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"We Asked Intel To Define 'AI PC.' Its reply: 'Anything With Our Latest CPUs'"
Tuesday March 12, 2024. 09:41 PM , from Slashdot
An anonymous reader shares a report: If you're confused about what makes a PC an 'AI PC,' you're not alone. But finally have something of an answer: if it packs a GPU, a processor that boasts a neural processing unit and can handle VNNI and Dp4a instructions, it qualifies -- at least according to Robert Hallock, Intel's senior director of technical marketing. As luck would have it, that combo is present in Intel's current-generation desktop processors -- 14th-gen Core, aka Core Ultra, aka 'Meteor Lake.' All models feature a GPU, NPU, and can handle Vector Neural Network Instructions (VNNI) that speed some -- surprise! -- neural networking tasks, and the DP4a instructions that help GPUs to process video.
Because AI PCs are therefore just PCs with current processors, Intel doesn't consider 'AI PC' to be a brand that denotes conformity with a spec or a particular capability not present in other PCs. Intel used the 'Centrino' brand to distinguish Wi-Fi-enabled PCs, and did likewise by giving home entertainment PCs the 'Viiv' moniker. Chipzilla still uses the tactic with 'vPro' -- a brand that denotes processors that include manageability and security for business users. But AI PCs are neither a brand nor a spec. 'The reason we have not created a category for it like Centrino is we believe this is simply what a PC will be like in four or five years time,' Hallock told The Register, adding that Intel's recipe for an AI PC doesn't include specific requirements for memory, storage, or I/O speeds. 'There are cases where a very large LLM might require 32GB of RAM,' he noted. 'Everything else will fit comfortably in a 16GB system.' Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://slashdot.org/story/24/03/12/1928250/we-asked-intel-to-define-ai-pc-its-reply-anything-with-o...
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