HomeFeaturesDAI#42 – Hot chips, bad memory, and AI ups and downs

DAI#42 – Hot chips, bad memory, and AI ups and downs

Welcome to this week’s roundup of triple-distilled AI news.

This week, battle lines were drawn within the chip wars in Taiwan.

Microsoft might have to forget to recollect.

And AI techs are fighting for his or her right to warn us about what they saw.

Let’s dig in.

Made in Taiwan

This week all eyes were on the Computex 2024 event in Taiwan, where many of the world’s high-end AI chips are produced.

GPU top dog NVIDIA unveiled its roadmap for increasingly powerful GPUs and other next-gen AI tech.

CEO Jensen Huang says the corporate can be releasing a brand new family of GPUs yearly. The Blackwell GPUs are barely shipping yet, but Huang said an upgraded version will launch later this 12 months.

When you’re taking a more in-depth take a look at the Blackwell performance numbers, you start to get an idea of the potential impact NVIDIA’s latest AI superchip will likely have.

AMD remains to be playing catchup within the AI chip race but additionally announced that it can release latest generations of AI GPUs annually. With its sights set on NVIDIA, AMD says its latest AI chip, the Instinct MI325X GPU beats NVIDIA’s H200 flagship GPU.

The specs are seriously impressive, but it surely should have been somewhat awkward bragging about beating the H200 when the Blackwell chips are almost able to ship.

The AI chip battle between NVIDIA and just about every other computing company ratcheted up a notch last week. Big Tech firms, including AMD and Intel, formed a consortium to develop an open AI connectivity standard.

Guess who wasn’t invited to participate?

Forget about it

The Silicon Valley mantra of ‘Move fast and break things’ was in evidence this week.

Microsoft is about to unleash its Windows AI Recall feature which sounds great on paper.

Recall remembers all the things you’ve seen and done in your PC and may also help out when you possibly can’t remember on which website you saw that great deal, or where you saved your lolcat pics.

But there’s an issue. Tech security experts are saying the best way Recall stores the information may very well be a security disaster. It’s worse than you think that, and Microsoft should want to recall Recall.

Microsoft’s enterprise customer briefings about Recall pic.twitter.com/q7eqnHKRwN

Last week Google’s AI Overviews told users to place glue on pizza and suggested eating rocks. Google finally admitted AI Overviews has a number of snags but says it’s mostly your fault.

If Big Tech can’t get AI search and operating systems right, how will they tackle humanity’s big problems?

At the AI For Good Summit, industry leaders discussed examples of AI’s societal advantages and the challenges that should be overcome to avoid widening the digital divide.

Will AI solve a few of humanity’s biggest problems or make them worse?

OpenAI’s ups and downs

What happens after we change into completely depending on AI tools just for them to interrupt? This week we got a taste of what that may very well be like.

OpenAI’s ChatGPT had a serious outage as users couldn’t access the chat platform for hours. Was it a coincidence that Gemini, Claude, and Perplexity also had issues around the identical time?

Could it have anything to do with supporters of disgruntled employees or AI skeptics?

Former and current OpenAI and Google employees just published a letter demanding the suitable to warn about AI risks without consequences.

The “Right to Warn” letter makes some good points but I’m unsure how likely it’s that OpenAI and others will commit to their demands.

Fake politics

Lying and politics go together like fire and smoke. There never appears to be one without the opposite.

AI has supercharged people’s ability to spread disinformation but has also provided a handy excuse for politicians in a good spot.

Conservatives are demanding potentially embarrassing audio of Joe Biden’s special counsel interview. The Justice Department says it won’t release the audio since it may very well be manipulated by AI.

Fair enough, or grabbing at AI straws?

AI Events

If you’re seeking to be on the forefront of what’s happening in AI then you definately’re spoilt for alternative with events like these happening around the globe.

If you need to see how AI can provide your marketing efforts a lift then try the AI for B2B Marketers Summit 2024.

When you consider AI and electric vehicles you immediately consider Tesla and self-driving. But AI also helps with thermal management in EVs. The European EV Thermal Management Summit 2024 explores the emerging trends and tech on this space.

The AI_dev: Open Source GenAI & ML Summit Europe is a dynamic two-day event specializing in open-source generative AI and machine learning. We’ve got a fantastic discount code for you should you’d prefer to attend.

In other news…

Here are another clickworthy AI stories we enjoyed this week:

And that’s a wrap.

At the speed latest generations of GPUs are being released, 2025 is ready to deliver an enormous leap in AI advances. Can you imagine looking back a 12 months from now and pondering how quaint GPT-4 is in comparison with GPT-5 and GPT-6?

Will you be using Windows AI Recall when it rolls out? I would, but just once they stop storing the information in plain text in an unsecured folder. What were they pondering?

The “Right to Warn” letter makes for chilling reading. When the individuals who built the AI say they’ve seen things they’re not allowed to warn us about, we should always probably concentrate.

But Yann LeCun says there’s nothing to fret about so perhaps it’ll be just advantageous.

Is it time to panic, or time to cheer on the AGI and chill? Let us know what you think that, and send us links to any interesting AI news stories we missed.

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