Postcard from Vision: Hurricane? Tornado? AI's Got This
In this Intel Newsroom "postcard" from Intel Vision 2025, Intel recaps a live on-stage demonstration of how Kamiwaza AI, running on Intel technology, makes severe-weather warnings dramatically faster. Kamiwaza CEO Luke Norris appeared alongside Sunny Wescott, a federal chief meteorologist, and Intel's Karin Eibschitz Segal to show how Kamiwaza's AI orchestration engine — powered by Intel Gaudi 3 AI accelerators and Intel Xeon 6 processors — helps a federal meteorology department automate analysis and uncover insights across more than 90 years of climate data. The headline capability: processing roughly one trillion data points from old weather sensors, a task that used to take days now completes in minutes. That speed is critical when lives are on the line. The system automatically links past weather anomalies to specific hurricane events, giving emergency responders crucial context for faster, more accurate predictions and, ultimately, safer communities. The piece emphasizes that Kamiwaza isn't limited to weather: its multi-agent interface is designed to make AI deployment accessible across industries, turning historical data into lifesaving predictions or business-critical insights. As part of Intel's own Vision 2025 coverage, the postcard showcases Kamiwaza as a marquee example of real-world AI transformation on Intel silicon, reinforcing the Kamiwaza–Intel partnership around high-throughput, energy-efficient AI orchestration. It complements the deeper DHS and defense weather-preparedness work Kamiwaza has described elsewhere. Read the full postcard on the Intel Newsroom.
Source: Intel Newsroom — Read the full article