a big launch for Altera as it’s the first as a newly independent company. Altera was originally a chip manufacturing company that was acquired by Intel in 2015 for $16.7 billion and merged into the company’s data center unit under the Programmable Solutions Group (PSG) brand. But Intel ran into a number of manufacturing challenges and leadership changes. After nearly a year of preparation, Altera spun out of Intel formally on January 10, with longtime Intel executive Rivera as CEO. Sandra Rivera is CEO of Altera. The Agilex 3 FPGAs can deliver 1.9 times higher fabric performance compared to the previous generation with 38% lower power, said Rivera, in a press briefing. “Since last year, we have really been focused on our leadership roadmap and execution excellence and really driving a full-stack portfolio for all of the segments and customers that we support and that we service,” Rivera said. “And that really starts with this waterfall strategy that we have for the entire Agilex roadmap that we have introduced into the market. Now we’re introducing the last component of that in terms of the Agilex roadmap. It is the more cost-constrained, power-constrained part of the roadmap.” One big family Agilex 3 FPGAs tackled the low-end of power-efficient edge systems. At the high end, Altera offers its Agilex 7 and Agilex 9 cihps for high compute density. It has Agilex 5 in the midrange and now Agilex 3 completes the product line. The recent introductions of Agilex 5 and Agilex 3 lower barriers to entry, increase the market participation, and just accelerate the rate of innovation overall in the programmable logic industry, Rivera said. At the high end, Agilex 7 and Agilex 9 are suited for data center infrastructure, networking and communications applications, as well as the aerospace sectors with the built-in RF and multi chip packaging capability. “In the mid-range of the applications, we have power and performance optimized capabilities, and we are delivering two times better performance per watt versus the competition in that very meaty, large mid-range of applications and customers and segments,” Rivera said. She said that Altera’s programmable solutions meet the stringent power, performance and size requirements of embedded and intelligent edge applications. These hardware solutions, along with Altera’s FPGA AI Suite, enable machine learning engineers, software developers, and FPGA designers to create custom FPGA AI platforms using industry-standard frameworks such as TensorFlow and PyTorch,and development tools such as OpenVINO and Quartus Prime software. Rivera said Altera’s low-power, cost-optimized Agilex 3 FPGAs are available for ordering. The FPGA’s high-performance programmable architecture, along with built-in AI Tensor blocks and embedded processors, enables businesses to rapidly modernize their edge and embedded infrastructure by deploying customized AI solutions that deliver the low latency, energy efficiency and agility needed for system longevity. In robot control systems, Agilex 3 FPGAs bring real-time control to multi-axis robot arms by fusing machine learning capabilities into multi-sensor pipelines. And in smart factory cameras, Agilex 3 FPGAs improve defect detection by using fine-grained parallel processing and CNNs trained for object recognition to analyze vast amounts of data. I asked Rivera whether she was concerned about TSMC being affected in the possible tariff wars if the trade war spills over to Taiwan, as Donald Trump has said before. She noted that since Altera uses both TSMC and Intel Foundry (the contract manufacturing arm of Intel), it is shielded from such concerns. Intel has numerous chip factories in the U.S., and TSMC is also making chips in the U.S. now. And Altera’s defense-related projects in particular also require domestic production and that will be unaffected. How FPGAs are used in the field Agilex FPGAs can be used in smart factories. For developers and customers, this means that Altera is bringing more intelligent compute to industrial and embedded markets. That means AI’s intelligence can spread far into everyday edge devices, where more computing can be done in a cost-efficient and network-efficient way. The devices can boost applications including industrial, automotive and defense users. It can help drones be deployed with more built-in intelligence, as an example. It also enables seamless integration of sensors and actuators in robotics in smart factories. Those robots require precise motor control algorithms to function efficiently on factory floors. “An FPGA will be used extensively in those environments because they can accommodate multiple operations in parallel and efficiently handle that continuous flow of data streams,” Rivera said. “So by leveraging an FPGA that in many cases is already there and designed into the system, we see our embedded developers fusing machine learning capabilities into their support pipeline or their sensor pipeline to incorporate AI algorithms in robotics at the edge.” FPGAs are also used in endoscopy and MRI machines in medical fields. And they can bring greater computing power and efficiency to processing of LIDAR sensor data in self-driving cars. And since the chips are reprogrammable in the field, they can be updated over the air to adjust for the evolution of standards, algorithms or capabilities. That makes the designs future proof, Rivera said. Production ready Increasing intelligence at the edge is key to AI proliferation. Customers can place orders now for production-quality Agilex 3 devices, development kits, selected partner boards and system-on-modules. The first wave of Agilex 5 FPGAs E-Series devices are now fully qualified and released for high-volume production. Compared to the Agilex 5 D-Series FPGAs, the Agilex 5 E-Series FPGAs are optimized for more power-sensitive applications that require high-performance with smaller form factors and logic densities. Agilex 5 E-Series FPGAs, with AI-infused fabric, bring high levels of integration and improved computing capabilities for intelligent edge applications, including video, industrial, robotics, and medicalsystems. In a continued effort to enhance its cost-optimized product portfolio, Altera is expanding the MAX 10 FPGA family with new package options. The MAX 10 10M40 and 10M50 product lines are now offered in variable pitch BGA packages. This new package option significantly increases the value of these highly integrated devices by reducing form factor while maintaining a high IO count, resulting in a lower total cost of ownership for users. Customers can place orders now for engineering samples of MAX 10 FPGAs in the VPBGA-610 package, with production silicon available in Q3 2025. “With today’s announcements, we continue to expand our leadership programmable portfolio by offering an even broader range of end-to-end solutions built on decades of expertise and a strong ecosystem of partners,” said Rivera. “With our latest FPGA products and development tools, we provide embedded developers a seamless approach to deliver highperforming and high-quality intelligent edge solutions for the era of AI.” Altera is showcasing its latest FPGA innovations and development tools at Embedded World 2025 in Nuremburg, Germany.

