Hot French startup ZML releases free product to speed inference across lots of AI chips
ZML, a hot French AI startup endorsed by Turing Award winner Yann LeCun, has now released ZML/LLMD, software that could make running AI less costly.
The days of Nvidia’s unparalleled market dominance aren’t over, but challengers and choices are arising from all directions.
ZML , a hot French AI startup endorsed by Turing Award winner Yann LeCun, has released inference -performance software that allows a variety of open-source large language models to run on a variety of chips — including Nvidia’s, AMD’s, Google’s TPU, Apple Metal and Intel Arc.
With ZML/LLMD , the newly launched LLM inference server, the company’s ambition is to break existing silos and make different chips available for AI use cases at their maximum available speed, and sometimes faster, ZML founder Steeve Morin told TechCrunch.
As AI becomes integrated into our work and everyday lives, optimizing inference — aka, the processing of prompts — has been outpacing model raining in importance, but often feels patchy behind the scenes, with software and architecture barriers that lead to vendor lock-in, Morin said.
The promise of achieving peak performance across a variety of chips is a technological feat, but it could also be a market disruptor, amid mounting fears over AI-related costs.
ZML hopes to provide enterprises and clouds with the option to use a mix of chips, some of which might be less costly or consume less energy. “The idea is to give people back the power to create their own system and achieve real efficiency gains that allow [AI] to be disseminated,” Morin said.
Such a software assist may help novel AI chipmakers, many of which happen to be from Europe, Morin observed, citing Axelera , Fractile , Kalray , OLIX , Q.ANT , SiPearl , SpiNNcloud , and VSORA . But more than their region of origin, what matters to him is that ZML can work with them on “things that haven’t been done before anywhere in the world.”
That doesn’t mean Morin is bearish on Nvidia. He’s not , in part because of its existing supply. He told TechCrunch that ZML has a good relationship with the AI chip giant, which has been gearing up for the rise of inference.
Inference has been an area of such intense investment, that the trend has been hailed the “ inference gold rush .” So ZML has competition such as Baseten , recently valued at $13 billion; Inferact , from the creators of open source project vLLM ; as well as RadixArk , the commercial company behind SGLang .
Both vLLM and SGLang partially compete with LLMD, but Morin’s ambitions for ZML cover a broader spectrum. “We have reached the point where we are co-designing silicon,” he said. He further credited ZML’s lean team of 20 people as the reason why the Paris-based startup has been able to move fast, with more releases in the plans.
It also helped that this small team is well funded for its size. Thanks to his track record as VP of engineering of Zenly , which Snapchat acquired for nine figures in 2017 , Morin raised $20 million from venture firms including Harry Stebbings’ 20VC, >commit, AALVC, Drysdale Ventures, Xavier Niel’s Kima Ventures, Kindred Capital, LocalGlobe, and Puzzle Ventures.
Unlike ZML’s first public project, the inference-focused ML framework released in 2024 and updated in March , ZML/LLMD is not open source. But it is launching as a free product with the goal of learning about usage. “I’d rather measure and [then generate revenue] where it is most effective without hindering my growth stupidly because I have been too greedy from the get-go,” Morin said.
It is too early to tell when ZML/LLMD might become a paid product, and what its adoption will look like. But the startup’s cap table confirms that other founders are paying attention, including Dagger and Docker founder Solomon Hykes, Clément Delangue and Julien Chaumond from Hugging Face, as well LeCun, now with AMI Labs . This also builds the case that Europe’s AI startups can now build from home . “I couldn’t do ZML anywhere but in Paris,” Morin said.
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Pontos-chave
- A ZML/LLMD pode democratizar o uso de chips de IA no Brasil, reduzindo custos operacionais.
- A interoperabilidade entre diferentes arquiteturas de hardware pode acelerar a inovação em startups brasileiras.
- A resposta da Nvidia e de outros gigantes da tecnologia será crucial para o futuro do mercado de IA.
Análise editorial
A liberação do ZML/LLMD pela startup francesa ZML representa um avanço significativo na democratização do uso de chips de IA, especialmente em um cenário onde a dominância da Nvidia é questionada. Para o setor de tecnologia brasileiro, essa inovação pode abrir portas para empresas locais que buscam otimizar suas operações de IA sem depender exclusivamente de fornecedores tradicionais. A possibilidade de utilizar uma variedade de chips, incluindo opções menos custosas e mais eficientes em termos de energia, é um passo importante para a redução de custos operacionais, o que pode ser um diferencial competitivo em um mercado cada vez mais saturado.
Além disso, a abordagem da ZML de quebrar silos e promover a interoperabilidade entre diferentes arquiteturas de hardware pode estimular a inovação no Brasil. Com um ecossistema de startups em crescimento, a capacidade de integrar soluções de IA em diversas plataformas pode acelerar o desenvolvimento de aplicações locais, desde fintechs até saúde digital. A colaboração com novos fabricantes de chips europeus também pode inspirar parcerias semelhantes no Brasil, onde o desenvolvimento de hardware ainda é um desafio.
O que observar a seguir é como a ZML irá navegar em um mercado já competitivo, onde empresas como Baseten e Inferact estão se destacando. A capacidade de escalar sua tecnologia e conquistar a confiança de grandes empresas será crucial. Além disso, a resposta da Nvidia e de outros gigantes da tecnologia a essa nova competição será um fator determinante para o futuro do mercado de IA, tanto globalmente quanto no Brasil. A evolução das soluções de inferência pode influenciar diretamente a forma como as empresas brasileiras adotam e implementam IA em suas operações.
Por fim, a iniciativa da ZML de co-desenvolver silício para IA pode sinalizar uma nova era de colaboração entre startups e fabricantes de hardware, o que é particularmente relevante para o Brasil, onde a inovação muitas vezes depende de parcerias estratégicas. A capacidade de criar soluções personalizadas para o mercado local pode ser um diferencial importante para startups brasileiras, que buscam se destacar em um cenário global cada vez mais competitivo.
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Fonte original:
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Este artigo foi curado e publicado pelo AIDaily como parte da nossa cobertura editorial sobre desenvolvimentos em inteligência artificial. O conteúdo é baseado na fonte original citada abaixo, enriquecido com contexto e análise editorial. Ferramentas automatizadas podem auxiliar tradução e estruturação inicial, mas a decisão de publicar, a revisão factual e o enquadramento de contexto seguem responsabilidade editorial.
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