How IBM Plans to Redefine AI Performance with Its New Hardware

The big server launch set to combine faster chips with rapid ransomware defense

Summary
  • New AI servers launch July 25 with 55% faster cores and under-60-second ransomware detection
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IBM's (IBM, Financial) latest AI spectacle comes July 25, the company's rolling out its Power11 chips and next-gen servers—designed to keep your data center humming (no scheduled downtime) and sniff out ransomware in under a minute.

It's the first big Power upgrade since 2020's Power10, and it packs a punch: IBM claims up to 55% faster cores than Power9 and about 45% more capacity than Power10 in entry and mid-tier boxes.

What's cool is that these new systems will be the first to support IBM's in-house Spyre AI accelerator, so you can run AI inference right alongside your usual hybrid-cloud workloads. As Tom McPherson, IBM's Power Systems GM, put it: they're leveraging the full IBM stack to blend AI, automation and rock-solid security.

Why it matters: AI workloads are gobbling up compute cycles, and threats like ransomware aren't taking breaks. A setup that combines serious performance gains with built-in security features could give IBM an edge over the usual x86 servers. No surprise IBM's stock ticked up about 0.5% on the news. If you're planning your next enterprise AI rollout, Power11 might be worth a look.

Disclosures

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