During its recent 'Vision' event, Intel shared details on its upcoming Arctic Sound-M (ATS-M) GPU. ATS-M is Intel’s general-purpose datacentre GPU. It’s designed for compute and transcoding operations and its set to form the backbone of Intel and its clients’ streaming and cloud gaming services.
ATS-M will come in two versions, with respective TDPs of 75W and 150W. It’s designed to be a flexible and scalable solution for cloud providers. A single card can support up to eight 4K streams, or more than 30 1080p streams per card, which means up to 120 streams per node or 13,000 per rack.
The card that Intel displayed is a single slot passive card. That means it's designed to be used in a high density, high airflow datacentre environment. By itself, ATS-M would not offer stellar gaming performance, but when you pack tens of thousands of them together, there’s no reason that Intel can’t become a leader in cloud GPU services. Of course, that all depends on the particulars of the platform, software user interface and something that the public won’t be privy to, the pricing.
Notably, ATS-M supports AV1 encoding, which is set to become a widely used standard for streamers, content providers, and creators. As AV1 becomes more widely used by streaming services, the need for AV1 hardware support could give Intel an important advantage in the short to medium term. AV1 encoding support is also set to be offered by Arc desktop GPUs.
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The other interesting application for ATS-M GPUs is cloud gaming. Will these GPUs power the mysterious
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