AMD unveils new server chips at San Francisco exhibition
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) unveiled a new server chip at an event in San Francisco on Thursday, aiming to strengthen its position in the artificial intelligence chip market dominated by Nvidia. The company announced the launch of a new server central processing unit design. The chip series, originally codenamed Turin, includes a version aimed at providing data to graphics processing units to accelerate artificial intelligence processing speeds. The flagship chip features nearly 200 processing cores and is priced at $14,813. The entire processor series adopts the Zen 5 architecture, providing up to a 37% speed boost for advanced artificial intelligence data processing. At this event, AMD may provide detailed information on its MI325X chip and the next-generation MI350 chip. When AMD unveiled these two chips at the Computex trade show in Taiwan in June, the company promised to release them this year and next year respectively. According to the company's June presentation, the MI350 series has seen improvements in computing power and memory. AMD's design aims to compete with Nvidia's Blackwell architecture