
Nvidia’s SchedMD Deal Is a Warning Sign: AI Is Now About Control of the Stack
In the last 24 hours, the story with the biggest practical impact for AI teams is a Reuters report that Nvidia is moving to acquire SchedMD, the company behind Slurm, the open-source job scheduler that runs many AI supercomputing and high-performance workloads. For most people, this looks like another chip company buying a specialist. For AI builders, it is more consequential: it is about who controls the operating system of your model training stack. At least in public, this does not look like a glamorous product launch or a new benchmark leaderboard drop. It is a control-layer story. And that is exactly why it matters. Why this is a big deal If you have ever run large model training, inference, or serious data jobs, you know there is a layer beneath model code, data pipelines, and orchestration frameworks that people rarely discuss in press releases: queueing, scheduling, and allocator logic. That is what keeps GPU clusters running efficiently, prevents one team from starving another
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