
Supply chain reliability is another underappreciated advantage. Hyperscalers want a credible second source, but only if Intel can offer stable, predictable roadmaps across multiple product generations.
However, the company runs into a major constraint at the software layer.
“The decisive bottleneck is software,” Rawat said. “CUDA functions as an industry operating standard, embedded across models, pipelines, and DevOps. Intel’s challenge is to prove that migration costs are low, and that ongoing optimization does not become a hidden engineering tax.”
For enterprise buyers, that software gap translates directly into switching risk.
Tighter integration of Intel CPUs, GPUs, and networking could improve system-level efficiency for enterprises and cloud providers, but the dominance of the CUDA ecosystem remains the primary barrier to switching, said Charlie Dai, VP and principal analyst at Forrester.
“Even with strong hardware integration, buyers will hesitate without seamless compatibility with mainstream ML/DL frameworks and tooling,” Dai added.




















