The GPU was considered important to Intel’s expansion into the high-performance computing and AI markets. ![]() “Rialto Bridge, which was intended to provide incremental improvements over our current architecture, will be discontinued,” said Jeff McVeigh, corporate vice president and interim general manager of the Accelerated Computing Systems and Graphics group at Intel, in a blog entry on Intel’s website. Intel has scrapped a supercomputer GPU codenamed Rialto Bridge, which was advertised as the successor to its current Max Series GPU codenamed Ponte Vecchio. Intel has already exited seven businesses, and recently made wholesale graphics processors changes by axing products and changing its enterprise GPU roadmap. Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is taking a no-holds-barred approach to cutting costs as he whips the company back into financial shape. The story has been updated to clarify that point. Update (03/06/23): Intel confirmed that the first Falcon Shores product would be a GPU and would not integrate CPU chiplets on-package. Since 1987 - Covering the Fastest Computers in the World and the People Who Run Them
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