Intel Gaudi
Latest about Intel Gaudi

Intel might be too big to fail
By Jowi Morales published
American lawmakers are setting up backup plans to support Intel if it fails.

Intel says it will miss its AI goals with Gaudi 3 due to unbaked software
By Anton Shilov published
Software issues slowed the sales ramp of Intel's Gaudi 3 accelerator for AI.

Intel's former CEO reportedly wanted to buy Nvidia for $20 billion in 2005
By Andrew E. Freedman published
A New York Times report says that in 2005, Intel CEO Paul Otellini wanted to buy Nvidia for $20 billion, which could have changed the course of tech history.

We benchmarked Intel's Lunar Lake GPU with Core Ultra 9 [Updated]
By Jarred Walton published
Intel's integrated Battlemage GPU put to the test.

Intel launches Gaudi 3 accelerator for AI: Slower than Nvidia's H100 AI GPU, but also cheaper
By Anton Shilov published
Intel formally introduces Gaudi 3 AI accelerators, claiming massive price and TCO advantages over Nvidia's H100.

Intel reportedly gave up a chance to buy a stake in OpenAI in 2017
By Andrew E. Freedman published
Reuters reports that Intel had a chance to buy a stake in OpenAI in 2017 and 2018, but CEO Bob Swan didn't think AI models would make a splash anytime soon.

Sohu AI chip claimed to run models 20x faster and cheaper than Nvidia H100 GPUs
By Jowi Morales published
Etched took a gamble that the transformer AI architecture will take the AI world by storm, and it looks like that will pay off soon with its Sohu AI processor.

Intel's Gaudi 3 will cost half the price of Nvidia's H100
By Anton Shilov published
Intel reveals Gaudi 2 and Gaudi 3 prices: A lot of AI horsepower at a fraction of Nvidia's B200 price.

Intel's 1500W TDP for Falcon Shores AI processor confirmed — next-gen AI chip consumes more power than Nvidia's B200
By Anton Shilov published
Intel's hybrid processor for AI and HPC applications promises to offer unprecedented performance, but an unprecedented power.

Intel begins sunsetting Ponte Vecchio to focus on Falcon Shores, Gaudi 2 and 3
By Aaron Klotz published
Intel has begun the retirement process on Ponte Vecchio, despite the fact it has not released its successor. Existing customers will still be able to purchase these GPUs, but new customers will not.
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