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- Paradox ( @Paradox@lemdro.id ) English5•1 year ago
Can they build factories to brake too?
- CanadaPlus ( @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org ) 4•1 year ago
So can someone explain what an AI factory is, from an engineering perspective? The fact there’s competition to build them suggests it’s not just a marketing term, but I can’t find a clear answer with a quick search.
- Butterbee (She/Her) ( @Butterbee@beehaw.org ) English11•1 year ago
I can only imagine these are just crypto mining farms, but instead of running mining they train ai models
- CanadaPlus ( @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org ) 7•1 year ago
I mean, isn’t that just a normal datacenter, then? Those already exist, and Foxconn at least probably owns some.
- Butterbee (She/Her) ( @Butterbee@beehaw.org ) English7•1 year ago
Yes, but probably more video card focused than running the biggest epyc or xeon processors.
It’s just a marketing term.
- CanadaPlus ( @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org ) 1•1 year ago
Yep, just looked into Dojo. They don’t use the same term at all. -1 to the journalist for making it sound like an industry standard thing.
- ShaunaTheDead ( @ShaunaTheDead@kbin.social ) 3•1 year ago
Uh oh, if Foxconn is in charge of an AI factory then we’re sure to see our first AI suicide attempt in no time.
- Alex ( @ultra@feddit.ro ) 1•1 year ago
First? Didn’t a police robot roll into a pool?
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Nvidia and Foxconn are working together to build so-called “AI factories,” a new class of data centers that promise to provide supercomputing powers to accelerate the development of self-driving cars, autonomous machines and industrial robots.
The AI factory tie-up builds off a partnership between Nvidia and Foxconn announced in January to develop autonomous vehicle platforms.
On Tuesday, Foxconn also committed to manufacturing ECUs with Drive Thor, Nvidia’s next-gen SoC, after production starts in 2025.
As part of that partnership, Foxconn — which has been steadily unveiling off-the-shelf EV platforms for automakers to purchase — said the vehicles it makes as a contract manufacturer will be built with Nvidia’s Drive Hyperion 9 platform, which includes not only Drive Thor, but also a suite of sensors like cameras, radar, lidar and ultrasonic that are necessary for self-driving capabilities.
Because these AI factories are essentially rivals to Tesla’s Dojo supercomputer, which the Elon Musk-owned automaker started production on over the summer.
“This is a factory that takes data input and produces intelligence as an output,” said Huang, as Liu nodded his assent.
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