Macworld The future of technology involves AI and Apple is doing what it can to be part of that future. To that end, a new report states that the company has a partnership in place to develop its AI hardware.
Apple is switching over to a new Bluetooth and Wi-Fi chip that it designed in-house starting in 2025, reports Bloomberg. The combined Bluetooth
Apple is partnering with semiconductor developer Broadcom and plans to launch a new AI chip to boost future server performance.
To power its Apple Intelligence servers, Apple is now said to be at least in part working with Broadcom on a new processor design.
Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) announced a new AI chip cooperation this week, which is good news for Broadcom, as it should result in additional bu
Broadcom received a bullish note and price target upgrade from a Wall Street sell-side analyst today, building upon the blowout 2027 guidance management gave on the company's recent earnings call. On Monday, UBS analyst Timothy Arcuri raised his target on Broadcom from $220 to $270 per share, while maintaining his bullish stance on the name.
Apple plans to launch in-house Wi-Fi and Bluetooth chips by 2025. Broadcom will still supply Apple with radio frequency filters for modems. The Wi-Fi and Bluetooth chips will enable Apple devices to go online via wireless networks, pair with headphones ...
Apple's Private Cloud Compute technology that was announced earlier this year runs on Apple Silicon processors to perform AI tasks.
Complex data center workloads like training machine learning models and running artificial intelligence (AI) applications would take a very long time if powered only by central processing units (CPUs).
Apple has long worked on designing its own modems, and now it looks as if the company will also soon be switching to its own WiFi and Bluetooth solution.
According to the , Apple is reportedly developing a custom AI chip, codenamed Baltra, to power its AI services and devices. The tech giant is partnering with Broadcom to integrate advanced networking technology into the chip.
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