@HPC Podcast Archives - OrionX.net - HPC News Bytes – 20260302

Episode Date: March 2, 2026

- AI for military use; Anthropic, OpenAI, DoD - SambaNova: Intel partnership, new SN50 chip - GTC 2026 - Mobile World Congress 2026 [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/HPCNB_202...60302.mp3"][/audio] The post HPC News Bytes – 20260302 appeared first on OrionX.net.

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Starting point is 00:00:04 Welcome to HPC Newsbytes, a weekly show about important news in the world of supercomputing, AI, and other advanced technologies. Hi, everyone. Welcome to HBC Newsbytes. I'm Doug Black with a cold of Inside HPC, and with me is Shaheen Khan of Iranx.net. The biggest news of the week, of course, is the military action taken against Iran, and Shaheen and I are already planning at HPC podcast episodes focused on advanced technology-driven warfare. But for today, a big story is the battle between Anthropic and the Department of Defense over the use of Anthropic AI. In a nutshell, Anthropic signed a $200 million deal with DOD last July and has recently been embroiled in a battle over how its AI models are used.
Starting point is 00:00:55 Specifically, Anthropic objects to mass domestic surveillance and autonomous weapons use cases. The Defense Department says mass domestic surveillance will not be pursued because it's already been declared illegal by Congress and that rules are in place regarding autonomous weapons. A DOD spokesperson added, Anthropic doesn't make the rules. Questions have been raised about the timing of Anthropics demands. Why raise them now instead of before they signed the DOD contract? Also, do vendors establish use case rules? This also raises larger issues such as placing restrictions on our use of AI when and if we know our adversaries are doing those very things. Of course, no one favors mass domestic surveillance.
Starting point is 00:01:42 But if our adversaries are developing and using autonomous weapons, should we prohibit ourselves from doing the same? In addition to the customer vendor discussions and negotiations, there are larger and very valid issues here. The big one is the impact of technology on laws. This has two major dimensions. The first is digitization, which adds information to the equation. Laws that were designed to govern things need to evolve or otherwise get upgraded or rewritten to include information. Bits versus atoms, so to say. The second is the consumerization of technology.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Some decades ago, advanced technology would start in government labs and the military and it would then get sanitized and adopted by the enterprise, and then it would trickle down to consumers. For the past couple of decades, the flow has been getting reversed. More and more, the consumer uses advanced technologies first, and companies and governments struggle to keep up. So laws have evolved, but many of them were originally written before there were phones or pocket cameras.
Starting point is 00:02:50 On privacy, it's been the Fourth Amendment in the United States that provides constitutional protections for individuals by safeguarding their privacy while enabling the state to do its part to protect people. Over the years, it has been interpreted in broader ways, notably by the recognition that its focus is the protection of people and therefore their digital presence as well, not just physical things. On autonomous weapon systems, that's a whole new concept. There are some international laws that hold a state responsible and accountable. There's a NATO framework for responsible use, and there are various non-binding declarations, and also calls for treaties. In the U.S., there's a DOD directive that allows the development of autonomous
Starting point is 00:03:39 weapons, but requires rigorous testing and human judgment. But there are no specific, dedicated federal laws passed by Congress that regulate the development and use of autonomous weapons. weapons in the United States. That's really where the discussion belongs. But there is global competition towards these weapons, as you alluded to, and that makes it very, very difficult for a country to wait and deliberate while others are racing ahead and may not even follow international laws or honor their treaties anyway. This kind of thought process has led many to advocate for global regulation of AI that is modeled after how nuclear weapons are regulated. On the product side, it is interesting that for a technology as complex as AI, there are in fact so many choices
