Tachyum has confirmed it will begin mass production of its Prodigy Universal Processor later this year – the product which combines the functionality of a CPU, GPU, and TPU in a single unit, and threatens to turn the AI market on its head.

The 192-core 5nm processor delivers 4.5 times the performance of the best processors for cloud workloads, can be up to three times better than GPUs for high-performance computing (HPC), and can be six times more effective than GPUs for AI applications. 

The company first teased its universal processing component in 2022 and with it promised to transform hyperscale data centers into universal computing centers that can pave the way for the necessary computational power and efficiency to handle AI workloads.  Then, in December 2023, it released a video showing that it could emulate x86 applications – despite not incorporating any hardware in its architecture.

Can the all-in-one processor usurp Nvidia?

“The successes we were able to achieve while tweaking our product roadmap have brought us to a 2024 full of anticipation as we move towards volume production of Prodigy and the fulfillment of a multibillion-dollar sales pipeline,” said Tachyum CEO and founder Dr Radoslav Danilak.

“We look forward to fulfilling our commitment to transforming ordinary data centers into Universal Computing Centers in the near future.”

Because the component incorporates functionality for various types of workloads, it can dynamically switch between computational domains – while also apparently eliminating the need for expensive hardware dedicated to AI workloads. 

This is all according to the company’s press release – which recapped the firm’s feats during 2023 and outlined the company’s strategy in the coming years. 

Among its outlandish claims, the company stated just one of its $23,000 processors could match the AI training performance of a highly sophisticated array of 52 Nvidia H200 GPUs — currently among the best GPUs out there. Banking that many GPUs alongside seven Supermicro GPU servers would cost $2,349,028, the company claimed, versus a single Prodigy pocket system with 2TB DDR5 DRAM.

But that’s just the beginning, with Tachyum slating Prodigy 2, a 3nm processor that uses PCIe 6.0 and CXL, alongside either high-bandwidth memory (HBM) 3 RAM – for release in 2026, according to Tom’s Hardware.

Whether the finished product lives up to the company’s claims remains to be seen, but Tachyum has received a major purchase order to build a large-scale system. The firm has also released a series of white papers so developers can know what to expect when the processor becomes available.

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