Nvidia keeping prized NVLink tech closely guarded — companies warn restrictions could hamper deployment of some solutions

Nvidia's NVLink Fusion program has drawn interest from the industry aiming to build custom CPUs and accelerators for its ecosystem, but the initiative remains tightly controlled by the green company, which may limit its success.

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/nvidia-keeping-prized-nvlink-tech-closely-guarded-companies-warn-restrictions-could-hamper-deployment-of-some-solutions

Vytvorené 16d | 19. 6. 2025, 11:10:07


Ak chcete pridať komentár, prihláste sa

Ostatné príspevky v tejto skupine

 TSMC swats down claims it is delaying its Japan chipmaking plant to prioritize Arizona plants to avoid US tariffs — TSMC says US investments won't impact other regions

TSMC is reportedly slowing work on its second Japanese fab to accelerate buildout in Arizona in anticipation of possible U.S. tariffs on Taiwan-made chips, though the com

5. 7. 2025, 14:20:04 | tomshardware.com
 US reportedly plans to curb sales of AI GPUs to Malaysia and Thailand to prevent smuggling to China

The U.S. government is drafting export rules to require licenses for shipping Nvidia’s advanced AI GPUs to Malaysia and Thailand, aiming to block possible re-exports to C

5. 7. 2025, 14:20:04 | tomshardware.com
 Grab a Crucial X10 portable SSD with a 30% discount — savings up to $182, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, 6TB, and 8TB models all on sale

During this Prime Day sale, Amazon offers competitive prices on Crucial's newest X10 portable SSD.

4. 7. 2025, 22:10:02 | tomshardware.com
 Samsung Odyssey G3 27-inch gaming monitor drops to all-time low $129.99 — $100 discount for a limited time on Amazon

Samsung drops the price of its value gaming monitor by $100, giving you a 180Hz refresh rate and 1ms response time for less than $150.

4. 7. 2025, 19:40:05 | tomshardware.com
 DDR4 prices are now so high that vendors have decided to start making it again — manufacturers want a slice now that it's more expensive than DDR5

A few smaller manufacturers are pushing back their plans to discontinue DDR4 production because of surging prices in the global market.

4. 7. 2025, 17:20:07 | tomshardware.com