ByteDance develops custom CPUs for Coze and AI servers
ByteDance is developing its own custom Central Processing Unit (CPU) chips to support its expanding AI infrastructure needs, driven by surging chip prices and supply shortages. The chips are intended for internal operations in ByteDance's servers and data centers, specifically for agent-based products like its Coze platform, and are exploring both Arm and RISC-V architectures.
Key Takeaways
- ByteDance is targeting internal servers and data centres, not consumer hardware, for its proprietary CPU rollout.
- The first use case cited is agent-based products, including ByteDance’s Coze platform.
- The company is evaluating two architectures: Arm and the open-source RISC-V instruction set.
- Intel has warned Chinese customers of server CPU delivery lead times of up to six months, and AMD said the CPU market is “tight.”
- ByteDance current CPU suppliers, Intel and AMD, have raised prices by 10% to 35% quarter over quarter, according to two sources.
Why It Matters
ByteDance is moving to reduce dependence on Intel and AMD for the CPUs that support its AI infrastructure, starting with internal servers and data centres. The article places that move inside a wider industry shift toward inference, where agentic products need more CPU support alongside Nvidia GPUs, and notes that Google, Amazon and Microsoft are also building custom CPUs. The clearest signal to watch is whether ByteDance turns its early-stage Arm and RISC-V work into a manufacturing commitment with foundry partners.
Read full article at reuters.com