Starting point is 00:04:26 in the US and globally. And finally, whether or not a product is able to be compliant with policies or directives or laws or what have you is another aspect. And vendors may not sign up to that, and especially when much of AI remains probabilistic versus deterministic. Intel's road to an AI chip has been rocky from the start. The latest go-no-go or currents. was the scuttling of a reported $1.6 billion acquisition by Intel of AI-chip startup, Sanbanova. But by no means has the relationship between the companies fallen apart. The latest development is that Sanbanova has agreed to adopt Intel's server chips and graphics cards in a multi-year collaboration. The companies announced this on Tuesday.
Starting point is 00:05:12 Intel is also taking part in a $350 million funding round, adding to its earlier investment in San Bonova in 2019, we should also note that Intel CEO Lip Butem, known around the company as LBT, also is chairman of Sanbanova. So there are multiple ties between the companies. To be sure, Intel is developing its own AI GPU. And as we have discussed here, they really cannot sit it out. While the Sanbanova acquisition could have helped kickstart Intel into the AI fray, the partnership between the two companies seems more focused on strengthening Intel's CPU business within AI. San Benova counts Hugging Face,
Starting point is 00:05:54 meta, and major AI labs as customers. They say their new SN50 chip delivers higher performance than the Blackwell 200 system for a comparable price and that up to 256 SN50s can be connected. We've heard of circular financing in AI, but AI frenemies or co-opetition seems like a common thing too.
Starting point is 00:06:17 Intel invests in San Banova while Envidio took a stake in Intel valued at $5 billion, which was a contributing factor in Intel share prices going up. Intel shares were up 75% over the past year. And of course, the U.S. government took a 9.9% stake in Intel worth nearly $9 billion, which may have shown the way to Nvidia. GTC is the week after next, and we're expecting the same sardine can crowds at the San Jose Convention Center that we've seen in recent years, along with a huge crowd at a professional sports arena for Jensen Wong's keynote speech. For electricity, general excitement, and avid interest, I don't think I've ever seen anything quite like GTC unless it was at Comdex, if people remember that show, back in the 80s. I'm not trying to flatter, Nvidia, just stating a fact as I see it.
Starting point is 00:07:10 Moving around on the conference floor is a battle as is getting a hotel room, an Uber, a bottle of water, everything. The tech publication Tom's Guide ran an article late last week on what may be coming up at GTC. This includes the possibility of a new AI chip, something hinted at by Jensen, and Tom's guide says, quote, we can expect a major reveal of a new inference-focused chip, possibly related to the Feynman architecture designed for faster AI tasks. This wouldn't be a typical GPU since it's built for agentic AI. Sheehan, I have to imagine Nvidia's major competitors are all really. wincing in advance over what Nvidia may announce. Among the company's hallmarks is acceleration of the cadence of new chip releases putting immense pressure on the rest of the
Starting point is 00:07:58 industry. Yeah, for sure. I'm really looking forward to it. And as we look forward to GTC, this week we have the big Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, and next week, there's embedded world in Nuremberg, Germany. Mobile World Congress expects over 100,000 attendees and about 3,000 exhibitors focusing on advanced communications and mobile innovation in general. And there will be a lot of AI there too. The conference is themed the IQ era. And what we should expect is AI's expansion outside of the cloud towards edge AI, agentic AI, physical AI, and ambient AI.
Starting point is 00:08:39 There will be robots and smart things and examples of autonomous systems built directly into hardware and networks. really the return of the Internet of Things, this time propelled with AI. We talked a little bit about network intelligence after Envidio's GTC in Washington, D.C last year, and the work they did with partners towards AI-RAN, radio access networks. That will be on display, as will 6G built on AI-native platforms, complete with its own network autonomy, AI-enabled optimizations, and telco-reasoning models. In many countries, telcos are a suitable vehicle and partner for AI-enabled communications, for military applications, and sovereign AI deployments.
Starting point is 00:09:26 So we will see that as well. All right. That's it for this episode. Thank you all for being with us. HPC Newsbytes is a production of OrionX in association with InsideHPC. Shaheen Khan and Doug Black host the show. Every episode is featured on InsidehPC.com and posted on Orionx.net. listening.

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