In the news | Wired
Microsoft is pitching the idea of running AI projects atop chips called FPGAs, whose designs can be reprogrammed to support new forms of software on the fly.
In the news | Microsoft News
New developer tools for Windows and Azure IoT Edge Services enable real-time AI and machine learning for drones.
In the news | ZDNet
Microsoft says FPGA acceleration of models can actually be a good bit faster than GPU acceleration, so Azure Machine Learning Hardware Accelerated Models have the potential to create a super-fast AI infrastructure.
In the news | The AI Blog
Every day, thousands of gadgets and widgets whish down assembly lines run by the manufacturing solutions provider Jabil, on their way into the hands of customers. Along the way, an automated optical inspection system scans them for any signs of…
In the news | TechCrunch
Microsoft believes FPGAs give it more flexibility than designing custom chips and that the performance it achieves on standard Intel Stratix FPGAs is at least comparable to that of custom chips.
In the news | Intel Newsroom
Project Brainwave unlocks the future of AI by unleashing programmable hardware using Intel FPGAs to deliver real-time AI.
An initiative called Project Brainwave lets developers in Microsoft's data centers use field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), which can be customized even after they've been plugged into servers.
In the news | reddit r/tezos
We just saw a result from INRIA (Institution which developed Ocaml and partners with Tezos ) audit. The Tezos Devs changed the library from TWEETNACL to HACL which is developed by INRIA itself.