AI start-up builds a 22,000-GPU supercomputer
Most start-ups begin modestly, but this company has over $1 billion in hardware.
Most start-ups begin modestly, but this company has over $1 billion in hardware.
Stacking processor units on RAM without solder.
A cluster of 3,584 H100 GPUs completed a new GPT-3-based benchmark in just 11 minutes.
Second successive substantial drop in history
R&D ROI shifting to data center and AI.
The H100 GPU and L4 AIB are tested on the new MLPerf 3.0 benchmark suite.
And takes the water out of the 1550.
The GPU-Computing Market Report is a supplemental report to Market Watch focusing on the data center
The GPU-Computing market continues to grow and is a bright spot in the industry with continued growth in revenue and unit shipments.
Deploying GPUs and virtual GPU software in the data center has become an effective way for enterprises to meet the challenges of larger, more complex workloads. These technologies offer advanced capabilities for AI, real-time ray tracing, and graphics that are essential for a variety of workloads, while reducing costs, space, and power requirements.
With the sudden surge in popularity of AI training, today’s GPUs, with their massive acceleration capabilities, have been generating a great deal of interest and experiencing a rise in popularity. The report dives into the background of GPUs as they have become an important element in AI deep learning, scientific computing, machine learning, and more.
JPR identifies the three major US companies that compete in the global GPU/AIB market—AMD, Intel, and Nvidia—and three indigenous companies that compete for the Chinese AI market (as a result of the US sanctions)—Biren Technology, MetaX, and Moore Threads. More detailed information on the Chinese GPUs/AIBs can be found in our GPU Developments of 2022 report.
While none of the companies release shipment data on their data center products, JPR estimates the market at 272,000 add-in boards (AIBs) in 2022 and 230,000 in 2023. This was based on revenue reports, product classifications, adjacent shipments (servers), and experience. It’s worth noting that the 2022 shipment numbers were inflated by the large number of GPU-compute AIBs Intel made for the Aurora supercomputer and AMD made for the Frontier supercomputer.
Contact us now if you would like to receive a sample of the report.
What do developers think of the mods?
DirectX 12 lets the CPU steal VRAM.
The Grace CPU will be used in two configurations—Grace Superchip and Grace Hopper Superchip.
Introduces new Ada Generation GPUs for the laptop and SFF desktop.