Nvidia invests $2b in Synopsys, expands AI tools partnership

Synopsys remains open to partnering with other chipmakers, including AMD and Intel

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  • The tie-up aims to shift compute-intensive simulation and design workloadsโ€”traditionally run on CPUsโ€”onto Nvidiaโ€™s GPUs.

Nvidia has invested $2 billion in chip design software maker Synopsys as part of an expanded multi-year collaboration to develop AI-accelerated tools for designing products across industries, the companies said.

The tie-up aims to shift compute-intensive simulation and design workloadsโ€”traditionally run on CPUsโ€”onto Nvidiaโ€™s GPUs, promising major speed gains for tasks spanning semiconductor design to aerospace engineering.

Synopsysโ€™ software is widely used to virtually simulate designs before costly prototyping; simulations that can take weeks on conventional systems could be reduced to hours on Nvidia hardware, executives said.

Unlocking opportunities

โ€œThe order of magnitude speed-up is going to unlock opportunities that have never been possible before,โ€ Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at a press conference.

Synopsys CEO Sassine Ghazi said the Nvidia investment provides โ€œoptionalityโ€ as Synopsys adapts its tools to GPUs, emphasising there is โ€œno intention or commitment to use that $2 billion to purchase Nvidia GPUs.โ€

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The agreement is non-exclusive. Ghazi noted Synopsys remains open to partnering with other chipmakers, including AMD and Intel. Nvidia and Synopsys are also mutual customers, a dynamic that has drawn scrutiny amid Nvidiaโ€™s broader investment spree across the AI ecosystem.

The worldโ€™s most valuable company has deployed billions of dollars this year into AI-linked firms, from arrangements enabling up to $100 billion for OpenAI to a $5 billion stake in Intel. Synopsys also counts AMD as a customer, while Nvidia collaborates with Synopsys rival Cadence Design.


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