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Lenovo Anticipates Great Demand for AMD Instinct MI300X Accelerator Products

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Ryan McCurdy, President of Lenovo North America, revealed ambitious forward-thinking product roadmap during an interview with CRN magazine. A hybrid strategic approach will create an anticipated AI fast lane on future hardware—McCurdy, a former Intel veteran, stated: "there will be a steady stream of product development to add (AI PC) hardware capabilities in a chicken-and-egg scenario for the OS and for the (independent software vendor) community to develop their latest AI capabilities on top of that hardware...So we are really paving the AI autobahn from a hardware perspective so that we can get the AI software cars to go faster on them." Lenovo—as expected—is jumping on the AI-on-device train, but it will be diversifying its range of AI server systems with new AMD and Intel-powered options. The company has reacted to recent Team Green AI GPU supply issues—alternative units are now in the picture: "with NVIDIA, I think there's obviously lead times associated with it, and there's some end customer identification, to make sure that the products are going to certain identified end customers. As we showcased at Tech World with NVIDIA on stage, AMD on stage, Intel on stage and Microsoft on stage, those industry partnerships are critical to not only how we operate on a tactical supply chain question but also on a strategic what's our value proposition."

McCurdy did not go into detail about upcoming Intel-based server equipment, but seemed excited about AMD's Instinct MI300X accelerator—Lenovo was (previously) announced as one of the early OEM takers of Team Red's latest CDNA 3.0 tech. CRN asked about the firm's outlook for upcoming MI300X-based inventory—McCurdy responded with: "I won't comment on an unreleased product, but the partnership I think illustrates the larger point, which is the industry is looking for a broad array of options. Obviously, when you have any sort of lead times, especially six-month, nine-month and 12-month lead times, there is interest in this incredible technology to be more broadly available. I think you could say in a very generic sense, demand is as high as we've ever seen for the product. And then it comes down to getting the infrastructure launched, getting testing done, and getting workloads validated, and all that work is underway. So I think there is a very hungry end customer-partner user base when it comes to alternatives and a more broad, diverse set of solutions."




The AMD Instinct MI300X accelerator is mostly compared to NVIDIA's "Hopper" H100 GPU—favorable launch conditions and (rumored) competitive price points boosted AMD's financial prospects around early 2024. Lenovo's North American boss did not list his favorite—maintaining a cordial relationship with all hardware suppliers is a must: "we're not constraining ourselves. We want to provide our customers with the broadest range of choice. And I think those partnerships will show itself in future launches with products that we're bringing out across our portfolio: NVIDIA for sure, AMD for sure, Intel for sure, and Microsoft."

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Even without CUDA support, the demand for non-nVidia options is HOT!
Can't disagree with this PR, TBQH.

I'd guess ROCm will probably get more/better development, once there's units embedded in-industry.
 
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MI300X has the same memory capacity as the B200 per module, for many applications VRAM capacity is so important that it doesn't even matter if it's slower when it's also a lot cheaper, which I am sure MI300X is compared to Nvidia and Intel options.
 
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MI300X has the same memory capacity as the B200 per module, for many applications VRAM capacity is so important that it doesn't even matter if it's slower when it's also a lot cheaper, which I am sure MI300X is compared to Nvidia and Intel options.
It is a lot cheaper than even Hopper let alone Blackwell. But they better hurry up with MI400 as Nvidia is bring Blackwell successor out next year and AMD doesn't need MI300 going up against that.
 
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