NVIDIA’s RTX Spark looks like a PC chip
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By Max A. Cherney TAIPEI, June 2 (Reuters) - Arm Holdings CEO Rene Haas said on Tuesday that it would be challenging to block the export to China of central processing units (CPUs) that are useful for artificial intelligence because of their widespread use and the difficulty in singling out those intended for the purpose.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang unveiled a long-awaited Arm-based PC chip, breaking into PCs for the first time on new laptops by Dell, Microsoft, HP, ASUS and others.
A new laptop chip barely moves the needle for the AI giant -- but it strikes at the heart of what its rivals sell.
Nvidia unveils RTX Spark, its first full Windows PC platform chip. RTX Spark combines Arm CPU and Blackwell GPU for AI laptops. Intel, AMD and Qualcomm face fresh competition in premium PCs.
Arm's CEO announces ByteDance and Oracle as customers of its AI data centre CPU chips, highlighting AGI processors at Computex Taipei.
CPUs act like the brain of the computer, and more will be needed to handle the sequential reasoning and tools required to manage AI agents. While AI training typically has an 8-to-1 GPU-to-CPU ratio, with agentic AI, the ratio moves to 1-to-1. Now, the ...
After dominating the graphics card market, Nvidia appears poised to carve out a slice of the pie traditionally shared by Intel, AMD, and, to a certain extent, Qualcomm.
Quantum simulation enables scientists to simulate and study complex systems that are challenging or even impossible using classical computers across various fields, including financial modeling, cybersecurity, pharmaceutical discoveries, AI and machine ...
Snowflake has signed a new, enormous five-year deal with Amazon to secure chips for AI usage. Nvidia is once again being put on notice.
Engineering researchers have successfully developed a quantum microprocessor chip for molecular spectroscopy simulation of actual large-structured and complex molecules. Quantum simulation enables scientists to simulate and study complex systems that are ...
By Liam Mo and Fanny Potkin BEIJING/PARIS, May 28 (Reuters) - Chinese technology giant ByteDance is developing its own central processing units (CPUs) to support its growing AI infrastructure needs, three people familiar with the matter said,