Beijing-based Z.ai said its GLM models were now compatible with Huawei’s Ascend processors, which are used on AI servers, and Kirin chips that run inside smartphones and laptops, according to the start-up’s statement on Saturday.
“The tie-up marks a major breakthrough in cloud-device collaboration between home-grown large [language] models and computational architecture, highlighting the deeper integration of a domestic AI ecosystem,” Z.ai said in the statement.
The open-source approach gives public access to a program’s source code, allowing third-party software developers to share or modify its design, or scale up its capabilities.
CANN competes with Nvidia’s proprietary Compute Unified Device Architecture toolkit, which many Chinese AI developers have used as their default development platform for years amid the broad use of the US firm’s graphics processing units in many data centres.