Giga Computing Technology is a new Gigabyte subsidiary focused on supporting servers and other enterprise gear as well as liquid cooling. Credit: Gigabyte Gigabyte has split in two, breaking off its enterprise business as a subsidiary called Giga Computing Technology that’s focused on sales and support for its data-center products. The Taiwanese company is well known for its motherboards and GPU cards for gaming, but also for several form factors of servers. Breaking out Giga Computing into a separate unit enables it to better cater to the needs of enterprise customers, according to Daniel Hou, CEO of the new business. “This is just another extension of our long-term plan that will allow our enterprise solutions better react to market forces and to better tailor products to various markets,” Hou said in a statement. “Although we go by a different name, we will continue operations as we always have, and our customers will continue all the same relationships and have high expectations from our well-established server business unit that offers a diverse product portfolio.” Products falling under the new entity include servers configured for HPC, storage, and AI, as well as liquid-cooling technology. For example, last year, the company introduced a line of servers based on Ampere’s Altra or Altra Max Arm-based processors paired with Nvidia GPUs, aimed at workloads such as AI and HPC. Gigabyte’s 2021 annual financial report said its server/enterprise business accounts for 25% of its $4 billion in revenue. That puts it well behind the likes of Supermicro and other motherboard manufacturers, so the creation of Giga Computing might be an attempt to bolster the business. Intel recently made a similar move when it shifted responsibility for its consumer and enterprise graphics offerings from a single dedicated graphics group to two separate existing units, one focused on consumer products and one focused on data-center products. Related content news HPE, Dell launch another round of AI servers HPE unveils one server, and Dell launches several compute and storage products. By Andy Patrizio Oct 17, 2024 3 mins Servers Data Center news Dell updates servers with AMD AI accelerators The Dell PowerEdge XE9680 ships with Instinct MI300X accelerators, AMD's high-end GPU accelerators that are designed to compete with Nvidia Hopper processors. By Andy Patrizio Jul 17, 2024 3 mins Servers Data Center news Gartner: AI spurs 25% surge in data center systems spending Worldwide IT spending is expected to surpass $5 trillion in 2024, a 7.5% increase over 2023. Gartner's forecast reflects 'ravenous demand' for data center infrastructure. By Denise Dubie Jul 16, 2024 3 mins Generative AI Servers Data Center news Elon Musk’s Grok AI ‘compute factory’ will use Dell and Supermicro servers The factory’s location is still shrouded in mystery and shrink wrap. By John E. Dunn Jun 21, 2024 3 mins Generative AI Servers PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe