• Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io
No Result
View All Result
Converge Digest
Thursday, June 11, 2026
  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io
No Result
View All Result
Converge Digest
No Result
View All Result

Home » Astera Labs Expands Scorpio X-Series Roadmap

Astera Labs Expands Scorpio X-Series Roadmap

January 22, 2026
in Semiconductors
A A

Astera Labs announced an expanded roadmap for its Scorpio X-Series Smart Fabric Switches as hyperscalers push scale-up architectures to support rapidly growing AI clusters. The company said Scorpio X-Series has entered initial production and is shipping in early volumes following close collaboration with hyperscale customers. Astera Labs now estimates the merchant scale-up switching market could reach $20 billion by 2030, reflecting the growing demand for purpose-built fabrics inside large AI domains.

The company said next-generation AI workloads—characterized by larger context windows, multi-turn agentic workflows, and clusters scaling to hundreds of thousands of accelerators—are driving more diverse scale-up connectivity requirements. Rather than a single fabric design, hyperscalers are adopting multiple architectural approaches, each with different needs for radix, protocols, traffic management, and physical connectivity. Astera Labs positioned the expanded Scorpio X-Series portfolio as a response to this fragmentation, targeting flexibility across a wide range of AI platform designs.

To address these requirements, Astera Labs is broadening Scorpio X-Series capabilities across several dimensions, including higher radix options, support for hyperscaler-specific interconnect protocols, in-network computing, enhanced data distribution, and optical connectivity. The company said photonic switch-to-accelerator links will enable multi-rack scale-up domains reaching thousands of GPUs, while in-network compute and Hypercast technology aim to reduce GPU-to-GPU communication overhead and improve overall utilization.

  • Scorpio X-Series is now shipping in initial production volumes following hyperscaler collaboration
  • Roadmap adds higher radix configurations to support varied AI cluster sizes
  • Support planned for hyperscaler-specific and platform-custom interconnect protocols
  • In-network computing designed to offload data-intensive operations from GPUs
  • Hypercast technology targets more efficient data distribution for AI workloads
  • Optical connectivity enables multi-rack, large-scale GPU domains

“As hyperscalers scale to larger cluster sizes and deploy more complex AI workloads, they need flexible connectivity portfolios that can address varied architectural approaches—not one-size-fits-all solutions,” said Thad Omura, Chief Business Officer at Astera Labs.

🌐  Analysis

Astera Labs’ expanded Scorpio X-Series roadmap underscores how scale-up fabrics are becoming a distinct silicon category alongside traditional scale-out Ethernet switching. By focusing on merchant silicon tailored for hyperscaler-specific architectures, Astera Labs is positioning itself against both proprietary in-house fabrics and emerging competitors exploring optical and in-network compute approaches for AI clusters.

ShareTweetShareSummarizeSummarize
Previous Post

Neurophos Raises $110M Series A for Photonic AI Chips

Next Post

Intel Closes 2025 Flat as Data Center and AI Revenue Grows

Jim Carroll

Jim Carroll

Editor and Publisher, Converge! Network Digest, Optical Networks Daily - Covering the full stack of network convergence from Silicon Valley

Related Posts

Optical

Colt and Ciena Achieve 800GbE Quantum-Safe Across the Atlantic

June 10, 2026
All

AWS Launches Graviton5 CPU with 192 Cores for Agentic AI

June 10, 2026
Research

Dell’Oro: AI Infrastructure Spending Pushes 2026 Data Center Capex Above $1 Trillion

June 10, 2026
Semiconductors

TDK Acquires Fabric8Labs to Scale Advanced Cooling for AI Data Centers

June 10, 2026
Quantum

Xanadu Sets New Benchmark for Ultra-Low-Loss Photonic Chip Packaging

June 10, 2026
Research

Dell’Oro: Campus Ethernet Switch Revenue Climbs in 1Q 2026

June 10, 2026
Next Post

Intel Closes 2025 Flat as Data Center and AI Revenue Grows

Categories

  • 5G / 6G / Wi-Fi
  • AI Infrastructure
  • All
  • Automotive Networking
  • Blueprints
  • Clouds and Carriers
  • Data Centers
  • Enterprise
  • Explainer
  • Feature
  • Financials
  • Last Mile / Middle Mile
  • Legal / Regulatory
  • Optical
  • Quantum
  • Research
  • Security
  • Semiconductors
  • Space
  • Start-ups
  • Subsea
  • Sustainability
  • Video
  • Webinars

Archives

Tags

5G All AT&T Australia AWS Blueprint columns BroadbandWireless Broadcom China Ciena Cisco Data Centers Dell'Oro Ericsson FCC Financial Financials Huawei Infinera Intel Japan Juniper Last Mile Last Mille LTE Mergers and Acquisitions Mobile NFV Nokia Optical Packet Systems PacketVoice People Regulatory Satellite SDN Service Providers Silicon Silicon Valley StandardsWatch Storage TTP UK Verizon Wi-Fi
Converge Digest

A private dossier for networking and telecoms

Follow Us

  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io

© 2026 Converge Digest - A private dossier for networking and telecoms.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io

© 2026 Converge Digest - A private dossier for networking and telecoms.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version