Intel made major announcements about future graphics cards at its Seoul tech summit. The chip maker revealed plans for fresh Arc GPUs that target Edge AI servers. These new products should arrive during the final quarter of 2025. The company also confirmed a partnership with SK Hynix for advanced memory technology. Their collaboration focuses on the upcoming Jaguar Shores AI accelerators.
The current Arc lineup features Battlemage chips that power both gaming and professional cards. Intel sells the B580 and B570 for gamers and the PRO B60 and PRO B50 for workstations. The new Edge AI products might use the mysterious BMG-G31 chip that has appeared in recent leaks. This same processor could also power future gaming cards from Intel.
SK Hynix will supply HBM4 memory for the next Jaguar Shores accelerators. These AI chips will use Intel's advanced 18A manufacturing process that promises better performance and efficiency. The technology features RibbonFET transistors and backside power delivery systems. Jaguar Shores replaces the cancelled Falcon Shores project that would have combined CPUs and GPUs.
Server systems with Jaguar Shores will pair with either Granite Rapids or Diamond Rapids Xeon processors. SK Hynix will also provide MRDIMM Gen2 memory modules that hold up to 128 GB each. These powerful servers launch next year when NVIDIA releases Rubin and AMD debuts its MI400 platform. The timing puts Intel directly against major competitors in the AI chip market.
The current Arc lineup features Battlemage chips that power both gaming and professional cards. Intel sells the B580 and B570 for gamers and the PRO B60 and PRO B50 for workstations. The new Edge AI products might use the mysterious BMG-G31 chip that has appeared in recent leaks. This same processor could also power future gaming cards from Intel.
SK Hynix will supply HBM4 memory for the next Jaguar Shores accelerators. These AI chips will use Intel's advanced 18A manufacturing process that promises better performance and efficiency. The technology features RibbonFET transistors and backside power delivery systems. Jaguar Shores replaces the cancelled Falcon Shores project that would have combined CPUs and GPUs.
Server systems with Jaguar Shores will pair with either Granite Rapids or Diamond Rapids Xeon processors. SK Hynix will also provide MRDIMM Gen2 memory modules that hold up to 128 GB each. These powerful servers launch next year when NVIDIA releases Rubin and AMD debuts its MI400 platform. The timing puts Intel directly against major competitors in the AI chip market.