Samsung's IT services arm and other companies are said to be testing out a processor that sports more than 1,000 general-purpose RISC-V cores to deliver what the chip's designer claims is faster and more energy-efficient AI inference performance than power-hungry specialty silicon.
The chip designer, Esperanto Technologies, said Thursday Samsung SDS and other unnamed companies, which it only identified as "lead customers," are doing initial evaluations of the startup's ET-SoC-1 AI inference accelerator.
The Mountain View, California-based startup was founded in 2014 by Dave Ditzel, a semiconductor industry veteran who worked on parallel computing architectures at Intel and, earlier in his career, led the development of the SPARC CPU instruction set architecture at Sun Microsystems. Esperanto is now led by Art Swift, who has held several semiconductor leadership roles, including CEO of Wave Computing.