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Intel's CTO and AI chief, Sachin Katti, has left the company and has now joined OpenAI to power the company's push towards AGI, but interestingly, he has left his former firm in a very 'uncertain' stage. Intel’s Former CTO & AI Chief 'Surprisingly' Exits, Putting the Company’s AI Comeback in Jeopardy Intel has been under massive restructuring ever since CEO Lip-Bu Tan took over, and one of the more optimistic moves by the company was appointing Sachin as the company's CTO and AI chief. For those unaware, Sachin has been leading Intel's AI strategy in recent times, and the last time we did see him was back at the Intel Tech Tour, where he announced the company's roadmap for a 'comeback' in the AI race. However, just months after his post as Intel's CTO, Sachin Katti has revealed his switch to OpenAI, where he will be "designing and building compute infrastructure" of the AI giant. Based on what CRN says, the position of AI chief would now be overseen directly by CEO Lip-Bu Tan. This does put the company's future in the industry under uncertainity, given that announcements by former CTO Sachin Katti at the ITT were centered around the company's AI roadmap, and also under his leadership, Intel showcased their inference-focused 'Crescent Island' solution, which featured 160 GB of memory, offering energy-efficient performance. We will have to see whether Intel's CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, has a similar approach to Intel's AI business. However, the departure of Sachin Katti will likely leave a strain on the company's operations. Intel's AI strategy has been underperforming ever since the rise of the technology. Since the time of former CEO Pat Gelsinger, the firm was looking to capitalize on the inference segment, despite 'training' being the hype. Now, as AI inference gains demand, Team Blue still hasn't presented a credible solution, which raises concerns about what the company plans to achieve in the upcoming months. We do know that Intel has an "annual product cadence" in place, with Jaguar Shores coming next, but with Sachin Katti and other executives from multiple divisions leaving Team Blue, it appears that the internal optimism defintely lacks. For now, Intel's main priority is boosting shareholder value, which the company has achieved through partnerships with NVIDIA, SoftBank, and the Trump administration. However, when it comes to the consumer and AI segments, Team Blue appears to lag behind.