The AI PC revolution is almost here
We’ve seen the rapid rise of generational AI advances like OpenAI’s. In the meantime, we’ll start to see a lot more of this as we move towards the release of Windows 12, as Microsoft begins to roll out its own AI-powered service with Copilot.
AMD has been at the forefront of AI processors with its Ryzen AI launch earlier this year, Intel has a chip dedicated to AI in its upcoming Meteor Lake CPUs, and Qualcomm has AI at the center for its upcoming Snapdragon SoC for Windows devices .
Although the hardware side is ready for the AI PC revolution, we will ultimately use the potential here through software, that is, applications. We can say that the industry is already pursuing the most capable application in this sense. Companies are the Tetris of artificial intelligence. He wants his Mario Kart. Technology companies expect a significant increase in consumer demand with both hardware and application support.
Fierce competition continues
Companies are also in a race in artificial intelligence chips. Qualcomm and Apple were the first companies to release processors with these special elements a few years ago. In Qualcomm’s case, it’s the neural processing unit inside its Snapdragon chips, and in Apple’s case, it’s the neural engine inside its M series chips for Mac computers. On the other hand, AMD launched its first processors with an artificial intelligence engine, the Ryzen 7040 series for laptops, earlier this year. Intel, on the other hand, will launch its first chips with a neural processing unit (the Core Ultra series, previously known as Meteor Lake) in the coming weeks.