The chip war reshapes surveillance and security

Chris Miller´s ´Chip War´ explains why control of semiconductor supply chains now shapes the future of Artificial Intelligence surveillance and enterprise security.

Chris Miller´s Chip War is more than a history of semiconductors; it is a roadmap to the way control of compute will determine who wins in surveillance and security. The same chips at the center of geopolitics now underlie video analytics, access control, and forensic search. That link means decisions made in fabs and export controls in capitals ripple straight into server rooms and camera fleets around the world.

Video surveillance as a service and modern video management systems depend on specialized silicon for real-time analytics. Vendors such as nvidia, qualcomm, intel, amd and even google (with TPUs) supply the GPUs, NPUs and TPUs that power detection, recognition, and indexing. The blog highlights that over 90% of advanced chips are produced by tsmc and that tools like asml´s EUV machines are strategic leverage points in the global supply chain. Those supply realities feed directly into product design, deployment choices, and the cost or availability of advanced analytics.

ArcadianAI positions itself as chip-agnostic through a product called ranger. Ranger is presented as an adaptive security assistant that auto-detects available compute and shifts inference across edge GPUs, CPUs, and cloud TPUs. Key features described include dynamic load balancing, latency-aware prioritization of alerts, and chip-based failover so critical inference can continue if a cloud path degrades. The firm contrasts this approach with fixed hardware vendors and proprietary stacks that can be brittle under chip constraints or extreme environmental conditions.

The post draws attention to market dynamics and statistics reported in the piece: a projected market value listed as ´? billion by 2030´, an asserted 25% compound annual growth rate in chip spending for physical security, and a claim that more than 80% of VMS and VSaaS vendors now use GPU acceleration. Practical examples illustrate how chip flexibility matters—retail deployments that avoid full hardware upgrades, oil field cameras that survive thermal stress, and multinational sites that unify mixed-brand fleets.

The takeaway is blunt: surveillance is now inseparable from semiconductor geopolitics and architecture. Buyers and system architects must think ´chip first´ when planning modern security, because software that adapts to available silicon will outlast systems bound to a single chipset or vendor. The era that Miller documents on the world stage is already unfolding in everyday security operations.

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