Altera is launching its latest family of Agilex FPGA 3 chips to help developers expand the boundaries of the intelligent edge.

The Agilex 3 FPGA chips are now in production, said Sandra Rivera, CEO of Altera, in a press briefing. These devices are important for increasing intelligence at the edge and enabling AI proliferation.

Altera’s field programmable gate array (FPGA) chips are programmable chips that have found a home in a wide variety of edge applications, including robotics, factory automation systems and medical equipment. Altera is targeting its latest Agilex FPGAs as well as its Quartus Prime Pro software, and FPGA AI Suite at the intelligent edge market.

It’s a big launch for Altera as it’s the first as a newly independent company. Altera was originally a chip manufacturing company that was acquired by Intel in 2015 for $16.7 billion and merged into the company’s data center unit under the Programmable Solutions Group (PSG) brand. But Intel ran into a number of manufacturing challenges and leadership changes.

After nearly a year of preparation, Altera spun out of Intel formally on January 10, with longtime Intel executive Rivera as CEO.

Sandra Rivera is CEO of Altera.

The Agilex 3 FPGAs can deliver 1.9 times higher fabric performance compared to the previous generation with 38% lower power, said Rivera, in a press briefing.

“Since last year, we have really been focused on our leadership roadmap and execution excellence and really driving a full-stack portfolio for all of the segments and customers that we support and that we service,” Rivera said. “And that really starts with this waterfall strategy that we have for the entire Agilex roadmap that we have introduced into the market. Now we’re introducing the last component of that in terms of the Agilex roadmap. It is the more cost-constrained, power-constrained part of the roadmap.”

One big family

Agilex 3 FPGAs tackled the low-end of power-efficient edge systems.
Agilex 3 FPGAs tackled the low-end of power-efficient edge systems.

At the high end, Altera offers its Agilex 7 and Agilex 9 cihps for high compute density. It has Agilex 5 in the midrange and now Agilex 3 completes the product line.

The recent introductions of Agilex 5 and Agilex 3 lower barriers to entry, increase the market participation, and just accelerate the rate of innovation overall in the programmable logic industry, Rivera said. At the high end, Agilex 7 and Agilex 9 are suited for data center infrastructure, networking and communications applications, as well as the aerospace sectors with the built-in RF and multi chip packaging capability.

“In the mid-range of the applications, we have power and performance optimized capabilities, and we are delivering two times better performance per watt versus the competition in that very meaty, large mid-range of applications and customers and segments,” Rivera said.

She said that Altera’s programmable solutions meet the stringent power, performance and size requirements of embedded and intelligent edge applications. These hardware solutions, along with Altera’s FPGA AI Suite, enable machine learning engineers, software developers, and FPGA designers to create custom FPGA AI platforms using industry-standard frameworks such as TensorFlow and PyTorch,
and development tools such as OpenVINO and Quartus Prime software.

Rivera said Altera’s low-power, cost-optimized Agilex 3 FPGAs are available for ordering. The FPGA’s high-performance programmable architecture, along with built-in AI Tensor blocks and embedded processors, enables businesses to rapidly modernize their edge and embedded infrastructure by deploying customized AI solutions that deliver the low latency, energy efficiency and agility needed for system longevity.

In robot control systems, Agilex 3 FPGAs bring real-time control to multi-axis robot arms by fusing machine learning capabilities into multi-sensor pipelines. And in smart factory cameras, Agilex 3 FPGAs improve defect detection by using fine-grained parallel processing and CNNs trained for object recognition to analyze vast amounts of data.

I asked Rivera whether she was concerned about TSMC being affected in the possible tariff wars if the trade war spills over to Taiwan, as Donald Trump has said before. She noted that since Altera uses both TSMC and Intel Foundry (the contract manufacturing arm of Intel), it is shielded from such concerns. Intel has numerous chip factories in the U.S., and TSMC is also making chips in the U.S. now. And Altera’s defense-related projects in particular also require domestic production and that will be unaffected.

How FPGAs are used in the field

Agilex FPGAs can be used in smart factories.

For developers and customers, this means that Altera is bringing more intelligent compute to industrial and embedded markets. That means AI’s intelligence can spread far into everyday edge devices, where more computing can be done in a cost-efficient and network-efficient way.

