News: 0001574211

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Intel Releases OpenVINO 2025.3 With More GenAI Enhancements & Arc Pro B-Series Support

([Intel] 6 Hours Ago OpenVINO 2025.3)


On the same day as beginning to ship the [1]Intel Arc Pro B50 ~$349 USD workstation graphics card, Intel also shipped OpenVINO 2025.3 as the newest feature release for this open-source AI toolkit.

OpenVINO 2025.3 brings support for the Intel Arc Pro B-Series including the now-shipping Arc Pro B50 as reviewed yesterday on Phoronix. OpenVINO is also ready to go with the upcoming Arc Pro B60 that is more interesting for AI workloads due to the 24GB of RAM.

On the hardware side, Intel also expanded its NPU support with OpenVINO 2025.3. The Intel NPU found in their Core Ultra SoCs should now work with OpenVINO for Qwen3-1.7B, Qwen3-4B, and Qwen3-8B models. There is also a number of other enhancements around their NPU plug-in with this OpenVINO update. LLMs optimized for Intel NPU use are also now available via Hugging Face.

At large, OpenVINO 2025.3 adds GenAI support for the Phi-4-mini-reasoning, AFM-4.5B, Gemma-3-1B-it, Gemma-3-4B-it, and Gemma-3-12B models. Plus a number of other enhancements throughout for this quarterly OpenVINO 2025.3 AI toolkit update.

Downloads and more details on the OpenVINO 2025.3 release via [2]GitHub .



[1] https://www.phoronix.com/review/intel-arc-pro-b50-linux

[2] https://github.com/openvinotoolkit/openvino/releases/tag/2025.3.0



phoronix

New Crime Identified: "Tech Rage"

HARRISBURG, IL -- The police department in this Illinois town has coined a
new term for a growing trend in crime: "tech rage". Tech rage shares many
similarities with another modern crime, "road rage", but instead of
affecting drivers, tech rage is experienced by disgruntled computer users.

The first documented case of tech rage involves a Microsoft salesman, Bob
Glutzfield, who convinced the local TV station to "upgrade" its computer
systems from Macintosh to Wintel. While the migration seemed successful at
first, the Blue Screen became more prevalent during the following months.

Then, in January, the entire computer system crashed in the middle of the
weather forecast during the 10 o'clock evening news. Viewers could plainly
see the Blue Screen of Death showing in the monitors behind James Roland,
the chief meteorologist. The instability of Windows 98 stretched Roland's
patience until he snapped last week and succumbed to tech rage.

Roland tracked down the Microsoft salesman and followed him one evening to
his apartment. The weatherman yelled at the bewildered Microserf, "You
[expletive]! Because of you, I'm the [expletive] laughing stock of Southern
Illinois!" and then proceeded to beat him up. Roland is currently out on
bond pending trial next month.