d-Matrix Boosts Rack-Scale AI Capabilities with Acquisition of GigaIO Data Center Business
Addition of Rack-Scale Technology, Systems Expertise and Key Engineering Talent to Accelerate Deployment of Low-Latency, Highly Efficient AI Inference at Scale
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on April 6, 2026 at 2:01 pmd-Matrix, a pioneer in low-latency AI inference compute for data centers, announced the acquisition of GigaIO’s data center business, a systems engineering organization with deep expertise in rack-scale infrastructure and high-performance interconnects.
Building upon a collaboration that began in 2025, the deal deepens a proven partnership. With this move, d-Matrix expands its capabilities to support system-level deployments and strengthens the value of its end-to-end AI inference platform spanning Corsair inference accelerators, JetStream networking, and Aviator software, along with the d-Matrix SquadRack rack-scale reference architecture developed in collaboration with Broadcom and Arista.
While GigaIO, Inc. will continue as an independent entity focused on edge computing, d-Matrix has acquired the company’s core data center technologies, including SuperNODE and the FabreX PCIe-based memory fabric, to support its system-level infrastructure roadmap.
“Inference is bigger than any one chip. It’s now a systems problem,” said Sid Sheth, founder and CEO, d-Matrix. “To keep up with surging AI demand, frontier labs and other power users are dividing workloads into smaller tasks, disaggregated across CPUs, GPUs, and inference accelerators, with each processor handling a different part of the problem. That means data must move efficiently across chips, nodes, racks, and entire data centers in real time. This acquisition accelerates our ability to deliver infrastructure built for this new reality, where low latency, efficiency, and scale all matter at once.”
With the addition of a talented team of systems engineers based in Carlsbad, California, d-Matrix has established a new engineering presence in Southern California, extending its global footprint to six innovation hubs spanning North America, Europe, and Asia.






