Agentic AI to Drive CPU Demand: Intel CEO

Taipei: Agentic AI will drive demand for central processing units (CPUs) as artificial intelligence (AI) takes on increasingly complex tasks, Intel Corp. CEO Lip-Bu Tan said Tuesday, as the company unveiled new processors for AI infrastructure and personal computers. Speaking at Computex Taipei 2026, Tan said the next wave of AI development will create opportunities across personal computers, data centers, edge devices and physical AI systems.

According to Focus Taiwan, Tan emphasized that these systems will increasingly require purpose-built CPUs, graphics processing units (GPUs), and application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) tailored to different workloads and applications. Intel executives at the event highlighted how AI agents will boost CPU demand since they must coordinate tasks, retrieve information, access files, and interact with software tools. Unlike conventional AI inference, predominantly managed by GPUs, AI agents perform a broader range of computing tasks requiring greater orchestration.

"For agentic AI, the CPU orchestrates the show," stated Kevork Kechichian, executive vice president and general manager of Intel's Data Center Group. To support this vision, Intel introduced its latest Xeon 6 processors for data centers. Kechichian mentioned that the high-density version features up to 288 efficiency cores and 576 megabytes of L3 cache, which Intel claims can handle large-scale AI workloads and agent-based applications.

Intel also announced that its Intel 18A process technology is now at full scale. This node powers the company's Core Ultra Series 3 processors, which are already shipping across hundreds of consumer and commercial designs to bring local AI capabilities to a broader range of personal computers.

Through a collaboration with AI search startup Perplexity, Intel demonstrated how AI agents could divide workloads between local devices and cloud servers. The companies explained that sensitive information could remain on users' computers while larger models run in the cloud, describing this approach as "hybrid agentic inference."

Beyond processors, Intel announced partnerships with companies including Foxconn, Google, Ericsson, and SambaNova, as it seeks to expand its presence in AI infrastructure and custom silicon. Tan's keynote speech comes as Intel works to regain momentum under Tan, who became Intel CEO in March 2025 and has sought to sharpen the company's focus on engineering execution and advanced manufacturing technologies.

The speech was the third of four keynote addresses scheduled for Computex Taipei 2026, one of the world's largest computer and technology exhibitions. The final keynote will be delivered Wednesday by NXP Semiconductors N.V. President and CEO Rafael Sotomayor, according to the event organizer.