The devices can boost applications including industrial, automotive and defense users. It can help drones be deployed with more built-in intelligence, as an example. It also enables seamless integration of sensors and actuators in robotics in smart factories. Those robots require precise motor control algorithms to function efficiently on factory floors.

“An FPGA will be used extensively in those environments because they can accommodate multiple operations in parallel and efficiently handle that continuous flow of data streams,” Rivera said. “So by leveraging an FPGA that in many cases is already there and designed into the system, we see our embedded developers fusing machine learning capabilities into their support pipeline or their sensor pipeline to incorporate AI algorithms in robotics at the edge.”

FPGAs are also used in endoscopy and MRI machines in medical fields. And they can bring greater computing power and efficiency to processing of LIDAR sensor data in self-driving cars. And since the chips are reprogrammable in the field, they can be updated over the air to adjust for the evolution of standards, algorithms or capabilities. That makes the designs future proof, Rivera said.

Production ready

Increasing intelligence at the edge is key to AI proliferation.
Increasing intelligence at the edge is key to AI proliferation.

Customers can place orders now for production-quality Agilex 3 devices, development kits, selected partner boards and system-on-modules.

The first wave of Agilex 5 FPGAs E-Series devices are now fully qualified and released for high-volume production. Compared to the Agilex 5 D-Series FPGAs, the Agilex 5 E-Series FPGAs are optimized for more power-sensitive applications that require high-performance with smaller form factors and logic densities. Agilex 5 E-Series FPGAs, with AI-infused fabric, bring high levels of integration and improved computing capabilities for intelligent edge applications, including video, industrial, robotics, and medical
systems.

In a continued effort to enhance its cost-optimized product portfolio, Altera is expanding the MAX 10 FPGA family with new package options. The MAX 10 10M40 and 10M50 product lines are now offered in variable pitch BGA packages. This new package option significantly increases the value of these highly integrated devices by reducing form factor while maintaining a high IO count, resulting in a lower total cost of ownership for users. Customers can place orders now for engineering samples of MAX 10 FPGAs in the VPBGA-610 package, with production silicon available in Q3 2025.

“With today’s announcements, we continue to expand our leadership programmable portfolio by offering an even broader range of end-to-end solutions built on decades of expertise and a strong ecosystem of partners,” said Rivera. “With our latest FPGA products and development tools, we provide embedded developers a seamless approach to deliver highperforming and high-quality intelligent edge solutions for the era of AI.”

Altera is showcasing its latest FPGA innovations and development tools at Embedded World 2025 in Nuremburg, Germany.

Shape
Shape
Stay Ahead

Explore More Insights

Stay ahead with more perspectives on cutting-edge power, infrastructure, energy,  bitcoin and AI solutions. Explore these articles to uncover strategies and insights shaping the future of industries.

Shape

Altera targets low-latency AI edge applications with new FPGA products

Support for Agilex 3 and other Agilex product lines is available through Altera’s free Quartus software suite. Quartus is a design software suite for programmable logic devices. It allows engineers to design, analyze, optimize, and program Intel FPGAs, CPLDs, and SoCs using system-level design techniques and advanced place-and-route algorithms. For

Read More »

Observe links end-user experience with back-end troubleshooting

Frontend Observability uses a capability called Browser Real User Monitoring (RUM) to enable IT and developer teams to quickly identify and diagnose performance issues across browsers, devices, and locations. For instance, RUM identifies anomalies in page load times, core web vitals, and JavaScript or HTTP errors. RUM also provides developers

Read More »

ServiceNow to pay $2.85B for Moveworks’ AI tools

ServiceNow and Moveworks will deliver a unified, end‑to‑end search and self‑service experience for all employee requestors across every workflow, according to ServiceNow. A majority of Moveworks’ current customer deployments already use ServiceNow in their environments to access enterprise AI, data, and workflows. ServiceNow said this acquisition will build upon the

Read More »

Aberdeen Headquartered Company Confirms Intention to Reduce Jobs

A spokesperson for Aberdeen-headquartered Well-Safe Solutions has confirmed to Rigzone that the company intends to reduce jobs. “The knock-on effects of the Energy Profits Levy (EPL) have seen spend delayed on decommissioning across the industry, which is affecting both our rig and engineering activity,” the spokesperson told Rigzone.  “It’s with regret that Well-Safe Solutions confirms its intention to reduce positions aboard the Well-Safe Guardian while it is on standby. We must also resize our onshore team to reflect the reduction in activity throughout 2025,” the spokesperson added. The Well-Safe spokesperson said the company currently going through a collective consultation process “exploring options to safeguard as many colleagues as possible and are supporting them through this challenging time”. “It is proposed that 45 positions may be affected onshore. With the Well-Safe Guardian on standby, we will retain 34 positions onboard in readiness for our return to a client project,” the spokesperson added. “This is not a position we expected to find ourselves in, but we must make this hard decision now to protect the business ahead of an expected increase in global project availability for 2026 and beyond,” the spokesperson continued. The Well-Safe spokesperson told Rigzone that the Well-Safe Defender and Well-Safe Protector are not affected by the current consultations. “Well-Safe Solutions is continuing to deploy its personnel and assets onto relevant projects as we help our clients to realise their energy transition objectives,” the spokesperson told Rigzone. The EPL is an additional temporary tax on a company’s ring-fence profits, an oil and gas price mechanism consultation posted on the UK government website on March 5 states, highlighting that the measure was introduced in May 2022. “The levy was implemented in response to extraordinary profits made by oil and gas companies driven by global events, including resurgent demand for energy post Covid-19 and

