Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger has taken a shot at his main rival in high performance computing, dismissing Nvidia's success in providing GPUs for AI modelling as «extraordinarily lucky.» Gelsinger also implied that it would have been Intel, not Nvidia, currently coining it in AI hardware had the company not killed one of his pet projects nearly 15 years ago.
During a broad ranging discussion at MIT, Gelsinger was asked what Intel is doing to drive the development of AI. His answer? Among other things, to point out how lucky he thinks Nvidia has been with its AI-accelerating GPUs.
Discussing the emergence of GPUs as the weapon of choice for the latest large AI models, Gelsinger explained how he thinks Nvidia and its CEO, Jensen Huang, just happened to be in the right place at the right time.
«Jensen worked super hard at owning throughput computing, primarily for graphics initially, and then got extraordinarily lucky,» Gelsinger said. Gelsinger also emphasised that AI wasn't part of Nvidia's original plan for GPGPU or general purpose computing on GPUs. «They didn't even want to support their first AI project,» Gelsinger observed.
What's more, Gelisnger also claimed things would have been very different had Intel not cancelled the Larrabee project shortly after he left for an 11-year stint outside of Intel before returning as CEO in February 2021.
«When I was pushed out of Intel 13 years ago, they killed the project that would have changed the shape of AI,» Gelsinger said of Larrabee.
Larrabee was an Intel GPU project long before its current Arc graphics cards that was intended to go head-on with Nvidia in the gaming and GPGPU markets courtesy of scores of tiny x86 CPU cores. The gaming graphics cards were cancelled in late 2009
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