On the morning of December 16, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) Chair and CEO Lisa Su led an executive delegation to visit Lenovo Group's global headquarters in Beijing. Photos circulating online show AMD representatives touring Lenovo's latest products and technological achievements, including humanoid robots, accompanied by Lenovo executives.
As the second-largest player in the global AI chip industry after Nvidia, AMD has rapidly strengthened its strategic position in the AI computing market over the past two years. Recently, Time magazine named "The Architects of AI" as its 2025 Person of the Year, featuring Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, xAI founder Elon Musk, AMD CEO Lisa Su, and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
This is not the first interaction between Lisa Su and Lenovo Group. In March 2025, Su visited China, with Lenovo being her first corporate stop. Shortly after, the two companies announced multiple collaborations in AI PCs and deeper synergies in AI servers. AMD and Lenovo jointly serve major cloud computing and AI cluster clients, including Microsoft, Meta, and Oracle.
Around the same time, Lenovo has also been accelerating its partnership with Nvidia. About a month ago, Lenovo’s entire board and core executives were invited to Nvidia’s California headquarters for in-depth discussions on AI infrastructure, enterprise computing solutions, and potential ecosystem-level collaborations. Neither company disclosed details of the talks.
Lenovo previously announced that it will host its Tech World Innovation Conference on January 6, 2026, at the iconic Sphere in Las Vegas, where it will showcase its latest AI products, service solutions, and progress in hybrid AI strategy. Attendees will include Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and AMD CEO Lisa Su.
In the data center and GPU chip sector, competition between Nvidia and AMD extends beyond performance—it encompasses platform capabilities, software ecosystems, and system-level delivery efficiency. Nvidia dominates the high-end training and inference market with CUDA and mature software stacks, while AMD seeks breakthroughs in cloud computing and customized AI deployments with cost-efficient hardware and open software strategies.
For both companies, Lenovo holds significant strategic value. As the world’s largest edge-AI manufacturer and one of the few tech firms achieving large-scale commercialization in both B2B and B2C sectors, Lenovo is not only a key chip customer but also a critical bridge connecting computing power to real-world applications.
Despite holding the top global PC market share for over a decade, Lenovo’s ambitions go beyond hardware leadership. Through its hybrid AI strategy, the company aims to transition from a traditional device manufacturer to an AI computing and services integrator, building a global AI infrastructure ecosystem centered on edge devices—bringing AI capabilities beyond models and the cloud into cross-platform edge AI deployments.
Comments