
Beyond Meta, Arm confirmed commercial commitments from Cerebras, Cloudflare, F5, OpenAI, Positron, Rebellions, SAP, and SK Telecom. Sachin Katti, head of industrial compute at OpenAI, said the AGI CPU will play a role in OpenAI's infrastructure by strengthening the orchestration layer that coordinates large-scale AI workloads.
Arm has historically operated as an IP licensing company. Its partners, from Apple to Nvidia to AWS, design their own chips using Arm's instruction set architecture and core designs. The AGI CPU adds a third option alongside IP licensing and Arm's Compute Subsystems (CSS) program: Arm-designed, production-ready silicon that customers can deploy directly.
Arm said the AGI CPU product line will continue in parallel with the Arm Neoverse CSS product roadmap, and that follow-on products are already committed. The company seems keen to point out that this is an additive move rather than a pivot that competes with existing licensees, though how Arm manages that as it sells chips into the same data centers as Nvidia Grace, AWS Graviton, Google Axion, and Microsoft Cobalt remains to be seen.
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roboj1m Not sure it's really, "Arm's first foray into selling production chips." Technically I think that would be the ARM in the Apple Newton. So this is a return to ARM selling silicon after transitioning to an IP only company. Reply
Bigshrimp It's really just a ginormous money pit that converts into beasts of concrete and silicon that consume as much power, water, and land that you can feed them. Reply
bit_user Bigshrimp said: It's really just a ginormous money pit that converts into beasts of concrete and silicon that consume as much power, water, and land that you can feed them. This CPU is just a server CPU and it does what any server CPU does. It's really aimed at general-purpose cloud workloads and can do so arguably more efficiently than x86. But, like everything these days, it has to be branded "AI". In fact, ARM seems to be decidedly disingenuous in their choice of AGI as its name, which is more commonly used to refer to Artificial General Intelligence – a feat it certainly cannot do, and that we're probably years away from anyone accomplishing. Reply
usertests bit_user said: But, like everything these days, it has to be branded "AI". In fact, ARM seems to be decidedly disingenuous in their choice of AGI as its name, which is more commonly used to refer to Artificial General Intelligence – a feat it certainly cannot do, and that we're probably years away from anyone accomplishing. Phoronix users jumped on that name immediately. Very funny, ARM (and a leg). Reply
thestryker bit_user said: In fact, ARM seems to be decidedly disingenuous in their choice of AGI as its name, which is more commonly used to refer to Artificial General Intelligence – a feat it certainly cannot do, and that we're probably years away from anyone accomplishing. Doubly so since reading this article and their release it doesn't sound like there's anything custom about this chip. Reply
SwampRatUK roboj1m said: Not sure it's really, "Arm's first foray into selling production chips." Technically I think that would be the ARM in the Apple Newton. So this is a return to ARM selling silicon after transitioning to an IP only company. Before the transition to IP only wasn't there a much longer / older history of Acorn RISC Machines like the BBC Micro etc through the 80s? Reply
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