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Intel's first step into the metaverse was to borrow chips

Driving China on December 14, 2021, Intel executives revealed when they first announced the company's "meta-universe" strategy that the company is developing a software that can help notebooks borrow the computing power of other devices, and even borrow chips from competitors.

The metaverse requires powerful computing power, and Nvidia and Qualcomm may be the beneficiaries. At a recent RealTime Conference conference, Raja Koduri, head of Intel's Accelerated Computing Systems and Graphics Group, revealed that Intel's first product into the metaverse space was software that could borrow the computing power of existing and unused devices.

Intel's first step into the metaverse was to borrow chips

For example, if a gamer plays a game with heavy graphics tasks on a laptop, the system chip will be under a lot of pressure, and if there is an unused gaming PC in another room, the software can detect it, and then it will borrow computing power through the home network, so that the gaming experience will be better.

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