Try GOLD - Free
The stealthy lab cooking up Amazon's secret sauce
Mint Hyderabad
|May 12, 2025
The entrepreneur looked around a Seattle restaurant for a booth where he could have a private conversation.
The entrepreneur looked around a Seattle restaurant for a booth where he could have a private conversation. As the co-founder of Annapurna Labs, a secretive Israeli chip-design startup, Nafea Bshara was used to operating in stealth mode. His business was so allergic to publicity that it barely even had a website. But he was being especially discreet that night because his clandestine meeting was with an influential executive from one of the world's most valuable companies.
And it would result in one of the most consequential deals in tech history.
Their discussion of chips that began over beer and wine eventually led to Amazon buying the mysterious startup for about $350 million. Ten years later, it has become essential to the success of the whole company.
Amazon has long depended on Amazon Web Services—and Amazon Web Services depends on Annapurna.
The company's entire AI strategy is now built on a foundation of chips designed by Annapurna, which is so crucial that analysts have described this custom silicon as the secret sauce of AWS.
The person who might just have the deepest understanding of Annapurna's value is Amazon's chief executive. Before he succeeded Jeff Bezos, Andy Jassy led the company's giant cloud-computing business and made this deal.
"If and when they go back and tell the story of AWS," Jassy told me in an email, "our acquisition of Annapurna was one of the most important moments."
It looks even more important now that the AI boom has sparked a trillion-dollar arms race with Microsoft and Google also investing gigantic sums of money in powerful chips—the brains of artificial intelligence.
This story is from the May 12, 2025 edition of Mint Hyderabad.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint Hyderabad
Mint Hyderabad
GST cuts, easing inflation drive rural demand revival
India’s rural economy expanded and recovered strongly in late 2025, with consumption, incomes and investment improving after a key tax reform and as inflation eased, a survey showed.
2 mins
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Mexico duty hikes to hit 75% of India Jan exports
Three-quarters of India’s exports to Mexico are set to face a major setback from 1 January 2026, according to a report released on Friday by Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI), after the Mexican senate approved steep tariff increases on goods imported from countries that don’t have a free-trade agreement (FTA) with Mexico.
1 min
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Govt’s insurance reform allows 100% FDI, composite licences
The government has paved the way for 100% foreign direct investment in the insurance sector, composite licences and easier capital requirements, among others sweeping reforms, as the Union cabinet cleared the enabling legislation, said two officials aware of the matter.
1 mins
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
A teen, a wok and stir-fries for school
I should count myself lucky.
3 mins
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Chair man, of the bored
STREAM OF STORIES
3 mins
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Sebi weighs easier unified penalty rules for listed cos
Explores framework like the one for brokers that standardized and reduced fines
2 mins
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
English's place in history is not black and white
In 1784, two white men joined forces to establish an English school in Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu.
4 mins
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
A modern-day throwback to 'Malgudi Days'
Sita Bhaskar's latest novel revisits writer R.K. Narayan’s legacy to explore class, caste, and community in Mysuru
4 mins
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Tushar Adhav and politics of the dance floor
There's a 1983 song by English new wave band Re-Flex that keeps popping up in my mind every time I find myself on an Indian club floor.
4 mins
December 13, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Rising costs force Indian firms to rewrite employee benefits
Indian companies are rethinking the benefits they offer their staff, such as healthcare, retiral plans, well-being perks, and leave, as they seek to control budgets while retaining top talent without compromising on employee experience.
1 mins
December 13, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
