“I think blockchain is a transaction thing that is run much more efficiently than the current burning of hardware cycles. It’s something we are working on.” Koduri said. “And that’s not a GPU thing, so don’t try to confuse it as a GPU thing. No, no, no—GPUs will do graphics, gaming, and all those wonderful things.”

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He continued, “But being able to do much more efficient blockchain validation at a much lower cost, much lower power, is a pretty solvable problem. And we are working on that, and at some point in time, hopefully not too far into the future, we will kind of share some interesting hardware for that.”

While that might sound encouraging at face value, Intel hasn’t sufficiently reassured gamers that it’ll proactively discourage people from using its upcoming Arc Alchemist GPU for mining. Sure, the chipmaker says it prefers to welcome gamers over crypto-miners, but unless it implements a hash rate limiter, as Nvidia and AMD have done, nothing will prevent miners from snatching up these chips en masse until they join every other “out of stock” GPU.

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We expect to hear more about Intel Arc, the company’s first discrete GPU in decades, in the coming weeks. As for Bonanza Mine, we can only assume the chipmaker will showcase the ASIC at ISSCC on Feb. 23 at 10 a.m. ET.