My colleague, Asa Fitch covers a product that's often invisible to the naked eye, but critical to almost everything we do.
You should know that some of us on the team kind of refer to you a little bit as Mr.
Chips.
We know that when there's a chip story, we know who to call.
I'll take it.
That's a good nickname.
I like it.
Chips.
Those tiny, intricate slices of silicon.
Asa calls them the engines of modern life.
Life.
Just think about, you know, the 80s and the 90s.
There were PCs and they had chips, and then there was the smartphone revolution, and then everybody's carrying smartphone with.
With chips in the smartphone.
And you had cloud computing, you know, these massive data centers, and they had chips.
And of course now you have AI, and AI sort of runs on chips.
So every time that society's advanced, the answer has been, we need some more chips.
For that's been a boon for the companies that make chips, companies like TSMC or Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.
And Samsung.
The chip maker Nvidia is currently one of the most valuable companies in the world, worth over $3 trillion.