Paul Krill
Editor at Large

Clarifai previews AI compute orchestration

news
Dec 6, 20242 mins

Vendor-agnostic platform orchestrates AI workloads across any hardware provider, cloud provider, on-premises, or air-gapped environment, the company said.

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AI platform provider Clarifai is publicly previewing compute orchestration for AI workloads that the company says works across any AI model on any compute, at any scale.

Clarifai said its vendor-agnostic platform could build and orchestrate AI workloads across any hardware provider, cloud provider, on-premises, or air-gapped environment, helping enterprises to optimize AI performance and AI spending and eliminate vendor lock-in. Users can bring their own AI workloads, use Clarifai’s full-stack AI platform to customize them, seamlessly orchestrate their workloads across any compute, and use Clarifai’s SaaS compute while centrally managing costs, governance, and performance through a unified control plane, Clarifai said.

The Clarifai compute orchestration layer provides the following:

  • A control plane for governing access to AI resources, monitoring performance, and managing costs.
  • The ability to deploy a model using any hardware vendor in the cloud, on-premises, in air-gapped environments, or in SaaS environments for inference.
  • Integration with a full stack of AI tools.
  • Maintenance of enterprise security and flexibility, with the ability to deploy the compute cloud into a customer’s virtual private cloud (VPC) or on-premises Kubernetes cluster.
  • The ability to administer and allocate access to AI resources across projects and teams.

Users can sign up for Clarifai’s compute orchestration preview at the Clarifai website.

Paul Krill

Paul Krill is editor at large at InfoWorld. Paul has been covering computer technology as a news and feature reporter for more than 35 years, including 30 years at InfoWorld. He has specialized in coverage of software development tools and technologies since the 1990s, and he continues to lead InfoWorld’s news coverage of software development platforms including Java and .NET and programming languages including JavaScript, TypeScript, PHP, Python, Ruby, Rust, and Go. Long trusted as a reporter who prioritizes accuracy, integrity, and the best interests of readers, Paul is sought out by technology companies and industry organizations who want to reach InfoWorld’s audience of software developers and other information technology professionals. Paul has won a “Best Technology News Coverage” award from IDG.

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