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Madonna, Cruise lead A-list stars at World Cup final
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India all-rounder Sundar out of England finale
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Pogacar wins Tour de France 14th stage to extend overall lead
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Antonelli takes pole at Belgian Grand Prix
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Britain's Kerr sets new world record in men's mile
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Record setter Kerr, Alfred light up London Diamond League
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Botswana says 'alarming rise' in citizens lured to Russia's war
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Bethell hails 'incredible' Sobers for turning point in England career
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Brazil high court says Argentina's Milei cannot visit Bolsonaro
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DeChambeau 'fired up' by two-shot penalty as Fox joins 62 club at British Open
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Brook urges England to follow ever-green Root's example
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German lawmaker steps down for using US surrogacy to have a child
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Jones says Japan making 'good progress' despite France defeat
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Messi, Yamal come full circle in World Cup showdown
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Galthie hails France 'energy and commitment' after Japan rout
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Australia beat Italy 57-10 to end Schmidt era with win
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German lawmaker steps down over surrogate pregnancy controversy: party sources to AFP
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Antonelli continues to set blazing pace in Belgian practice
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Ireland 'never really got going' against All Blacks, says Farrell
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France cruise past Japan 42-15 in Nations Championship
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Rennie hails 'clinical' All Blacks after 40-21 win over Ireland
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France beat Japan 42-15 in Nations Championship
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Laos says cannot determine cause of tourist deaths linked to tainted alcohol
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The challenges facing UK's next PM Andy Burnham
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Six-try All Blacks see off Ireland at Eden Park fortress
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From Maradona to Messi: Bangladesh's enduring love for Argentina
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Founding father: statues of Myanmar's Aung San disappear
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UN to list more sites as 'in danger' from conflict or climate change
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Infantino's enlarged World Cup gamble pays off with punters
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Egypt's 'Garbage City' recyclers reap gains from Iran war plastic squeeze
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Spain, Argentina prepare for World Cup final, Trump hails success
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'Chainsaw massacre': Europe mulls culls for fish-guzzling cormorant
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Supplies run dry in Venezuelan village on edge of quake zone
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England carry 'scars' of World Cup exit, says Tuchel
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Latin America's unlikely football unity: cheering against Argentina
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Argentina coach Scaloni hails 'legend' Messi before World Cup final
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Aston Villa sign Swiss World Cup star Manzambi
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Argentina World Cup success moves me to tears, says goalkeeper Martinez
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Trump questions England's World Cup tactics
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Messi to get 'special attention' from Spain, says de la Fuente
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Spain captain Rodri preparing for 'physical' Argentina battle
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Italy coach Quesada's ban reduced to one Test
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Leather jacket worn by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang auctions for nearly $1 mn
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Sobers 'stood out' among the greats: West Indies legend Holding
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Leader Herbert, Burns equal record 62 at British Open, DeChambeau docked two shots
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DeChambeau's British Open charge hit by two-shot penalty
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Amazon unveils new AI chip in battle against Nvidia
Amazon Web Services launched its in-house-built Trainium3 AI chip on Tuesday, marking a significant push to compete with Nvidia in the lucrative market for artificial intelligence computing power.
The move intensifies competition in the AI chip market, where Nvidia currently dominates with an estimated 80- to 90-percent market share for products used in training large language models that power the likes of ChatGPT.
Google last week caused tremors in the industry when it was reported that Facebook-parent Meta would employ Google AI chips in data centers, signaling new competition for Nvidia, currently the world's most valuable company and a bellwether for the AI investment frenzy.
This followed the release of Google's latest AI model last month that was trained using the company's own in-house chips, not Nvidia's.
AWS, which will make the technology available to its cloud computing clients, said its new chip is lower cost than rivals and delivers over four times the computing performance of its predecessor while using 40 percent less energy.
"Trainium3 offers the industry's best price performance for large scale AI training and inference," AWS CEO Matt Garman said at a launch event in Las Vegas.
Inference is the execution phase of AI, where the model stops scouring the internet for training and starts performing tasks in real-world scenarios.
Energy consumption is one of the major concerns about the AI revolution, with major tech companies having to scale back or pause their net-zero emissions commitments as they race to keep up on the technology.
AWS said its chip can reduce the cost of training and operating AI models by up to 50 percent compared with systems that use equivalent graphics processing units, or GPUs, mainly from Nvidia.
"Training cutting-edge models now requires infrastructure investments that only a handful of organizations can afford," AWS said, positioning Trainium3 as a way to democratize access to high-powered AI computing.
AWS said several companies are already using the technology, including Anthropic, maker of the Claude AI assistant and a competitor to ChatGPT-maker OpenAI.
AWS also announced it is already developing Trainium4, expected to deliver at least three times the performance of Trainium3 for standard AI workloads.
The next-generation chip will support Nvidia's technology, allowing it to work alongside that company's servers and hardware.
Amazon's in-house chip development reflects a broader trend among cloud providers seeking to reduce dependence on external suppliers while offering customers more cost-effective alternatives for AI workloads.
Nvidia puzzled industry observers last week when it responded to Google's successes in an unusual post on X, saying the company was "delighted" by the competition before adding that Nvidia "is a generation ahead of the industry."
B.Baumann--VB