Read More »

Petrobras Achieves Successful Feedstock Co-Processing Test at Riograndense

An industrial-scale co-processing experiment has been successfully conducted at the Riograndense Refinery, owned by Petrobras, Ultra and Braskem. The test used 5 percent pyrolysis bio-oil (derived from non-food biomass) and fossil feedstock. The co-processing converted the bio-oil into fuel gas, LPG, and components for gasoline and marine fuel with renewable content, Petrobras said in a media release. Petrobras provided technology for the test at RPR’s catalytic cracking unit, which lasted seven days. A specialized team from Petrobras and Riograndense supported all stages of the bio-oil supply process, Petrobras said. In the experiment, the FCC unit was modified to allow for the simultaneous processing of bio-oil and fossil feedstock. The catalyst used in the reactor is part of the ReNewFCC series, created through a collaboration with Fábrica Carioca de Catalisadores (FCC S.A.), a joint venture between Petrobras and Ketjen, Petrobras said. The renewable component was provided by the Vallourec-Florestal unit. The bio-oil produced is ISCC PLUS-certified and is derived from the condensation of vapors generated during the production of eucalyptus charcoal, which contributes to reducing GHG emissions, according to Petrobras. The test is part of the ongoing efforts to transform RPR into a biorefinery in the coming years, Petrobras said. “In line with our commitment to leading a just energy transition in Brazil, the Riograndense Refinery has the potential to become the world’s first refinery to produce continuously 100 percent renewable products. It will become a biorefinery dedicated to producing fuels exclusively from renewable materials,” Magda Chambriard, Petrobras’ CEO, said. In late 2023, RPR became the first in the world to process 100 percent vegetable oil in an FCC unit, producing fuels and chemical feedstocks like propylene and bio-aromatics (benzene, toluene, and xylenes) using Petrobras’ CENPES technology, according to the company. “The recent test represents a significant breakthrough for global biorefining,

Read More »

Ukraine Says Its Drones Hit Major Refinery in Moscow

Ukraine claimed it hit a major oil refinery that supplies Moscow and its airports, as part of a record drone barrage ahead of talks between Kyiv and the US over a potential ceasefire. Drones hit the Moscow refinery overnight, Ukraine’s General Staff said in a Telegram post. In Russia, the regional unit of emergencies ministry said in a Telegram statement that debris of a UAV with an unexploded warhead was found in Moscow’s district of Kapotnya, where the refinery is located, and was “successfully neutralized.” Gazprom Neft PJSC, which owns the refinery, said the facility was operating normally, according to a statement from its press office. It wasn’t possible to independently verify Ukraine’s claims or assess any damage to the refinery. Ukraine launched a record number of drones on Russia overnight, with air defenses shooting down 337 drones including dozens that targeted Moscow, Russian officials said early Tuesday. Top officials from the US and Ukraine began talks in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday to explore the potential for reaching a ceasefire. The Moscow facility is one of Russia’s largest refineries, with design crude-processing capacity of about 257,000 barrels a day. It supplies more than a third of the fuel market in the capital region, including Moscow airports, according to its website. Ukrainian drones hit the facility last year, forcing it to briefly suspend operations at one of the processing units in September.  Kyiv has intensified attacks on Russia’s energy infrastructure targeting refineries and oil-pumping stations almost on a daily basis as the Kremlin’s war against Ukraine has entered its fourth year. Repeated drone attacks on a key industry aim to curtail Russia’s ability to send fuel to the front line and limit Moscow’s revenue from oil sales.  The overnight strike also led to explosions at an oil-product pipeline operation control station

Read More »

Genel Enters Block 54 in Oman

Genel Energy plc has signed agreements to enter into the Block 54 exploration and production sharing agreement (EPSA) in the Sultanate of Oman. The company has secured a 40 percent participating interest in the license, in which OQ Exploration and Production SAOG (OQEP) will hold operatorship and a 60 percent participating interest. Block 54 (the Karawan Concession) is on the eastern side of the South Oman Salt Basin and immediately adjacent to existing production, Genel said in a media release. The block spans 5,632 square kilometers (2,174.5 square miles) within the Al Wusta Governorate, approximately 600 kilometers (372 miles) south of Muscat, and is largely underexplored, Genel said. In the upcoming three years, Genel and OQEP anticipate putting in around $25 million in total direct expenses for the initial phase of the EPSA, which includes fulfilling the minimum work commitment that entails evaluating existing wells, drilling, and acquiring 3D seismic data. Genel added it will cover a portion of OQEP’s 60 percent stake during the initial phase. OQEP, a subsidiary of OQ SAOC, is Oman’s third-largest producer and is publicly listed on the Muscat Stock Exchange, having recently completed an initial public offering, Genel noted. “We identified Oman some time ago as a preferred jurisdiction for geographical diversification, given its stable regulatory environment and the significant steps it has taken in recent years to set its oil and gas sector up for an exciting future. It is therefore the ideal country for Genel to begin its strategic diversification, expand its portfolio, and invest capital”, Paul Weir, Chief Executive of Genel, said. “We are delighted to be partnering with OQEP and the Ministry of Energy and Minerals of the Sultanate of Oman on this exciting opportunity and look forward to working together to unlock and expand this contingent resource”. To contact

