Fair to say Intel's GPU plans don't always go to, er, plan. During Intel's latest earnings call for highly-remunerated bean counters, the company's new interim co-CEO let slip that its upcoming next-gen AI GPU has effectively been cancelled.
Already fed up with NVIDIA's next-gen GPUs having sold out in a flash? A hint of a B770 has been dropped, perhaps to offer the RTX 5070 some competition?
Trump says he had a 'good meeting' with Jensen Huang but still plans to tariff foreign-manufactured semiconductors. Tariffs on China and Mexico also go into effect tomorrow.
Intel’s upcoming Arc Battlemage graphics cards have gotten plenty of media attention through rumors, reports, and just recently an official reveal from Intel itself. But a recent Linux leak has revealed several new cards,
Former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger buys Nvidia shares, calling DeepSeek's AI breakthrough a market expansion opportunity, not a threat
Intel Corp. is taking a more combative stance in the data center market, signaling an aggressive pricing strategy to defend its territory against mounting competition from rivals like Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
Intel is effectively killing Falcon Shores, its next-generation GPU for high-performance computing and AI workloads.
Intel was set to release a new AI chip called Falcon Shores late this year, to replace its Gaudi 3 accelerator chip. But interim co-CEO Michelle Johnston Holthaus said on an earnings call that this would no longer be happening, meaning customers will now need to wait for a later version called Jaguar Shores.
Former CEO Pat Gelsinger was ousted last month, well before the completion of his four-year plan to turn around the company from years of missteps in its manufacturing operation and missed opportunities around the artificial intelligence boom that have left the erstwhile American chipmaking icon far behind its rivals.
DeepSeek's $6M AI breakthrough sent shockwaves through the market, but Gelsinger says investors are getting it all wrong.
Intel on Thursday posted December-quarter results that beat analysts' low expectations, while its forecast for current-quarter revenue missed estimates as the chipmaker grapples with tepid demand for its data center chips and as investors wait for a new CEO.
Intel will face investor scrutiny on its CEO search when it reports quarterly results on Thursday, as the chipmaker stares at another big decline in revenue due to weak PC sales and its shrinking share in the datacenter market.