The talk of the town in the world of AI right now is almost exclusively about the amounts of money shifting from one company to the next, but the latest event might have farther-reaching effects than most business deals. Eric Demers, who designed ATI's best GPUs and spearheaded almost all of Qualcomm's Adreno designs, has now joined Intel's GPU team "with a focus on AI."
The blue team's GPU efforts are all but guaranteed to be significantly bolstered by Demers, a particularly welcome development in these troubled times for the company. According to Moor Insights and Strategy, this move is "bigger than people realize", as "[Demers] is an executive, but also he is a GPU architect, of which there are not that many that are at the level that he is at because he can basically build a GPU architecture from the ground up.”
Although so far Intel has been quiet on the exact wording of his new position, the reports so far predictably indicate that Demers will be in charge of designing AI accelerator GPUs, much to the chagrin of hopeful gamers who would like to see Intel's Arc series get an influx of brainpower.
Nvidia and AMD's accelerators are the first ports of call for datacenter-grade AI chips, and Intel wants in on that action, having produced three generations of Gaudi accelerators. The last one, Gaudi 3, is from 2024 and was presented as a more affordable alternative to Nvidia's now-aging H100. Gaudi is set to be superseded in the coming years by Falcon Shores and Jaguar Shores chips. The Shores silicon will exist alongside Crescent Island, a bespoke design for inference tasks.
The chip architect knows GPUs from the first transistor to the video outputs, having spent most of career designing them for AMD (formerly ATI), and Qualcomm in the past 14 years. His designs live in millions of smartphones right now as part of Snapdragon chips, and he was the lead architect for ATI's R300 and R600 series. For those who remember the names, he was at Silicon Graphics and even Matrox during his early years.
The R300 is fondly remembered by any techie in the early 2000s in the form of the Radeon 9700 and 9500 series that delivered a one-two punch to Nvidia's offerings of the time, namely the much-maligned FX 5800, known still today as the Dustbuster. When AMD absorbed ATI, Demers became the company's graphics Chief Technical Officer, a position he held until 2012 when he joined Qualcomm, and now Intel in 2026. Reports of loud expletives heard from Nvidia's offices are as of yet unconfirmed.
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