Read More »

Oil tanker collision: Cargo ship captain arrested

The captain of the cargo ship that collided with an oil tanker in UK waters has been arrested. The US-flagged Stena Immaculate was anchored when it was hit by the Solong cargo vessel at around 9:48 am on Monday morning. At the time of the collision, the cargo vessel was travelling at around 18 miles per hour, or 16 knots. This sparked a blaze that raged into Tuesday and prompted a rescue attempt that saw more than 30 casualties brought ashore, although there is only one person remaining in hospital. However, one crew member was reported missing, and after search attempts, HM Coatsguard called off rescue attempts. Transport Minister Mike Kane said in the house of commons that the seafarer is presumed dead. Following the incident, Humberside Police said the 59-year-old captain of the Solong had been arrested on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter following searches for his missing crew member. Although smoke continues to spew from the ships off the coast of Yorkshire, UK government transport secretary Heidi Alexander has said both vessels are set to stay afloat. Firefighting vessels and lifeboats were dispatched to the scene soon after the collision, and both vessels caught ablaze in the Humber Estuary. © UGC/UNPIXSNORTH SEA – A major rescue operation was launched after an oil tanker and a cargo vessel collided off the East Yorkshire coast. Image: UGC/UNPIXS One US crewman onboard the Immaculate at the time of the collision said that “a massive ship came from out of the blue,” as he recounted the incident. The tanker was thought to be carrying jet fuel for the US military while the cargo ship is believed to have been transporting sodium cyanide. Concerns have been raised regarding the environmental impact this incident will have in the region. The owner of the Immaculate

Read More »

Oil Prices Rebound as Market Metrics Signal Oversold Conditions

Oil edged up as internal market metrics flashed signs that recent declines were overdone, overshadowing the prospect of a temporary truce in Ukraine. West Texas Intermediate rose 0.3% to top $66 a barrel, recovering from the lowest closing price in six months. Ukraine said it’s ready to accept a US proposal for a 30-day truce in Russia’s war, raising expectations that Moscow’s crude may again flow freely in the near future. Oil held its ground Tuesday even as fresh trade salvos from US President Donald Trump threatened to prolong a plunge in risk assets. Despite the weakening economic outlook weighing on futures prices in recent weeks, WTI’s prompt spread — a key indicator of near-term supply and demand balances — has held steady in a bullish, backwardated structure. That’s a sign that the growth scare for crude isn’t as severe as for other assets, said Jon Byrne, an analyst at Strategas Securities. “Crude could be on the cusp of decoupling from other risk assets during this selloff,” Byrne said. Also supporting crude prices, US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said on Monday that the Trump administration was prepared to enforce US sanctions on Iranian oil production, before clawing back gains.   Oil has fallen almost a fifth from a high in mid-January as Trump’s chaotic rollout of tariff hikes and push to slash federal spending darken the economic outlook in the biggest producer and consumer of crude. Other bearish factors include OPEC+ plans to add supply and weakening demand in China. At a major industry conference in Houston, executives from some of the world’s top oil and gas producers — including Chevron Corp., Shell Plc and Saudi Aramco — offered full-throated support for President Trump’s energy-dominance agenda at the gathering.    “Given how light positioning is, it doesn’t take much to

Read More »

Podcast: On the Frontier of Modular Edge AI Data Centers with Flexnode’s Andrew Lindsey

The modular data center industry is undergoing a seismic shift in the age of AI, and few are as deeply embedded in this transformation as Andrew Lindsey, Co-Founder and CEO of Flexnode. In a recent episode of the Data Center Frontier Show podcast, Lindsey joined Editor-in-Chief Matt Vincent and Senior Editor David Chernicoff to discuss the evolution of modular data centers, the growing demand for high-density liquid-cooled solutions, and the industry factors driving this momentum. A Background Rooted in Innovation Lindsey’s career has been defined by the intersection of technology and the built environment. Prior to launching Flexnode, he worked at Alpha Corporation, a top 100 engineering and construction management firm founded by his father in 1979. His early career involved spearheading technology adoption within the firm, with a focus on high-security infrastructure for both government and private clients. Recognizing a massive opportunity in the data center space, Lindsey saw a need for an innovative approach to infrastructure deployment. “The construction industry is relatively uninnovative,” he explained, citing a McKinsey study that ranked construction as the second least-digitized industry—just above fishing and wildlife, which remains deliberately undigitized. Given the billions of square feet of data center infrastructure required in a relatively short timeframe, Lindsey set out to streamline and modernize the process. Founded four years ago, Flexnode delivers modular data centers with a fully integrated approach, handling everything from site selection to design, engineering, manufacturing, deployment, operations, and even end-of-life decommissioning. Their core mission is to provide an “easy button” for high-density computing solutions, including cloud and dedicated GPU infrastructure, allowing faster and more efficient deployment of modular data centers. The Rising Momentum for Modular Data Centers As Vincent noted, Data Center Frontier has closely tracked the increasing traction of modular infrastructure. Lindsey has been at the forefront of this

