Amazon unveils Trainium3 chip
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Voice actors lambasted the AI dubs, which were added to anime "Banana Fish," "No Game No Life: Zero," and "Vinland Saga."
Prime Video has begun rolling out a supposed beta test using generative AI voices to dub anime—but they're a bad sign regardless of their dismaying quality.
Amazon Web Services has unveiled new autonomous AI “frontier agents” that can code, secure and operate software for days without human input, reshaping how enterprises build and run applications.
AWS has been building its own AI chips — and systems — for years now. It just released its third version, known as Trainium3, with some impressive specs.
While OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google trade blows at the top of the charts, Amazon is asking everyone to look somewhere else.
Fans were furious. And the fallout on social media quickly became so vociferous that Amazon has now quietly pulled the AI dubs from several of the shows, including “Banana Fish.” The AI-generated Spanish dub for “Banana Fish” and “Vinland Saga,” however, are still available, Anime Corner noted.
Amazon.com's AWS cloud computing unit on Tuesday said it will adopt key Nvidia technology in future generations of its artificial intelligence computing chips as the firm ramps up efforts to attract major AI customers to use its services.
As Google and Microsoft continue to surge, the AWS chief lays out his pitch: cheaper, reliable AI delivered at hyperscale.
Amazon is experimenting with AI dubs on anime and other projects, and what it has done with Banana Fish is downright disgraceful.
If the product name sounds familiar, it should. It's a collab with Nvidia that combines AWS tech with the chip maker's tech.