
Chinese AI team wins global award for replacing Nvidia GPU with industrial chip
researchers have trained a cutting-edge video-generation model on an off-the shelf industrial chip – outperforming high-end GPUs in both speed and efficiency.
Advertisement
Their system, FlightVGM, recorded a 30 per cent performance boost and had an energy efficiency that was 4½ times greater than
Nvidia's flagship RTX 3090 GPU – all while running on the widely available V80 FPGA chip from
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), another leading US semiconductor firm.
The innovation earned top honours at the prestigious FPGA 2025 conference which concluded on March 1. The win marked the first time a mainland Chinese team had claimed the event's Best Paper Award, signalling a seismic shift in the global race to optimise
AI hardware
Developed by scientists from Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Tsinghua University and Beijing-based start-up Infinigence-AI, the model could redefine how industries deploy cost-effective, energy-efficient AI systems, from robotic controls to
autonomous vehicles
FPGAs or field-programmable gate arrays, are programmable semiconductor devices that allow post-manufacturing modifications to their circuitry and functionality. In contrast, conventional
chips like CPUs or central processing units, GPUs or graphics processing units, and ASICs or application-specific integrated circuits have fixed functionalities once fabricated.
Advertisement
In video-generation and general computing, FPGAs and Nvidia GPUs each have distinct advantages. FPGAs offer customisable architecture tailored to specific applications, resulting in higher energy efficiency and lower latency. Meanwhile, Nvidia GPUs, known for their massive parallel computing power, excel in processing large-scale data and handling complex computational tasks.
Building on previous research, the Chinese team developed FlightVGM, the first FPGA-trained video-generation AI model. Through innovations in data architecture and scheduling methods, FlightVGM achieved computational performance that could outpace GPUs.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Trump confirms he made a deal with Nvidia chief to let tech company sell chips to China
US President Donald Trump said on Monday that he had personally negotiated a deal with Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang, letting the tech giant sell a lower-end chip in China in exchange for part of those sales revenues being paid to the US government. The highly unusual deal was first reported on Sunday by the Financial Times. The arrangement comes amid Washington's years-long push to restrict Beijing's access to cutting-edge semiconductors, a policy rooted in concerns that advanced AI processors could bolster China's military capabilities. Since 2022, Washington has imposed export controls on such chips, hitting US chipmakers hard — particularly Nvidia, the dominant player in the industry. Speaking at a White House news conference, Trump said that the agreement centred around Nvidia's H20 chip, which he called 'obsolete' but still commercially viable. 'H20 is obsolete but it still has a market,' Trump said. 'So I said, listen, I want 20 percent if I am going to approve this for you, for our country ... I don't want it myself.' According to Trump, Huang pushed back slightly. 'He said, will you make 15? So we negotiated a little deal,' Trump added.


HKFP
4 hours ago
- HKFP
Nvidia, AMD to pay US 15% of AI chip sales to China: media reports
US semiconductor giants Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices have agreed to pay the United States government 15 percent of their revenue from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, according to media reports Sunday. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met with US President Donald Trump at the White House on Wednesday and agreed to give the federal government the cut from its revenues, a highly unusual arrangement in the international tech trade, according to reports in the Financial Times, Bloomberg and New York Times. According to the Financial Times, the artificial intelligence chips that are part of the agreement with the US government are Nvidia's 'H20' and the 'MI308' from Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). Nvidia did not deny the reported deal when approached for comment. 'We follow rules the U.S. government sets for our participation in worldwide markets,' a spokesperson told AFP. 'While we haven't shipped H20 to China for months, we hope export control rules will let America compete in China and worldwide.' The company spokesperson added: 'America cannot repeat 5G and lose telecommunication leadership. America's AI tech stack can be the world's standard if we race.' AMD did not immediately respond to inquiries for comment. Investors are betting that AI will transform the global economy, and Nvidia — the world's leading semiconductor producer — last month became the first company ever to hit $4 trillion in market value. The California-based firm has, however, become entangled in trade tensions between China and the United States, which are waging a heated battle for dominance to produce the chips that power AI. The US has been restricting which chips Nvidia can export to China on national security grounds. 'Political tariff' Nvidia said last month that Washington had pledged to let the company sell its H20 chips to China, which are a less powerful version that the tech giant specifically developed for the Chinese market. The Trump administration had not issued licenses to allow Nvidia to sell the chips before the reported White House meeting. On Friday, however, the Commerce Department started granting the licenses for chip sales, the reports said. Silicon Valley-based AMD will also pay 15 percent of revenue on Chinese sales of its MI308 chips, which it was previously barred from exporting to the country. The deal could earn the US government more than US$2 billion, according to the New York Times report. The move comes as the Trump administration has been imposing stiff tariffs, with goals varying from addressing US trade imbalances, wanting to reshore manufacturing, and pressuring foreign governments to change policies. A 100 percent tariff on many semiconductor imports came into effect last week, with exceptions for tech companies that announce major investments in the United States. 'It's a political tariff in everything but name, brokered in the shadow of heightened US-China tech tensions,' Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said.


South China Morning Post
6 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Huawei's Ren Zhengfei, Changan Automobile's Zhu Huarong discuss state of China EV sector
According to his post on Chinese microblogging site Weibo , Changan chairman Zhu Huarong said he visited Ren, 80, at Huawei's headquarters in Shenzhen last Friday to discuss the state of development and competition in China's electric vehicle (EV) industry. While Zhu did not provide details of their discussion, he praised the 'wisdom' shared and 'passion' shown by Ren during the meeting. Zhu said he also met Huawei deputy chairman Eric Xu Zhijun and Richard Yu Chengdong , chairman of the company's consumer business group, in Shenzhen. The meeting reflects how Chinese industry leaders look to Ren for possible direction amid US President Donald Trump 's tariff strategy, which has disrupted global trade. Tariffs imposed by the US government have made exports to the country 'impossible' for Chinese EV manufacturers. Electric vehicles are being assembled on the production line of Changan Automobile in Chongqing. Photo: Xinhua