Amazon’s senior vice president Peter DeSantis told CNBC that the company hopes to compete with frontier AI labs OpenAI and Anthropic ‘in the coming year’, acknowledging that AI models of Amazon have not yet reached the very forefront of the most demanding workloads.
“We’ve been taking a very deliberate approach to get our foundations right, our data, our architecture, our infrastructure. And you know, we’re on a path that we want to be on,” he said. He further added that Amazon’s AI approach is two-pronged. On one side, Bedrock serves as a marketplace for models from different companies, offering AWS customers access to a range of AI tools. On the other hand, Amazon has developed Nova2, its latest AI model launched in December, which now has about 50,000 customers.
DeSantis admitted Nova2 is not yet at the frontier but said the aspiration is to make it one of the most capable models available.
Amazon’s AI strategy depends on custom semiconductor designs
Amazon’s AI strategy also leans heavily on its custom semiconductor designs. The company has developed Trainium and Graviton chips to optimize performance for AI workloads. DeSantis compared Amazon’s chip capabilities to Nvidia, noting that few companies can design, manufacture, and deploy chips at scale.
While AWS currently rents compute capacity to customers — including Anthropic — CEO Andy Jassy has suggested Amazon could eventually sell racks of Trainium chips to third parties.
DeSantis left the door open to Graviton also being sold outside AWS in the future.DeSantis argued that the next wave of progress depends on chips and models developing in lockstep—a dynamic that's still underappreciated across the industry.
"If the chips are not telling the model designers what capabilities are coming and where they can optimize, then we're not doing the science necessary to take advantage of those capabilities until the chips are available, and then you're waiting months and months," he said.
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos to all the people saying AI will lead to mass layoffs: You are wrong
Recently, Jeff Bezos fired back at those who are predicting that artificial intelligence (AI) will cause widespread job destruction. The Amazon founder argued that the booming technology will usher in a successful new era of civilisational wealth and human productivity.
Bezos also spoke about his new $41 billion AI venture, Prometheus, dismissing the dark economic forecasts that have dominated Silicon Valley and global financial markets for some time now.“The people who are jumping to the conclusion that the jobs are all going to go away... I think these people are just wrong,” Bezos told the Financial Times, adding, “At root, all civilisational wealth is driven by invention. Six thousand years ago, somebody invented the plough, and we all got wealthier.”Instead of an employment apocalypse, Bezos believes that AI will actually create a labour shortage by spurring the creation of far more advanced new jobs than it eliminates.
View original source — Times of India ↗


