-Nvidia in GTC 2025 Keynote disclosing they will be using MRR's in their next-generation technology, and it has been proven that LWLG's technology is the solution to the issues that silicon MRR's have with temperature sensitivity that require individual temperature IC's for EACH & EVERY MRR!!! read all about it in this post of mine https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=176202947
- the Lebby exchange with Nvidia VP of R&D who commented directly back to Lebby "some startups are clinging too tightly to their IP" Note: perhaps this is the actual reason Lebby was replaced by Yves, Lebby likely was being too controlling in relationship developing the devices in-house where the recent LWLG shift in business strategy in now allowing the Customer to control the device developments with LWLG technical support and PDK's available to them as needed
- 2024 ASM slides 13 and 14 including the quote from Nvidia executive
----- Quote from Slide 13 >> “in many ways polymers will be an ideal enabler of the growth expected in Infiniband usage”
----- Infiniband is a key enabler for NVIDIA à higher speeds are required now
- JM's comment regarding working with Nvidia at the 2024 ASM
----- Slide 14 showing the Infiniband Roadmap showing how LWLG would be able to enable with their Polymers
- Yves LeMaitre asked $LWLG shareholders to do some homework and watch the GTC 2025 hardware presentation of Jensen Huang on copacked optics. Because presentations can be long, Steve Schiets made an AI podcast with NotebookLM. Great listen, imo.
Marco commented, This podcast summary of what came out of Jensen"s Huang's talk on co-packaged optics is absolutely great! It pieces together what Nvidia wants and sees the industry moving towards while pointing out the things that will allow LWLG's polymers to meet the checklist of requirements without each company talking about the other. A match made in heaven so to speak. The critical concept of moving the optics as close as possible to the compute functions can be facilitated using polymers as part of the device configuration. Accomplishing this either using tiny MRRs with polymers inside or using co-packaged optics with polymers incorporated the goal is obtained. Either way, it looks like Lightwave's polymers will become critical enablers of the marriage of optics and compute.