US approves NVIDIA H200 chip exports to China
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The agreement with the start-up Cerebras is the latest in a series intended to expand the A.I. company’s computing power.
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MIT's chip stacking breakthrough could cut energy use in power-hungry AI processes
Data doesn’t have to travel as far or waste as much energy when the memory and logic components are closer together.
Nvidia has been the biggest beneficiary of the artificial intelligence revolution so far, but another chip stock may be about to kick into a new gear.
Generative AI company OpenAI has signed a multi-year deal with wafer-scale chip company Cerebras. The deal, worth more than $10 billion according to CNBC, will see some 750 megawatts of computing power delivered through 2028. Alongside directly selling its large chips, Cerebras offers them through its own data centers as a cloud service.
Nvidia Corp. has been in pole position in the artificial intelligence chip market for as long as the industry has existed, but it may want to keep an eye on the rear-view mirror as some of its biggest rivals are getting the financial backing they need to shift into a higher gear.
One big selling point of Rubin is dramatically lower AI inference costs. Compared to Nvidia's last-gen Blackwell platform, inference workloads on Rubin can be run at a 90% lower cost per token. Tokens are units of data processed by AI models, and it's how customers of those models are generally charged for use.
Nearly one in five Mac gamers on Steam are using systems powered by Apple's M4 chip, according to actual user data provided by Valve.
Television personalities Chip and Joanna Gaines are doing their part to get the Baylor baseball program back on track.