Intel dumped its Xe-HPC GPU accelerators in favor of Gaudi but is still missing its sales goals with its Gaudi 3 AI accelerator. Thus, Intel is pinning its AI hopes on its next-gen Falcon Shores ...
the company's new interim co-CEO let slip that its upcoming next-gen AI GPU has effectively been cancelled. Known as Falcon Shores, it was supposed to replace Intel's Gaudi 3 chip. But no more.
In a surprising twist, Intel announced on Thursday that its Falcon Shores GPU for AI and HPC applications will not be released to the market but will remain an internal test processor to develop ...
Intel is effectively killing Falcon Shores, its next-generation GPU for high-performance computing and AI workloads. The move comes as Intel tries to correct course after a number of disappointing ...
That brings us to the ever-changing “Falcon Shores” accelerator. Three years ago, Intel was working on a GPU product line anchored by its “Ponte Vecchio” Max GPU and followed by its “Rialto Bridge” ...
Intel will no longer launch its Falcon Shores artificial intelligence (AI) GPU as a commercial product. The plan is to focus on rack-scale AI solutions with Jaguar Shores. This move could further ...
Falcon Shores and Jaguar Shores are GPUs. Falcon Shores isn’t the first Intel GPU to be pulled from its road map. Indeed, it only became Intel’s great GPU hope after the company canceled its ...
Intel is officially shelving its Falcon Shores GPU, marking another shift in the company's tumultuous AI hardware strategy. In its Q4 2024 earnings call, Interim Co-CEO Michelle Johnston Holthaus ...
Intel is officially shelving its Falcon Shores GPU, marking another shift in the company's tumultuous AI hardware strategy. In its Q4 2024 earnings call, Interim Co-CEO Michelle Johnston Holthaus ...
Until last week, the plan was to launch Falcon Shores in late 2025. Falcon Shores is a more traditional GPU that was expected to incorporate some features from the Gaudi family of chips.
Intel is effectively killing Falcon Shores, its next-generation GPU for high-performance computing and AI workloads. The move comes as Intel tries to correct course after a number of disappointing ...