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NVIDIA is eying a comeback to the client processor business, reveals a Bloomberg interview with the CEOs of NVIDIA and Dell. For NVIDIA, all it takes is a simple driver update that exposes every GeForce GPU with tensor cores as an NPU to Windows 11, with translation layers to get popular client AI apps to work with TensorRT. But that would need you to have a discrete NVIDIA GPU. What about the vast market of Windows AI PCs powered by the likes of Qualcomm, Intel, and AMD, who each sell 15 W-class processors with integrated NPUs capable of 50 AI TOPS, which is all that Copilot+ needs? NVIDIA held an Arm license for decades now, and makes Arm-based CPUs to this day, with the NVIDIA Grace, however, that is a large server processor meant for its AI GPU servers.
NVIDIA already made client processors under the Tegra brand targeting smartphones, which it winded down last decade. It's since been making Drive PX processors for its automotive self-driving hardware division; and of course there's Grace. NVIDIA hinted that it might have a client CPU for the AI PC market in 2025. In the interview Bloomberg asked NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang a pointed question on whether NVIDIA has a place in the AI PC market. Dell CEO Michael Dell, who was also in the interview, interjected "come back next year," to which Jensen affirmed "exactly." Dell would be in a front-and-center position to know if NVIDIA is working on a new PC processor for launch in 2025, and Jensen's nod almost confirms this
NVIDIA has both the talent and the IP to whip up a PC processor—its teams behind Grace and Drive can create the Arm CPU cores, NVIDIA is already the big daddy of consumer graphics and should have little problem with the iGPU, and the NPU shouldn't be hard to create, either. It wouldn't surprise us if the NPU on NVIDIA's chip isn't a physical component, but a virtual device that uses the AI acceleration capabilities of the iGPU with its tensor cores, as a hardware backend.
NVIDIA's journey to the AI PC has one little hurdle, and that is the exclusivity Qualcomm enjoys with Microsoft for the current crop of Windows-on-Arm notebooks, with its Snapdragon X series chips. NVIDIA would have to work with Microsoft to have the same market access as Qualcomm.
If all goes well, the NVIDIA PC processor powering AI PCs will launch in 2025.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
NVIDIA already made client processors under the Tegra brand targeting smartphones, which it winded down last decade. It's since been making Drive PX processors for its automotive self-driving hardware division; and of course there's Grace. NVIDIA hinted that it might have a client CPU for the AI PC market in 2025. In the interview Bloomberg asked NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang a pointed question on whether NVIDIA has a place in the AI PC market. Dell CEO Michael Dell, who was also in the interview, interjected "come back next year," to which Jensen affirmed "exactly." Dell would be in a front-and-center position to know if NVIDIA is working on a new PC processor for launch in 2025, and Jensen's nod almost confirms this
NVIDIA has both the talent and the IP to whip up a PC processor—its teams behind Grace and Drive can create the Arm CPU cores, NVIDIA is already the big daddy of consumer graphics and should have little problem with the iGPU, and the NPU shouldn't be hard to create, either. It wouldn't surprise us if the NPU on NVIDIA's chip isn't a physical component, but a virtual device that uses the AI acceleration capabilities of the iGPU with its tensor cores, as a hardware backend.
NVIDIA's journey to the AI PC has one little hurdle, and that is the exclusivity Qualcomm enjoys with Microsoft for the current crop of Windows-on-Arm notebooks, with its Snapdragon X series chips. NVIDIA would have to work with Microsoft to have the same market access as Qualcomm.
If all goes well, the NVIDIA PC processor powering AI PCs will launch in 2025.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source