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Riot Platforms is doubling down on its data center infrastructure ambitions through a strategic partnership with a major semiconductor manufacturer. The move signals growing competition among mining operators to secure cutting-edge hardware and optimize computational efficiency. By cementing relationships with leading chip suppliers, operators like Riot can better position themselves to scale operations and manage the rising demands of Bitcoin mining in an increasingly power-conscious market. This type of infrastructure-first approach underscores how modern mining has evolved beyond simply purchasing rigs—it's now about controlling the entire value chain from hardware sourcing to facility deployment.
Seizing upstream resources is truly a game for big miners; small retail investors can only look on with envy.
The infrastructure-first approach has long been proven in the mining industry—whoever controls the chips wins.
I should have laid the groundwork for such mining companies earlier; now following the trend is a bit late.
This is why BTC mining is becoming more and more like industrial competition—it's not about technology, but about financial strength.
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It's another infrastructure race. How can small miners survive?
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Riot's approach is quite ruthless, directly blocking the supply chain.
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The era of purely buying machines is really over... you need to control the entire supply chain.
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Now chip manufacturers are even more in demand; miners have to watch their every move.
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In a power-conscious market, whoever can optimize energy efficiency will win.
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From purchasing equipment to building an ecosystem, it's a pretty interesting evolution.
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Vertical integration has been played out in traditional manufacturing, now miners are learning it too? Interesting.
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Energy anxiety + chip shortage, Riot's strategy of forming alliances is indeed satisfying, but small miners can only be eliminated.
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Controlling the value chain... sounds very hardcore, but could this actually kill the industry?
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Partnering with chip manufacturers means what? Capacity assurance or price hikes? Let's see how they proceed.
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Isn't this just an old monopoly tactic? As long as the supply is stable, I’m convinced.