Intel (INTC) hosted its “AI Everywhere” event on Thursday, showcasing a range of products and services which all include artificial intelligence. Included in the showcase was the Gaudi3, an artificial intelligence chip for generative AI software. The chip will officially launch next year. Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the implementation of AI across the company and its products and how the AI market will move into next year and beyond.
Gelsinger comments on future use cases for AI: “I do think that enterprises are just going to find a lot of critical use cases for this. We showed a couple today in some of the communications technologies. Imagine realtime translation, transcription, summarization, contextualization, ‘wow, this is cool’, but also cases like manufacturing lines. We showed even our manufacturing line where high-resolution imaging and being able to detect machine variations and being able to improve line yields in our big factories.”
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I like how excited he sounds for the future of Intel. Let’s go Intel! 💪🏾
Yeah! He actually might turn that company around!
@@PascalH9191 Yeah… he is amusing… Always entertains. I want him to come my niece birthday party dressed in his clown costume too. She is 5yrs old and definitely smarter that this cookie.
entry price of 29 dollars. really exited for next year
exited or excited?
I feel like I just had a therapy session, but better. Thanks!
He is funny right! Best clown in the industry!!
LOL… this is funny. I cried laughing listening to this…. Thanks for making this comical interview.
Real AI are in big data center
Interesting in Gelsinger’s Eyes Intel is the only tech company in the Western World, i think I heard him say that, this Guy in my opinion is just as comical as a used car salesman
He means manufacturing. Nvidia and AMD and Qualcomm are fabless
Everyone jst throws the AI word around, but they never explain in any specifics wat exactly do they mean. This guy doesn’t say exactly what the AI element/aspect/functions r built into the chip that makes it AI and how this is reflected to the customer who r, say PC users. Wat makes something AI is the simulationg of organic sentient thinking/behavior, artifical intelligence. I think most ppl think AI is anything that is a program these days.
youre right… in this case hes talking about adding special area on chips dedicated strictly to executing “AI ” instructions … the hope is that software developers will more and more utilize this hardware if it already exists on the consumers laptop as opposed to running the AI apps through web browsers remotely processing them in a data center somewhere.
@cKunke Your sayin nothin more than wat Intel CEO said, in generalities of, ‘it’s in the chip’, the reason for my post. Also, if AI is built into the chip, it’s not something that is only for browsers or web. It’s accessible for all software running on the hardware. But it all still goes back to the question of specifics, wat is it that makes the chip AI.
@@s1iznc1d34 what makes the chip AI is there’s a specific area on it called an npu or neutral processing unit. When a section of chip real estate is carved out for a purpose of better dealing with a specific class of software instructions it’s called an accelerator. You could ultimately run these AI instructions on the chips main cpu cores, because the cores are very “general purpose” and you can find a way to run basically any computer load on them, it’s just a matter of whether it’s time efficient. The graphics processor (GPU) is basically the same story as the NPU, computing/rendering graphical images benefits largely from low precision parallel computations, which is basically the opposite of how the CPU is configured so you need a separate space for this GPU chip (accelerator) …For a long time these gpus exist on the CPU (integrated ) but eventually GPU demands became more powerful and discreet gpus were sold separate as their own expansion card. AI neural processing also just so happens to utilize the same configuration as the GPU and in the earlier days of AI when there wasn’t the specially designed chips directly made for AI, GPUs were used (and still are).
But if the question is what makes these so called AI programs “artificially intelligent” then yeah to some extent I’d agree that it’s not like we are actually replacing a human brain here. Do some reading on neural networks if you want to learn more about how AI is similar to the brain.
@cKunke U completely removed the content of your post and replaced it with something totally diff. This post is not even addressing my reply. Time to end our convo bro. Move along.
I’m about to die, and but artificial intelligence he is addressing you on my interests to you 😭⚰️🪦
WOW!! intel will become a chip powerhouse! 😲🤑🤑🤑