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Lenovo and NVIDIA are pushing AI into its next phase, scaling real-time, production-ready systems that could make AI as embedded in business operations as cloud computing is today. The rise of “AI factories” and gigawatt-scale systems signals the beginning of a massive boom in AI data centers and compute infrastructure, potentially echoing the early days of cloud computing, but on a far larger scale.

Lenovo has expanded its partnership with NVIDIA to help businesses move AI from experimentation into real-world use at scale. The new “Hybrid AI Advantage” platform is designed to run AI across devices, edge systems, data centres, and large cloud “AI factories.” The focus is on AI inferencing, the stage where trained models are used to make real-time decisions.

“Across Asia Pacific, organizations are moving quickly from AI experimentation to production, and scaling AI now depends on the right infrastructure and the agility to deploy it effectively.” — Sumir Bhatia, President, Asia Pacific, Infrastructure Solutions Group, Lenovo

“Across Asia Pacific, organizations are moving quickly from AI experimentation to production, and scaling AI now depends on the right infrastructure and the agility to deploy it effectively. With NVIDIA, Lenovo is combining its full-stack infrastructure, services, and offerings to give enterprises the agility to scale AI across cloud, data center, and edge,” said Sumir Bhatia, President, Asia Pacific, Infrastructure Solutions Group, Lenovo.

The companies say their combined systems can deploy AI faster and more efficiently, cut costs significantly (up to 8x lower per AI task), deliver results in under six months, and support large-scale AI infrastructure, including “gigawatt-scale” data centres. The offering includes new AI-powered workstations, enterprise servers, and cloud-scale systems, along with industry-specific solutions for sectors like retail, manufacturing, healthcare, and smart cities.

The shift is from training AI to using AI in real time. Lenovo and NVIDIA are building the infrastructure to run AI everywhere, not just in labs or cloud platforms.

This has similarities to Nvidia’s recent release of OpenClaw, which focuses on AI agents that can act, plan, and execute tasks and is directly about AI agents coordinating tools, making decisions. Basically, AI systems acting like digital workers.

“Every company in the world today needs to have an OpenClaw strategy. This is the new computer.” — Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang

As Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says, “Every company in the world today needs to have an OpenClaw strategy. This is the new computer.”

While Lenovo and NVIDIA are scaling the infrastructure for real-time AI, frameworks like OpenCLAW point to what will run on it, namely autonomous agents capable of executing complex tasks.

The implication of this news is that AI is entering its “production era”. This signals a major shift because it means that AI is no longer experimental. Companies are now deploying it in daily operations. Think real-time decisions in factories, stores, hospitals, cities, where inferencing becomes the new battleground. The focus is moving from building models to running them efficiently while reducing cost per AI output (“cost per token”).

According to a report by Deloitte India, Agentic AI is enabling a shift from passive tools to systems that can independently plan, execute and collaborate across workflows.

This is most likely where companies will compete next, where Hybrid AI will dominate, because businesses don’t want AI only in the cloud anymore. They want it on devices, on-premise, and at the edge. This creates demand for integrated platforms like Lenovo’s. This means a massive infrastructure race is underway.

The mention of “AI factories” and gigawatt-scale systems points to a coming boom in AI data centres and huge capital investment in compute infrastructure. This is possibly similar to the early days of cloud computing, but even bigger.

Enterprise AI adoption will accelerate with faster deployment, lower costs, and ready-made solutions, where more industries will adopt AI quickly, not just tech companies.

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