Ex-CEO of Intel, Pat Gelsinger, has come out praising China's new DeepSeek R1 model: also announces he's buying the dip with cheap NVIDIA shares.
Pat Gelsinger, former Intel CEO, shares his thoughts on DeepSeek's low-cost AI innovation and its market impact. Despite Nvidia's stock dip, Gelsinger sees potential growth and innovation in the AI sector.
The GPU giant laid out a very smart approach to agentic AI earlier this month at CES, but it could do more to clarify its business model and its software strategy.
Retired Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger said "the markets are getting it wrong" Monday after investors triggered a sell-off in response to China's DeepSeek.
The superstar run for Nvidia’s stock the last few years has been astonishing. So was its tumble Monday, which caused $595 billion in wealth to vanish.
The tech industry's reaction to AI model DeepSeek R1 has been wild. Pat Gelsinger, for instance, is elated and thinks it will make AI better for everyone.
Intel's future is uncertain after CEO's retirement, raising questions about potential split and financial advantage. Read more on INTC stock here.
The industry expects the resource-light new model could usher in a wave of more efficient AI models, hurting demand for AI hardware.
The Dell Inspiron Desktop is currently available with a discount of $200, making it a noteworthy option for those in need of a powerful computing solution. This desktop is equipped with an Intel Core i7
Citi analyst Atif Malik stated NVIDIA believes DeepSeek’s models are an “excellent advancement for AI” according to a report from Bloomberg. NVIDIA stands to be a beneficiary of DeepSeek’s innovation and could lead to newer inference opportunities that could lead to a large number of
The Intel Arc B580 has been touted as one of the better budget gaming GPUs on the market, but how does it stack up to Nvidia's RTX 4060?
For the desktop, Intel envisages a module for the CPU, a little like the CPU cartridges of yesteryear, that presumably makes a CPU replacement less scary than messing with a fully exposed socket and an array of fragile pins. Intel has tried to get CPU modules going for years now, such as the Compute Element in previous years' NUCs.