Is Intel Ready for an AI Comeback in 2025?

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One area where Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) has seriously dropped the ball has been artificial intelligence (AI). Nvidia essentially owns the market for AI accelerator chips, and AMD is at least competitive with its Instinct line of data center graphics processing units (GPUs). Nvidia is generating tens of billions of dollars in revenue each quarter from its data center GPUs, and AMD is producing a few billion per year. Meanwhile, Intel fell short of its goal to sell $500 million worth of AI accelerators in 2024.

Missing the boat

It didn't have to be this way, but mistakes made long ago have hampered Intel's AI efforts. The company was working on a discrete GPU project, codenamed Larabee, way back in 2008, and its architecture would have been well suited for the massively parallel computing tasks required to train AI models. Larabee was canceled, however, setting the stage for Intel to be blindsided by the AI revolution and the surge in demand for GPU accelerators over the past few years.

Intel's current AI accelerator lineup comes from Habana Labs, an AI chip company Intel acquired in 2019. The Gaudi family of AI chips aren't traditional GPUs, although they're similar in nature.

The latest Gaudi 3 chip offers solid performance, and Intel has been aggressive on pricing. Gaudi could have been a success story for Intel, but an immature software ecosystem is hurting sales. Developers who have been working with GPUs for years don't have experience with Gaudi's distinct architecture, something that's been impossible for Intel to overcome.

Software immaturity is starting to become a theme for Intel in the graphics and AI spaces. In 2023, the company tried again in the discrete GPU market with its Arc Alchemist gaming graphics cards, but they failed to sell well due to faulty software drivers and myriad game-breaking bugs. The company has stuck with it, greatly improving its software over time, and its second-generation graphics cards are faring much better.

Don't expect big things in 2025

If Intel's experience in the graphics card business is any indication, it's going to take time for the AI software ecosystem to improve enough for Gaudi to be a major success. Another wrinkle is that Intel's AI accelerator roadmap is complicated. Under the Max brand name, Intel already sells data center GPUs, which power the Aurora supercomputer at Argonne National Laboratory.

Neither the Max family of GPUs nor the Gaudi family of AI accelerators will be extended. Rather, the next-generation Falcon Shores will be a traditional GPU that will reportedly integrate some of Gaudi's unique features.