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AI

Intel says the newest laptop chip software will handle generative AI

Exclusive: US chip CEOs will discuss China policies in Washington Exclusive: US chip CEOs will discuss China policies in Washington
Exclusive: US chip CEOs will discuss China policies in Washington Exclusive: US chip CEOs will discuss China policies in Washington

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Intel says the newest laptop chip software will handle generative AI. On Tuesday, Intel (INTC.O) announced that a December chip can run a generative AI chatbot on a laptop without cloud data centers.

Intel was anticipated to demonstrate ChatGPT-like technologies at a Silicon Valley software developer conference, allowing corporations and consumers to test them without transmitting sensitive data of their computers. New AI data-crunching features in Intel’s “Meteor Lake” laptop CPU and new software tools enable it.

As stated, Intel officials anticipate announcing that the business will deliver a successor chip called “Arrow Lake” next year and that its production technique will compete with Taiwan Semiconductor production Co (2330. TW). Intel was the top chipmaker, lost it, and now claims to be back.

Intel has lagged behind Nvidia (NVDA.O) in the market for strong data center CPUs that “train” AI systems like ChatGPT. Intel announced Tuesday that it was developing a supercomputer for image-generating firm Stability AI.

On Tuesday, Intel sought to gain momentum in the unorganized market for AI chips outside data centers.

Intel said OpenVINO will let developers run Meta Platforms (META.O)’s big language model, which powers ChatGPT, on laptops. That will speed up chatbot responses and keep data on the device.

“You can get a better performance, a lower cost and more private AI,” Intel network and edge group senior vice president and general manager Sachin Katti told Reuters.

TechInsights analyst Dan Hutcheson told Reuters that Intel’s strategy may appeal to business customers wary of giving sensitive corporate data to third-party AI businesses.

AI “is still in that class of technology where you need a PhD,” Hutcheson added. Challenge for Intel CEO Gelsinger: “Democratize. If he can make it universal, his chips will have a larger market.”


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