Intel recently unveiled its strategy for the future of artificial intelligence in the enterprise, outlining a path towards open and scalable systems. At the heart of this vision, the presentation of the Intel Gaudi 3 AI accelerator represents a watershed moment, promising superior performance and greater energy efficiency compared to competitors in the sector, as highlighted by the direct comparison the company has made with Nvidia H100. But it doesn't stop there: Intel has also announced the availability of Gaudi 3 to OEMs, with names such as Dell Technologies, HPE, Lenovo and Supermicro ready to integrate it into their data center solutions, thus expanding the options available to enterprises.
Collaboration with leading companies and the introduction of new customers and partners for the Intel Gaudi accelerator, including giants such as Bharti Airtel, Bosch and IBM, mark a further step towards integrating AI into the business ecosystem. Intel also announced an open platform for enterprise AI developed together with partners such as SAP, IBM, RedHat and Hugging Face. This platform aims to facilitate the adoption of secure GenAI systems, focusing on retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) to accelerate the implementation of intelligent solutions in enterprises.
Finally, Intel's commitment to a more efficient and open AI infrastructure is also manifested through the Ultra Ethernet Consortium (UEC) initiative, which places the company at the center of the development of Ethernet networking for AI. AI-optimized Ethernet solutions, such as AI NICs and AI connectivity chiplets, are concrete examples of how Intel is working to make AI more accessible and integrated into existing infrastructures.
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