Huawei holds global debut for AI computing clusters in challenge to Nvidia


Chinese telecommunications gear giant Huawei Technologies is introducing its latest supernode computing clusters to the international markets at this year’s MWC Barcelona, aiming to offer an alternative to US-led artificial intelligence (AI) systems from rivals such as Nvidia.

The Shenzhen-based firm plans to debut the Atlas 950 SuperPoD, a system powered by 8,192 neural processing unit cards, as well as TaiShan 950 SuperPoD, its general-purpose compute cluster, among its other computing products to the attendees at MWC Barcelona, formerly known as Mobile World Congress, which runs from Monday to Thursday.

Announced in the China market last September, Atlas 950 SuperPoD and TaiShan 950 SuperPoD have been hailed by the company as “the world’s most powerful” AI compute systems using local chipmaking processes. They are part of Huawei’s efforts to break the supply chokehold restricting China’s access to the most advanced chips.

Huawei’s move to bring its computing power overseas rides on the surging demand for the deployment of agentic AI across various industries, the company said.

“This embodies the company’s latest endeavour to open source and open collaboration with the aim of building a resilient computing foundation and creating a new option worldwide,” Huawei said in a statement on Saturday.

With this move, Huawei is flexing its muscle in AI computing in the global market as the US-sanctioned company has managed to achieve chip breakthroughs, including its Ascend AI chips, in the past few years without relying on American technologies.

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China creates analogue AI chip said to be 1,000 times faster than Nvidia GPU

China creates analogue AI chip said to be 1,000 times faster than Nvidia GPU

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