Nvidia
made
a
fortune
on
the
AI
boom.
AMD’s
rival
AI
chip
became
the
fastest
ramping
product
in
its
history,
already
pulling
in
$1
billion
per
quarter
and
inspiring
AMD
to
remake
itself
as
an
AI
company
too.
But
Intel,
which
suggested
it
would
pull
in
$1
billion,
even
$2
billion
on
the
back
of
AI
in
2024,
now
says
it
won’t
even
meet
its
more
modest
$500
million
goal
for
its
Gaudi
AI
accelerator
this
year.
“We
will
not
achieve
our
target
of
$500
million
in
revenue
for
Gaudi
in
2024,”
CEO
Pat
Gelsinger
just
said
on
the
company’s
Q3
2024
earnings
call
today.
Though
Intel
just
launched
its
recent
Gaudi
3
accelerator
this
past
quarter,
said
Gelsinger,
“the
overall
uptake
of
Gaudi
has
been
slower
than
we
anticipated
as
adoption
rates
were
impacted
by
the
product
transition
from
Gaudi
2
to
Gaudi
3
and
software
ease
of
use.”
Despite
the
missed
goal,
Gelsinger
says
“we
remain
encouraged
by
the
market
available
to
us.
There
is
clear
need
for
solutions
with
superior
[total
cost
of
ownership]
based
on
open
standards,
and
we
are
continuing
to
enhance
the
Gaudi
value
proposition.”
Later
on
the
call,
Gelsinger
seemingly
had
some
sour
grapes
to
share,
pointing
out
how
so
far,
the
industry’s
huge
spend
on
AI
chips
has
been
focused
on
training
AI
models
in
the
cloud.
“Training
is
creating
the
weather
model,
not
using
it,”
he
says,
suggesting
once
again
that
putting
AI
into
all
the
chips,
not
just
ones
in
the
cloud,
might
be
more
important
in
the
long
run.
Intel
reported
$13.3
billion
in
revenue
in
quarterly
earnings
today,
down
6
percent
year
over
year
but
up
compared
to
last
quarter
—
and
losses
of
a
whopping
$16.6
billion.
But
those
losses
were
based
on
$18.5
billion
of
impairments
and
restructuring
charges,
the
cost
of
Intel’s
decision
to
rework
itself
for
more
profitability
in
the
future.
Last
quarter
it
announced
a
$10
billion
cost
reduction
plan
and
over
15,000
layoffs,
and
it’s
now
detailing
some
of
the
structural
shifts
inside
the
company
too
—
including
moving
its
edge
computing
business
into
the
Client
Computing
Group
that
generally
handles
its
desktop
and
laptop
chips,
and
integrating
its
software
teams
into
the
company’s
core
business
units.
Gelsinger
says
Intel
will “focus
on
fewer
projects,
with
the
top
priority
to
be
to
maximize
the
value
of
our
x86
franchise
across
the
client,
edge,
and
data
center
markets.”
(Originally posted by Sean Hollister)
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