Marvell Technology, a semiconductor company that started around a kitchen table nearly three decades ago, has suddenly found itself in the spotlight after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang suggested it could become the world's next trillion-dollar company. His comments,... Marvell Technology, a semiconductor company that started around a kitchen table nearly three decades ago, has suddenly found itself in the spotlight after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang suggested it could become the world's next trillion-dollar company. His comments, made during Computex Week in Taipei, sent Marvell's shares soaring and renewed attention on the company's remarkable journey from a startup founded by a small family team to a major player in the artificial intelligence infrastructure race.Speaking alongside Marvell CEO Matthew Murphy, Huang praised the company's role in powering modern data centres, where thousands of chips must communicate with each other at extremely high speeds.“Marvell is set to be the next trillion-dollar company as its networking and connectivity chips are essential to data centres where computing tasks are spread across thousands of connected chips that need to share data quickly,” Huang said.The remarks had an immediate impact on Wall Street. Marvell's stock jumped more than 20 per cent, adding tens of billions of dollars to its market value in a single trading session. While the company remains far from the $1 trillion valuation Huang mentioned, investors appeared encouraged by its growing position in the AI ecosystem.Why Marvell matters in the AI boomUnlike Nvidia, which is best known for making the powerful graphics processors used to train artificial intelligence models, Marvell focuses on the technology that connects those processors together. Its products are widely used across cloud computing, enterprise networking, AI infrastructure, 5G networks and automotive systems.Huang explained that connectivity has become one of the most important parts of modern computing.“When you take a computing problem, and you disaggregate it into a lot of parts, and you distribute it across the entire data center, what’s necessary is connectivity. That’s the reason why Matt’s doing so well. That’s the reason why Marvel is so essential,” he said. 131462352He added, “We’ve distributed and disaggregated computing so that it runs across these enormous clusters, so that we could get aggregating the total compute, the total memory, the total bandwidth that we have, and what makes it possible is connectivity.”The company's business has benefited from the rapid expansion of AI data centres around the world. Marvell recently reported quarterly revenue of $2.4 billion and projected continued growth driven by demand from its data centre operations. It has also forecast that its custom chip business could generate more than $10 billion in annual revenue by fiscal 2029.Earlier this year, Nvidia invested $2 billion in Marvell as part of efforts to help customers combine Marvell's custom AI chips with Nvidia's processors and networking technologies.The man who helped build MarvellBehind the company's success story was co-founder Sehat Sutardja, an engineer whose fascination with electronics began long before Silicon Valley took notice.Born and raised in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sutardja spent his childhood experimenting with