Read More »

Last Energy to Deploy 30 Microreactors in Texas for Data Centers

As the demand for data center power surges in Texas, nuclear startup Last Energy has now announced plans to build 30 microreactors in the state’s Haskell County near the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. The reactors will serve a growing customer base of data center operators in the region looking for reliable, carbon-free energy. The plan marks Last Energy’s largest project to date and a significant step in advancing modular nuclear power as a viable solution for high-density computing infrastructure. Meeting the Looming Power Demands of Texas Data Centers Texas is already home to over 340 data centers, with significant expansion underway. Google is increasing its data center footprint in Dallas, while OpenAI’s Stargate has announced plans for a new facility in Abilene, just an hour south of Last Energy’s planned site. The company notes the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area alone is projected to require an additional 43 gigawatts of power in the coming years, far surpassing current grid capacity. To help remediate, Last Energy has secured a 200+ acre site in Haskell County, approximately three and a half hours west of Dallas. The company has also filed for a grid connection with ERCOT, with plans to deliver power via a mix of private wire and grid transmission. Additionally, Last Energy has begun pre-application engagement with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for an Early Site Permit, a key step in securing regulatory approval. According to Last Energy CEO Bret Kugelmass, the company’s modular approach is designed to bring nuclear energy online faster than traditional projects. “Nuclear power is the most effective way to meet Texas’ growing energy demand, but it needs to be deployed faster and at scale,” Kugelmass said. “Our microreactors are designed to be plug-and-play, enabling data center operators to bypass the constraints of an overloaded grid.” Scaling Nuclear for

Read More »

Data Center Jobs: Engineering and Technician Jobs Available in Major Markets

Each month Data Center Frontier, in partnership with Pkaza, posts some of the hottest data center career opportunities in the market. Here’s a look at some of the latest data center jobs posted on the Data Center Frontier jobs board, powered by Pkaza Critical Facilities Recruiting.  Data Center Facility Engineer (Night Shift Available) Ashburn, VAThis position is also available in: Tacoma, WA (Nights), Days/Nights: Needham, MA and New York City, NY. This opportunity is working directly with a leading mission-critical data center developer / wholesaler / colo provider. This firm provides data center solutions custom-fit to the requirements of their client’s mission-critical operational facilities. They provide reliability of mission-critical facilities for many of the world’s largest organizations facilities supporting enterprise clients and hyperscale companies. This opportunity provides a career-growth minded role with exciting projects with leading-edge technology and innovation as well as competitive salaries and benefits. Electrical Commissioning Engineer New Albany, OHThis traveling position is also available in: Somerset, NJ; Boydton, VA; Richmond, VA; Ashburn, VA; Charlotte, NC; Atlanta, GA; Hampton, GA; Fayetteville, GA; Des Moines, IA; San Jose, CA; Portland, OR; St Louis, MO; Phoenix, AZ;  Dallas, TX;  Chicago, IL; or Toronto, ON. *** ALSO looking for a LEAD EE and ME CxA agents.*** Our client is an engineering design and commissioning company that has a national footprint and specializes in MEP critical facilities design. They provide design, commissioning, consulting and management expertise in the critical facilities space. They have a mindset to provide reliability, energy efficiency, sustainable design and LEED expertise when providing these consulting services for enterprise, colocation and hyperscale companies. This career-growth minded opportunity offers exciting projects with leading-edge technology and innovation as well as competitive salaries and benefits. Switchgear Field Service Technician – Critical Facilities Nationwide TravelThis position is also available in: Charlotte, NC; Atlanta, GA; Dallas,

Read More »

Amid Shifting Regional Data Center Policies, Iron Mountain and DC Blox Both Expand in Virginia’s Henrico County

