Intel Gets Serious About Neuromorphic, Cognitive Computing Future
Like all hardware device makers eager to meet the newest market opportunity, Intel is placing multiple bets on the future of machine learning hardware. The chipmaker has already cast its Xeon Phi and future integrated Nervana Systems chips into the deep learning pool while touting regular Xeons to do the heavy lifting on the inference side. However, a recent conversation we had with Intel turned up a surprising new addition to the machine learning conversation--an emphasis on neuromorphic devices and what Intel is openly calling "cognitive computing" (a term used primarily--and heavily--for IBM's Watson-driven AI technologies). This is the first time to date we've heard the company make any definitive claims about where neuromorphic chips might fit into a strategy to capture machine learning, and marks a bold grab for the term "cognitive computing" which has been an umbrella term for Big Blue's AI business. Intel has been developing neuromorphic devices for some time, with one of the first prototypes that was well known in 2012.
Feb-17-2017, 13:55:51 GMT