Kids in their bedrooms, comparing gaming benchmarks and scores with Supercomputing requirements.
It's a totally different world. For who really wants to find something new, Intel has already a second gen AI chip (VPU). Not a big deal to improve it and put it in the next GPU. It will already be embedded in the Xeon Cascade Lake (Intel DL Boost).
https://newsroom.intel.com/news/intel-unveils-intel-neural-compute-stick-2/
*Intel's subsidiary Movidius has a 2nd gen VPU, visual processing unit... it is the easiest problem to solve...it's all inferencing no models being made here... that's on distant heavy iron.
Intel is waaaay behind in mindshare on their various acquired IP... Altera, Movidius , nervana and no... they did not embed a mobius vpu chip in cascade lake...
They simply added another AVX extension AVX512VNNI as well as bfloat16.
Don't try and combine press releases. please and thank you.
Intel is not gaining traction on any of those projects outside of facebook.... they are all cool... but not fully baked. They just gave FB enough of a deal to help them polish up both Movidius and Nervana product lines.
Altera, flexible fpga, but gets utterly trounced by the T4, it was barely competitive to the p4 and Nvidia launched the T4 before they could get it out the door.
There are other more capable fpga's on the market and convincing people to go intel comes down to discounts. They are combining it with IB (infiniband) for some interesting offload capabilities.
Now... for Xe... there have been no performance estimates from it, from any side. not consumer, not server...
This is not a bid won because of Xe... but already won and delayed because of Intel's past failings...
Originally announced in April
2015, Aurora was planned to be delivered in
2018 and have a peak performance of 180
petaFLOPS. The system was expected to be the world's most powerful system at the time. The system was intended to be built by Cray based on Intel's 3rd generation
Xeon Phi (
Knights Hill microarchitecture). In November 2017 Intel announced that Aurora has been shifted to 2021 and will be scaled up to 1
exaFLOPS. The system will likely become the first supercomputer in the United States to break the exaFLOPS barrier. As part of the announcement
Knights Hill was canceled and instead be replaced by a "new platform and new microarchitecture specifically designed for exascale".
What this is ... is a win for Intel's ONE api, to make a language that handles all the details of the workloads and offloads it to the most capable accelerator for any given task.
This is not a win for Xe, but one in spite of it.
I live in the realm of supercomputers and love all the competition to nvidia that has risen up in the past few years.
This this is... DOE... Intel has to showcase efficiency not absolute performance per node. Which is why this is a win for cray and not omnipath.