AMD’s recent acquisition of AI software optimization startup Brium aims to diminish Nvidia’s dominance in the AI hardware market.
On Wednesday, semiconductor giant AMD announced the purchase of Brium, though the terms of the deal were not disclosed. Brium operates in stealth mode, developing machine learning applications that facilitate AI inference—the process by which trained AI models draw conclusions from new data—across various hardware platforms, according to a blog post on its minimal website.
In simpler terms, Brium enables AI software to adapt to different hardware configurations that it may not have originally been designed for.
In its press release, AMD stated that acquiring Brium aligns with its commitment to “building a high-performance, open AI software ecosystem that empowers developers and drives innovation.”
While AMD emphasizes the creation of a more open AI ecosystem, the move also addresses a significant challenge: most AI software is tailored for Nvidia hardware and chips.
Brium’s blog post, published in November 2024, highlighted the industry’s dependence on Nvidia and specifically mentioned AMD. It stated, “In recent years, the hardware industry has made strides towards providing viable alternatives to Nvidia hardware for server-side inference. Solutions such as AMD’s Instinct GPUs offer strong performance characteristics, but it remains a challenge to harness that performance in practice as workloads are typically tuned extensively with Nvidia GPUs in mind. At Brium, we intend to enable efficient model inference across a range of hardware architectures.”
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This acquisition marks AMD’s fourth strategic move in the past two years, aiming to foster an open-source AI ecosystem. Previous acquisitions include Silo AI (July 2024), Nod.AI (October 2023), and Mipsology (August 2023).
TechCrunch has reached out to AMD for additional details.
SOURCE: TECH CRUNCH