NVIDIA's Vera CPU: The Engine for AI That Acts
Forget crunching numbers. NVIDIA’s new Vera CPU is built to make AI models *do* things, powering the next wave of intelligent agents that act on your behalf.
In-depth coverage of the latest AI & GPU Accelerators developments, trends, and analysis — curated daily.
Forget crunching numbers. NVIDIA’s new Vera CPU is built to make AI models *do* things, powering the next wave of intelligent agents that act on your behalf.
Intel is shuffling the deck, appointing fresh leadership to steer its client computing division into the AI era and solidify its technological future. This move signals a serious commitment to the fundamental platform shift AI represents.
Forget wrestling with raw GPU hardware. Meta and UC San Diego researchers have delivered TLX, a new compiler designed to bridge the gap between complex hardware and efficient AI workloads.
NVIDIA's new Blackwell GPUs command a hefty price tag, reportedly double that of Google and Amazon's custom silicon. Yet, Morgan Stanley argues the performance justifies the spend, though alternative metrics cast a shadow.
For years, Windows gamers have held a distinct advantage in latency reduction technologies. Now, a bold open-source project is bridging that gap on Linux, bringing NVIDIA Reflex 2 and AMD Anti-Lag 2 to practically any GPU.
The memory market's rollercoaster is CXMT's golden ticket. Years of red ink are suddenly black, thanks to a global shortage that's juicing revenue and profit.
For years, TSMC has been the undisputed king of advanced chip manufacturing. But artificial intelligence and shifting global dynamics are finally creating cracks in its seemingly impenetrable armor.
NVIDIA's most powerful professional GPU, the RTX 6000 Blackwell, has crossed the $10,000 threshold, a seismic shift driven by insatiable AI workloads.
Ninety seconds to load a game? Unacceptable. Microsoft's new tech cuts Forza Horizon 6 boot times to a mere four seconds, but AMD is the latest player to join the shader delivery arena.
Forget the GPU arms race. China's latest supercomputer, LineShine, packs an astonishing 2.4 million CPU cores to bypass US sanctions and achieve massive AI performance. This isn't just a workaround; it's a fundamental shift.
Nvidia's Jensen Huang thinks the idea of restricting AI chip sales to 'adversarial countries' is, frankly, stupid. He’s got a point, sort of.
Europe poured billions into sovereign clouds to escape US digital oversight, but the architecture's reliance on American silicon—and its hidden management engines—threatens to undermine those very goals.