Intel is the world's biggest maker of central processors for
data center servers but has increasingly seen competition from Arm-based chips.
With its "Grace" server processor, Nvidia will be the largest chip
company so far to challenge Intel in its key market.
Nvidia shares rose 2.6% and Intel shares dropped 4% in
midday trading after the news. Intel shares have risen more than 30% this year
as its new chief Pat Gelsinger outlined its strategy to overcome years of
manufacturing woes.
Arm's technology powers the chips in most smartphones, but
for the last several years has been making its way into data centers, with
companies such as Amazon.com Inc and Ampere Computing designing chips for
servers with it.
Nvidia's entry into the market could hasten Arm's inroads
into data centers. Nvidia's chips have traditionally been used as
"accelerators" alongside existing central processors from Intel,
Advanced Micro Devices Inc or others, offloading some computing work from them
and speeding up the overall computing system.
By making its own central processor, Nvidia is taking on
Intel and AMD directly for the first time. In a keynote speech announcing the
chip, Nvidia Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang called the new server chip
the "final piece of the puzzle" that will join Nvidia's graphics and
networking chips to form the "basic building block of the modern data
center.”
Santa Clara, California-based Nvidia said the
"Grace" server processor, which will be released in 2023, is designed
to handle tasks like training artificial intelligence algorithms. Once known
for its graphics chips to improve the play of video games, Nvidia has focused
heavily on artificial intelligence computing in recent years, helping its
market capitalization exceed Intel's to become the largest U.S. semiconductor
firm.
Nvidia also said that the Swiss National Supercomputing
Centre will make a new supercomputer dubbed "Alps" using the new
"Grace" processors and built by Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. The
computing system, which Huang said will be 10 times faster than the world's
current best supercomputer, will be used for tasks such as weather forecasting
and physics research.
Meet NVIDIA Grace - the basic building block of the modern data center. This powerful @Arm-based #CPU allows us to accelerate the largest HPC and #AI workloads. #GTC21
— NVIDIA Data Center (@NVIDIADC) April 12, 2021
Nvidia officials said that the company's accelerator chips
will continue to support central processors from Intel and AMD even as it dives
into the market itself. Huang said that Nvidia will alternate its focus,
concentrating on making accelerator chips that work with Arm-processors one
year, and then chips that work with AMD and Intel chips in the next year.
Nvidia did not disclose which Arm technology it would use
for the chips but said they would use computing cores Arm's
"Neoverse" family of server chip technology that will be released in
the future. Huang said it was "off-the-shelf" technology from Arm.
Nvidia said in September that it will buy Arm for $40
billion.
Nvidia's rivals have expressed concerns that the company
will use its potential ownership of Arm to get early access to Arm's
technologies as they become more prevalent in the data center market.
Arm said that Nvidia has had the same access to its
intellectual property as the rest of Arm's customer base and did not get early
access to its technology.
