Updated
Updated · MarketWatch · May 5
Lisa Su says AMD differentiates servers through AI workload optimisation
Updated
Updated · MarketWatch · May 5

Lisa Su says AMD differentiates servers through AI workload optimisation

16 articles · Updated · MarketWatch · May 5
  • Speaking on competition with Arm and Intel, Su said customers will need different CPUs for general-purpose operations, head nodes and agentic AI tasks.
  • She argued no single CPU technology will dominate the server market, positioning AMD as well placed because it has considered multiple ways processors can optimise AI workloads.
  • The remarks came in response to an analyst question about how AMD can stand out when major chipmakers are working with many of the same server customers.
As rivals Intel and Arm launch specialized chips, can AMD's 'Venice' CPU secure its lead in the AI server market?
Is the era of one-size-fits-all CPUs truly over, and what does this mean for the future cost of cloud computing?
With critical AI chip components already sold out for 2026, can any company truly meet the explosive demand from AI?