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Habana Labs chairman Avigdor Willenz Eyal Toueg/Intel
Habana Labs chairman Avigdor Willenz stands near a rack that incorporates Habana Labs’ HLS-1 Gaudi artificial intelligence training system at Habana Labs’ office in Caesarea, Israel. Willenz will serve as a senior adviser to the business unit as well as to Intel Corporation after Intel’s purchase of Habana.

Intel Buys AI Chip Firm That Claims 4x Higher Throughput Than GPUs

Intel says multiple hyperscalers are sampling Habana’s accelerator for ML training.

Intel said Monday it has spent $2 billion to acquire an Israeli designer of processors that claims its hardware can crunch through nearly four times as much data in a given period when training a deep-learning model as an equivalent number of GPUs.

Habana Labs, the company being acquired, develops hardware accelerators for both training and inference categories of deep-learning workloads. Its inference product, Goya, is already on the market, while the training part, Gaudi, is currently being sampled by multiple hyperscalers, according to Intel.

Habana will keep its home base in Israel and operate as an independent Intel business unit led by its existing management, Intel said. Habana chairman Avigdor Willenz will be senior adviser to the unit.

Intel Capital, the chipmaker’s venture capital arm, was an investor in Habana before the transaction.

Intel has been enjoying a near-monopoly in the server CPU market, but the quickly growing market for machine-learning hardware has seen Nvidia emerge as king in hardware acceleration, at least on the training side of things. Nvidia’s GPUs are the most widely used workhorses in systems that train deep-learning models.

By claiming such a steep throughput improvement offered by Habana’s Gaudi processors over GPUs, Habana is taking a shot squarely at Nvidia’s market share. One of the company’s slides shows Gaudi delivering 3.8x better throughput training the ResNet-50 neural network than “V100” – presumably Nvidia’s Tesla V100 GPU.

Intel repeated the 4x performance improvement claim in its announcement.

While crucial, however, throughput is just one of the factors that influence a customer’s buying decision. Price and considerations like energy efficiency, cooling requirements, and the availability of software that can take advantage of the accelerators’ might are some of the other big ones.

Habana and Intel’s “combined IP and expertise will deliver unmatched computing performance and efficiency for AI workloads in the data center,” Navin Shenoy, executive VP and general manager of Intel’s Data Platforms Group, said in a statement.

Intel said it expects to make $3.5 billion in revenue driven by AI workloads this year – up more than 20 percent from 2018.

The company bought two AI hardware accelerator companies in 2016. One, Movidius, makes a chip specifically for acceleration of computer vision in edge devices. Last year, Microsoft announced it was working to add native support for the chip to Windows.

The other acquisition was of Nervana Systems, designer of accelerator chips for data centers. This November, Intel launched a Nervana accelerator for training and a Nervana accelerator for inference, the latter developed in collaboration with Facebook.

Intel didn’t explain in Monday’s announcement whether or how it plans to position the Nervana chips differently from the Habana products.

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