Google: AlphaGo Powered by Custom AI Chip

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Last October, a computer system beat a professional human player at the ancient Chinese board game Go. The AI system, AlphaGo, was built by Google and trained using machine learning techniques.

Google built the hardware that powered AlphaGo in-house, as it does with most of its infrastructure components. At the core of that hardware is the Tensor Processing Unit, or TPU, a chip Google designed specifically for its AI hardware, the company’s CEO, Sundar Pichai, said from stage this morning during the opening Google I/O conference keynote next to Google headquarters in Mountain View, California.

This is the first time Google has shared any information about the hardware backend that powers its AI, which will play a central role in the company’srevamped cloud services strategy, announced earlier this year. TPUs will be part of the infrastructure that supports its cloud services.

Related: Google to Build and Lease Data Centers in Big Cloud Expansion

Pichai shared little detail about the TPU, saying only that its performance per watt was “orders of magnitude higher” than any commercially available CPU or GPU (Graphics Processing Unit):

Pichai TPU slide GoogleIO

Google CEO Sundar Pichai on stage at Google I/O 2016 (Source: Google I/O live stream)

“Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) is a custom ASIC for machine learning that fits in the same footprint of a hard drive, and was the secret sauce for AlphaGo in Korea,” Google said in an emailed statement.

TPU gets its name from TensorFlow, the software library for machine intelligence that powers Google Search and other services, such as speech recognition, Gmail, and Photos. The company open sourced TensorFlow in November of last year.

Original article appeared here: Google: AlphaGo Powered by Custom AI Chip

Source: TheWHIR