“These strategic moves strengthen AMD’s ability to offer open-source solutions tailored for enterprises seeking flexibility and interoperability across platforms,” said Prabhu Ram, VP of industry research group at Cybermedia Research. “By integrating Silo AI’s capabilities, AMD aims to provide a comprehensive suite for developing, deploying, and managing AI systems, appealing broadly to diverse customer needs. This aligns with AMD’s evolving market position as a provider of accessible and open AI solutions, capitalizing on industry trends towards openness and interoperability.”
Beyond AMD: A broader industry trend
This strategic shift towards software is not limited to AMD. Other chip giants like Nvidia and Intel are also actively investing in software companies and developing their own software stacks.
“If you look at the success of Nvidia, it is driven not by silicon but by software (CUDA) and services (NGC with MLOps, TAO, etc.) it offers on top of its compute platform,” Shah said. “AMD realizes this and has been investing in building software (ROCm, Ryzen Aim, etc.) and services (Vitis) capabilities to offer an end-to-end solution for its customers to accelerate AI solution development and deployment.”