The dynamic landscape of data center developments in Maryland and Virginia exemplify the intricate balance between fostering technological growth and addressing community and environmental concerns. Data center developers in this region find themselves both in the crosshairs of groups worried about the environment and other groups looking to drive economic growth. In some cases, the groups are different components of the same organizations, such as local governments. For data center development, meeting the needs of these competing interests often means walking a none-too-stable tightrope. Rapid Government Action Encourages Growth In May 2024, Maryland demonstrated its commitment to attracting data center investments by enacting the Critical Infrastructure Streamlining Act. This legislation provides a clear framework for the use of emergency backup power generation, addressing previous regulatory challenges that a few months earlier had hindered projects like Aligned Data Centers’ proposed 264-megawatt campus in Frederick County, causing Aligned to pull out of the project. However, just days after the Act was signed by the governor, Aligned reiterated its plans to move forward with development in Maryland.  With the Quantum Loop and the related data center development making Frederick County a focal point for a balanced approach, the industry is paying careful attention to the pace of development and the relations between developers, communities and the government. In September of 2024, Frederick County Executive Jessica Fitzwater revealed draft legislation that would potentially restrict where in the county data centers could be built. The legislation was based on information found in the Frederick County Data Centers Workgroup’s final report. Those bills would update existing regulations and create a floating zone for Critical Digital Infrastructure and place specific requirements on siting data centers. Statewide, a cautious approach to environmental and community impacts statewide has been deemed important. In January 2025, legislators introduced SB116,  a bill

Read More »

New Reports Show How AI, Power, and Investment Trends Are Reshaping the Data Center Landscape

Today we provide a comprehensive roundup of the latest industry analyst reports from CBRE, PwC, and Synergy Research, offering a data-driven perspective on the state of the North American data center market.  To wit, CBRE’s latest findings highlight record-breaking growth in supply, soaring colocation pricing, and mounting power constraints shaping site selection. For its part, PwC’s analysis underscores the sector’s broader economic impact, quantifying its trillion-dollar contribution to GDP, rapid job growth, and surging tax revenues.  Meanwhile, the latest industry analysis from Synergy Research details the acceleration of cloud spending, AI’s role in fueling infrastructure demand, and an unprecedented surge in data center mergers and acquisitions.  Together, these reports paint a picture of an industry at an inflection point—balancing explosive expansion with evolving challenges in power availability, cost pressures, and infrastructure investment. Let’s examine them. CBRE: Surging Demand Fuels Record Data Center Expansion CBRE says the North American data center sector is scaling at an unprecedented pace, driven by unrelenting demand from artificial intelligence (AI), hyperscale, and cloud service providers. The latest North America Data Center Trends H2 2024 report from CBRE reveals that total supply across primary markets surged by 34% year-over-year to 6,922.6 megawatts (MW), outpacing the 26% growth recorded in 2023. This accelerating expansion has triggered record-breaking construction activity and intensified competition for available capacity. Market Momentum: Scaling Amid Power Constraints According to CBRE, data center construction activity reached historic levels, with 6,350 MW under development at the close of 2024—more than doubling the 3,077.8 MW recorded a year prior. Yet, the report finds the surge in development is being met with significant hurdles, including power constraints and supply chain challenges affecting critical electrical infrastructure. As a result, the vacancy rate across primary markets has plummeted to an all-time low of 1.9%, with only a handful of sites

Read More »

Minnesota PUC Says No to Amazon’s Bid to Fast-Track 250 Diesel Generators for Data Center

Amazon is facing scrutiny and significant pushbacks over its plan to install 250 diesel backup generators for a proposed data center in Becker, Minnesota. Much of the concern had been due to the fact that the hyperscaler was seeking an exemption from the state’s standard permitting process, a move that has sparked opposition from environmental groups and state officials. Aggregate Power that Matches Nuclear Power Generation Amazon’s proposed fleet of diesel generators would have a maximum power output almost equivalent to the 647 MW that is produced by Xcel Energy’s nuclear plant in Monticello, one of the two existing nuclear generation stations in the state. Meanwhile, as reported by Datacenter Dynamics, according to a real estate filing published with the Minnesota Department of Revenue, the land parcel assigned for the Amazon data center in Becker was previously part of Minneapolis-based utility Xcel’s coal-powered Sherco Site. Amazon argues that the diesel generators in question are essential to ensuring reliable and secure access to critical data and applications for its customers, including hospitals and first responders. However, opponents worry about the environmental impact and the precedent it may set for future large-scale data center developments in the state. The Law and Its Exception Under Minnesota state law, any power plant capable of generating 50 megawatts or more that connects to the grid via transmission lines must obtain a Certificate of Need from the Public Utilities Commission (PUC). This certification ensures that the infrastructure is necessary and that no cheaper, cleaner alternatives exist. Amazon, however, contends that its generators do not fall under this requirement because they are not connected to the larger electric grid; power generated would be strictly used by the data center suffering an outage from its primary power source. That power would be generated locally, and not transmitted over

Read More »

Microsoft will invest $80B in AI data centers in fiscal 2025

And Microsoft isn’t the only one that is ramping up its investments into AI-enabled data centers. Rival cloud service providers are all investing in either upgrading or opening new data centers to capture a larger chunk of business from developers and users of large language models (LLMs).  In a report published in October 2024, Bloomberg Intelligence estimated that demand for generative AI would push Microsoft, AWS, Google, Oracle, Meta, and Apple would between them devote $200 billion to capex in 2025, up from $110 billion in 2023. Microsoft is one of the biggest spenders, followed closely by Google and AWS, Bloomberg Intelligence said. Its estimate of Microsoft’s capital spending on AI, at $62.4 billion for calendar 2025, is lower than Smith’s claim that the company will invest $80 billion in the fiscal year to June 30, 2025. Both figures, though, are way higher than Microsoft’s 2020 capital expenditure of “just” $17.6 billion. The majority of the increased spending is tied to cloud services and the expansion of AI infrastructure needed to provide compute capacity for OpenAI workloads. Separately, last October Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said his company planned total capex spend of $75 billion in 2024 and even more in 2025, with much of it going to AWS, its cloud computing division.

