Unicorn Z.ai adapts models for Huawei chips in drive to broaden China’s AI ecosystem


Beijing-based Z.ai said its GLM models were now compatible with Huawei’s Ascend processors, which are used on AI servers, and Kirin chips that run inside smartphones and laptops, according to the start-up’s statement on Saturday.

“The tie-up marks a major breakthrough in cloud-device collaboration between home-grown large [language] models and computational architecture, highlighting the deeper integration of a domestic AI ecosystem,” Z.ai said in the statement.

Huawei’s collaboration with Z.ai – one of China’s four so-called AI tigers – marks another milestone for Huawei, days after saying it would open-source its Compute Architecture for Neural Networks (CANN) – the software toolkit used to develop applications on the firm’s Ascend AI processors – to provide an alternative platform for developers to build applications on domestic chips.

The open-source approach gives public access to a program’s source code, allowing third-party software developers to share or modify its design, or scale up its capabilities.

Z.ai, formerly known as Zhipu AI, is one of China’s four so-called AI tigers, which include Moonshot AI, MiniMax and Baichuan. Photo: Shutterstock
Z.ai, formerly known as Zhipu AI, is one of China’s four so-called AI tigers, which include Moonshot AI, MiniMax and Baichuan. Photo: Shutterstock
CANN competes with Nvidia’s proprietary Compute Unified Device Architecture toolkit, which many Chinese AI developers have used as their default development platform for years amid the broad use of the US firm’s graphics processing units in many data centres.
  • Related Posts

    Canadian Solar elevates Hong Kong role amid industry slump and geopolitical tensions

    Canadian Solar, one of the industry’s most exposed players to US-China tensions, is expanding the role of its Hong Kong operations as it reshapes its global business to weather a…

    Continue reading
    Why Hong Kong’s tech index is failing to ride the Chinese AI stock boom

    Investor frustration is growing with Hong Kong’s technology index, as the benchmark’s prolonged slide contrasts sharply with the soaring share prices of several Chinese AI firms that recently went public…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *