OpenAI and Broadcom unveil LLM-optimized inference chip

OpenAI’s new “Jalapeño” chip drops, and the comments instantly went full chaos

TLDR: OpenAI and Broadcom unveiled Jalapeño, a custom chip meant to make AI tools run faster and use less power, with huge data center plans ahead. But in the comments, the biggest reaction was a sarcastic acquisition joke followed by moderators moving the whole conversation elsewhere.

OpenAI and Broadcom just rolled out Jalapeño, a new computer chip built specially to run AI chatbots and other large language models faster while using less electricity. In plain English: they want their own custom brain box so AI can be cheaper, quicker, and less dependent on other chip makers. The companies are bragging that early tests look better than today’s top options when it comes to speed for the power used, and they say they built the thing in a wild nine months. They’re also aiming absurdly big, talking about future rollout in giant data centers at gigawatt scale, which is the kind of phrase that makes tech people sit up straight.

But the community reaction? Absolute tiny-thread chaos. Instead of a massive debate over OpenAI entering the chip game, one of the first comments came in with a dry, almost surgical joke: “Did they acquire also BMC?” That single line basically became the mood—part confusion, part snark, part “wait, how many companies are they swallowing now?” Then the moderator swooped in with the ultimate buzzkill energy, moving the discussion to another thread. So yes, the real drama here is that the launch of a supposedly world-changing AI chip immediately turned into a comment-section evacuation. The hot take wasn’t about silicon at all—it was the internet doing what it does best: making one cryptic joke, then getting redirected elsewhere before the fight could even start.

Key Points

  • OpenAI and Broadcom announced Jalapeño, OpenAI’s first custom AI inference accelerator for large language models.
  • The chip was designed from scratch for LLM inference rather than adapted from a general-purpose accelerator architecture.
  • OpenAI says engineering samples are already running ML workloads in the lab at target production frequency and power, including GPT‑5.3‑Codex‑Spark.
  • The companies say early testing shows Jalapeño will deliver substantially better performance per watt than current state-of-the-art systems.
  • Broadcom said the Jalapeño program is part of a multi-generation roadmap aimed at gigawatt-scale data center deployments with Microsoft and other partners beginning in 2026.

Hottest takes

"Did they acquire also BMC?" — vb-8448
"Comments moved" — dang
"also BMC" — vb-8448
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