Read More »

John Deere unveils more autonomous farm machines to address skill labor shortage

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Self-driving tractors might be the path to self-driving cars. John Deere has revealed a new line of autonomous machines and tech across agriculture, construction and commercial landscaping. The Moline, Illinois-based John Deere has been in business for 187 years, yet it’s been a regular as a non-tech company showing off technology at the big tech trade show in Las Vegas and is back at CES 2025 with more autonomous tractors and other vehicles. This is not something we usually cover, but John Deere has a lot of data that is interesting in the big picture of tech. The message from the company is that there aren’t enough skilled farm laborers to do the work that its customers need. It’s been a challenge for most of the last two decades, said Jahmy Hindman, CTO at John Deere, in a briefing. Much of the tech will come this fall and after that. He noted that the average farmer in the U.S. is over 58 and works 12 to 18 hours a day to grow food for us. And he said the American Farm Bureau Federation estimates there are roughly 2.4 million farm jobs that need to be filled annually; and the agricultural work force continues to shrink. (This is my hint to the anti-immigration crowd). John Deere’s autonomous 9RX Tractor. Farmers can oversee it using an app. While each of these industries experiences their own set of challenges, a commonality across all is skilled labor availability. In construction, about 80% percent of contractors struggle to find skilled labor. And in commercial landscaping, 86% of landscaping business owners can’t find labor to fill open positions, he said. “They have to figure out how to do

Read More »

2025 playbook for enterprise AI success, from agents to evals

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More 2025 is poised to be a pivotal year for enterprise AI. The past year has seen rapid innovation, and this year will see the same. This has made it more critical than ever to revisit your AI strategy to stay competitive and create value for your customers. From scaling AI agents to optimizing costs, here are the five critical areas enterprises should prioritize for their AI strategy this year. 1. Agents: the next generation of automation AI agents are no longer theoretical. In 2025, they’re indispensable tools for enterprises looking to streamline operations and enhance customer interactions. Unlike traditional software, agents powered by large language models (LLMs) can make nuanced decisions, navigate complex multi-step tasks, and integrate seamlessly with tools and APIs. At the start of 2024, agents were not ready for prime time, making frustrating mistakes like hallucinating URLs. They started getting better as frontier large language models themselves improved. “Let me put it this way,” said Sam Witteveen, cofounder of Red Dragon, a company that develops agents for companies, and that recently reviewed the 48 agents it built last year. “Interestingly, the ones that we built at the start of the year, a lot of those worked way better at the end of the year just because the models got better.” Witteveen shared this in the video podcast we filmed to discuss these five big trends in detail. Models are getting better and hallucinating less, and they’re also being trained to do agentic tasks. Another feature that the model providers are researching is a way to use the LLM as a judge, and as models get cheaper (something we’ll cover below), companies can use three or more models to

Read More »

OpenAI’s red teaming innovations define new essentials for security leaders in the AI era

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More OpenAI has taken a more aggressive approach to red teaming than its AI competitors, demonstrating its security teams’ advanced capabilities in two areas: multi-step reinforcement and external red teaming. OpenAI recently released two papers that set a new competitive standard for improving the quality, reliability and safety of AI models in these two techniques and more. The first paper, “OpenAI’s Approach to External Red Teaming for AI Models and Systems,” reports that specialized teams outside the company have proven effective in uncovering vulnerabilities that might otherwise have made it into a released model because in-house testing techniques may have missed them. In the second paper, “Diverse and Effective Red Teaming with Auto-Generated Rewards and Multi-Step Reinforcement Learning,” OpenAI introduces an automated framework that relies on iterative reinforcement learning to generate a broad spectrum of novel, wide-ranging attacks. Going all-in on red teaming pays practical, competitive dividends It’s encouraging to see competitive intensity in red teaming growing among AI companies. When Anthropic released its AI red team guidelines in June of last year, it joined AI providers including Google, Microsoft, Nvidia, OpenAI, and even the U.S.’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which all had released red teaming frameworks. Investing heavily in red teaming yields tangible benefits for security leaders in any organization. OpenAI’s paper on external red teaming provides a detailed analysis of how the company strives to create specialized external teams that include cybersecurity and subject matter experts. The goal is to see if knowledgeable external teams can defeat models’ security perimeters and find gaps in their security, biases and controls that prompt-based testing couldn’t find. What makes OpenAI’s recent papers noteworthy is how well they define using human-in-the-middle

Read More »

Introducing Gemma 3

For a deeper dive into the technical details behind these capabilities, as well as a comprehensive overview of our approach to responsible development, refer to

Read More »