How are microprocessors changing our world and how are they influencing data center strategy and design?
Chips remain the most critical technology to the world’s economy. The steady supply of chips was thrown into disarray in recent years during the global microchip shortage. With signs that this is now starting to ease, further uncertainty been caused by geopolitical tensions. Simultaneously, there have been huge advancements in microchip processing power.
During this broadcast, speakers will consider the evolution of the microchip industry, and what this means for data processing. From trends in the semiconductor market to supercomputing and the democratization of chip design, experts will debate what developments mean for the future of data centers, and how they can prepare.
Now streaming on-demand:
Schedule Overview
Time | Session |
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11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. | All episodes are now available to stream on-demand. Click "View presentation" to watch the episodes you want, when you want. |
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Sessions
11:00 a.m.
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Fireside Chat: Chips in 2022 - what's happening and what's on the horizon?
12:00 p.m.
Catch up on the topic so far...
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Report: White House "strongly discouraged" Intel plan to alleviate chip shortage with Chinese expansion
As the Biden Administration dangles lucrative incentives
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IBM debuts 127-qubit Eagle quantum processor, says it can't be simulated on a classical supercomputer
And the company teases the IBM Quantum System Two
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AI wafer scale chip startup Cerebras raises $250m at $4bn valuation
Maker of the world's largest chip gets bigger
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Tencent reveals three data center chips - for AI, video transcoding, and networking
Likely exclusive to its cloud platform
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Intel and Google Cloud partner to develop ASIC-based IPU, will sell data center chip to others
Could help lead to diskless server architectures
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EU plans 'Chips Act' to boost domestic semiconductor research and manufacturing
Hopes to compete with similar efforts in the US, China, South Korea, and Taiwan
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Computacenter: "We are starting to see major problems in the supply of data center components"
Data center growth threatened by supply chain issues
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Facebook is developing in-house AI chips for video transcoding, recommendations
Just like Google, Facebook expands its silicon ambitions