Annapurna’s latest work is expected to be showcased next month when Amazon announces widespread availability of ‘Trainium 2’, part of a line of AI chips aimed at training the largest models. Trainium 2 is already being tested by Anthropic—the ...
Yeah, okay, neither of those figures is small potatoes; Nvidia is a heavy-hitter in this arena for sure—but there's about to be a rumble in the AI jungle.Amazon has not been shy about its commitment to AI (and we're not just talking about their deal-spitting robot Rufus).
Amazon.com's cloud computing unit on Tuesday said it will offer free computing power to researchers who want to use its custom artificial intelligence chips, aiming to challenge Nvidia's popularity among those researchers.
Amazon is developing new artificial intelligence chips to boost returns on its semiconductor investments and reduce dependency on Nvidia, as reported by the Financial Times. The company plans to widely release its ‘Trainium 2’ AI training chip next month.
New tools are helping developers plug their apps into different AI models. Data suggests the developers are increasingly choosing Anthropic models.
Amazon’s capital spending is expected to reach $75 billion in 2024, with a large portion dedicated to tech infrastructure, up from $48.4 billion in 2023, reflecting the AI investment trend among major cloud providers. Why It Matters: Amazon’s move to ...
Amazon is developing its own AI chips, led by its Annapurna Labs, to compete with Nvidia. The new Trainium 2 chip aims to train AI models faster and reduce Amazon's reliance on Nvidia. Amazon and other tech giants are heavily investing to boost AI ...
Amazon (AMZN) is set to release its newest artificial intelligence chips as the company seeks returns on its multibillion-dollar semiconductor investments and reduce its reliance on Nvidia (NVDA), Michael Acton and Tim Bradshaw of The Financial Times ...
It's still early in the AI race, and Amazon's slow start may not matter in the end. In fact, the company's third-quarter earnings report showed why the stock can keep moving higher even if Amazon isn't an artificial intelligence leader.
Specifically, the partnership lets employees at intelligence agencies and the Department of Defense use San Francisco-based Anthropic’s generative AI models Claude 3 and 3.5 within Palantir’s AI Platform (AIP). The systems will run on Amazon Web Services and will incorporate information classified up to the “secret” level.
Between the "smart" assistant's 2014 introduction and late 2022, Amazon's Worldwide Digital unit lost over $10 billion on Alexa alone. Despite countless hardware iterations and plenty of ads showcasing Alexa's ability to answer everyday questions,
Partner universities will receive up to $11 million each in credits for Amazon Web Services' Trainium AI chips, while other research entities will get grants of up to $500,000.