XConn Technologies Showcases Dynamic Memory Allocation with CXL Switch and AMD at CXL DevCon 2025

XConn Technologies and AMD unveil dynamic memory allocation using CXL switch technology, advancing cloud and Artificial Intelligence data center efficiency.

XConn Technologies, recognized for its innovations in interconnect technologies for high-performance computing and Artificial Intelligence, has demonstrated a significant leap in data center memory management at CXL DevCon 2025. The company’s live demonstration at the Santa Clara Marriott revealed how Compute Express Link (CXL) switch technology enables dynamic, on-demand memory pooling and expansion across heterogeneous computing environments.

This achievement, presented in collaboration with AMD, highlights the potential for more flexible and scalable memory infrastructure in modern data centers. By harnessing the XConn Apollo CXL switch, organizations can dynamically allocate memory resources as workloads demand, eliminating the need to over-provision memory and thereby streamlining both performance and resource utilization. This capability is particularly relevant for cloud computing, Artificial Intelligence, and high-performance computing (HPC), where demands on throughput and responsiveness continue to grow.

The successful deployment of dynamic memory allocation via CXL switching is positioned to deliver substantial operational benefits. Notably, data centers stand to gain from reduced total cost of ownership (TCO) by allocating resources with precision, enhancing overall efficiency, and supporting a wide range of applications across diverse hardware ecosystems. This new milestone underscores XConn Technologies´ and AMD´s roles in pioneering connectivity and memory solutions for next-generation, data-intensive workloads.

71

Impact Score

Google Vids opens free video generation to all Google users

Google has made Google Vids available to anyone with a Google account, adding free access to video generation with its latest models. The move expands Google’s end-to-end video workflow and increases pressure on rivals that charge for similar tools.

Court warns against chatbot legal advice in Heppner case

A federal court found that chats with a publicly available generative Artificial Intelligence tool were not protected by attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine. The ruling highlights litigation risks when executives or employees use chatbots for legal guidance without lawyer supervision.

Newsom orders California to weigh Artificial Intelligence harms in contract rules

Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed an executive order directing California agencies to account for potential Artificial Intelligence harms in state contracting while expanding approved use of generative tools across government. The move follows a dispute involving Anthropic and reflects a broader split between California and the Trump administration on Artificial Intelligence oversight.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.