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The Future of Compute: Ampere Computing‘s CPO, Jeff Wittich, On The Data Center Chip Industry

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Manage episode 306132029 series 2964575
Content provided by Shortman Studios. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Shortman Studios or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The semiconductor industry is in a period of transition. Supply chain problems and questions over whether we are now in a secular growth environment; changing leadership as Intel loses ground and Taiwan Semiconductor, Nvidia, and even a new generation of start-ups stake out a claim; and the new demands posed by Artificial Intelligence and its burgeoning compute needs.

We're rolling out a little Future of Compute series to cover this. We speak with several executives and experts in the field to hear what the state of semiconductors, technology usage, and artificial intelligence from the hardware and software side looks like.

We kick off with Jeff Wittich, Chief Product Officer at Ampere Computing. Wittich, like several of his Ampere colleagues including CEO/founder Renee James, is an Intel veteran. Ampere’s aim is to develop server chips designed explicitly for cloud usage, using an ARM chip framework, with the target of delivering much greater power efficiency. They seem to be gaining traction, with the most recent evidence being reports SoftBank is considering an investment in Ampere at an $8B valuation.

We speak with Jeff about Ampere’s journey, about why now is the time for Arm-based chips in servers, about how hyperscalers shape the industry’s demands, the state of semiconductors, and of course a bit on Intel and its challenges.

Topics Covered
  • 4:00 – Ampere’s story
  • 6:00 – What does a cloud focus mean for a chip maker?
  • 11:30 – ARM’s experience in the data center world
  • 16:45 – Why now for ARM-based server chips?
  • 19:30 – TSM’s passing Intel and Intel losing its data center advantage
  • 24:30 – The role of the hyperscalers as pace setters for cloud hardware
  • 28:30 – Can Intel hold onto a shrinking datacenter TAM?
  • 30:30 – The inflection point in the competitive landscape
  • 35:00 – The in-house vs. outsourcing question for AI companies
  • 41:00 – The inference vs. training distinction and the role of the CPU
  • 47:00 - Optimizing for AI workloads
  • 50:30 – How is Ampere lasting when other companies quit
  • 55:30 – Supply chain outlook
  • 58:30 – Risk of a cyclical downturn?
  • 1:01:30 – Lightning round and edge vs. cloud
  continue reading

100 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 306132029 series 2964575
Content provided by Shortman Studios. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Shortman Studios or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The semiconductor industry is in a period of transition. Supply chain problems and questions over whether we are now in a secular growth environment; changing leadership as Intel loses ground and Taiwan Semiconductor, Nvidia, and even a new generation of start-ups stake out a claim; and the new demands posed by Artificial Intelligence and its burgeoning compute needs.

We're rolling out a little Future of Compute series to cover this. We speak with several executives and experts in the field to hear what the state of semiconductors, technology usage, and artificial intelligence from the hardware and software side looks like.

We kick off with Jeff Wittich, Chief Product Officer at Ampere Computing. Wittich, like several of his Ampere colleagues including CEO/founder Renee James, is an Intel veteran. Ampere’s aim is to develop server chips designed explicitly for cloud usage, using an ARM chip framework, with the target of delivering much greater power efficiency. They seem to be gaining traction, with the most recent evidence being reports SoftBank is considering an investment in Ampere at an $8B valuation.

We speak with Jeff about Ampere’s journey, about why now is the time for Arm-based chips in servers, about how hyperscalers shape the industry’s demands, the state of semiconductors, and of course a bit on Intel and its challenges.

Topics Covered
  • 4:00 – Ampere’s story
  • 6:00 – What does a cloud focus mean for a chip maker?
  • 11:30 – ARM’s experience in the data center world
  • 16:45 – Why now for ARM-based server chips?
  • 19:30 – TSM’s passing Intel and Intel losing its data center advantage
  • 24:30 – The role of the hyperscalers as pace setters for cloud hardware
  • 28:30 – Can Intel hold onto a shrinking datacenter TAM?
  • 30:30 – The inflection point in the competitive landscape
  • 35:00 – The in-house vs. outsourcing question for AI companies
  • 41:00 – The inference vs. training distinction and the role of the CPU
  • 47:00 - Optimizing for AI workloads
  • 50:30 – How is Ampere lasting when other companies quit
  • 55:30 – Supply chain outlook
  • 58:30 – Risk of a cyclical downturn?
  • 1:01:30 – Lightning round and edge vs. cloud
  continue reading

100 episodes

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