Industry observers note that but if you do, there’s a major problem. Most sophisticated models can’t fit inside the limitations of your PC’s memory and storage. Phison and Intel are working on a solution. Not everyone wants to run local AI on their own PCs.
As part of the ongoing story, that has two advantages: bringing local AI to more laptops and allowing more powerful laptops to load even larger models or else run separate tasks alongside AI. On a PC, AI can monopolize system resources, preventing any other work from being done. This can sometimes force a user to buy a dedicated AI PC. Using Phison’s aiDAPTIV solution, a 26 billion parameter AI model can be run on a laptop with 16GB of RAM, versus the 32GB of RAM it would normally require.
As part of the ongoing story, it’s a simple productivity solution, allowing either larger AI models to be run on a PC or freeing up a laptop for other tasks.
According to the latest update, in either case, tokens are being generated on the fly inside the video memory. (Intel traditionally split half of a laptop’s system RAM between the integrated GPU and Windows, before allowing consumers to manually adjust the allocation in August 2025.). Part of AI’s devices problem is that it has to calculate tokens, whether for something as simple as asking an LLM for a poem or a more complex set of instructions to monitor oil prices and make predictions.
As part of the ongoing story, those can be recalculated again or stored as a reference. The problem is that AI functions are typically processed in video RAM or system RAM that’s shared with the GPU. The result? Everything bogs down. The problem is that as a user goes on and on with an LLM, it has to remember what the original prompt instructions were as well as updates.
In a fresh development, since RAM is where AI functions are computed, robbing a portion of it to “store” data lessens its effectiveness.
The report highlights that microsoft Word runs on your PC’s CPU and uses RAM to do it, but documents are stored in the cloud or in the SSD. If Word needs a document, it asks Windows to retrieve it from your SSD. Phison does something similar. But there’s a solution and it’s one you’re probably already familiar with.
The report highlights that (Technically, the cache stores the key-value (KV) data, which grows with the context length and model size.) Normally, this would slow down the entire process. What aiDAPTIV tries to do is anticipate the model’s needs, intelligently sending data back and forth between the RAM and the SSD to allow you to run larger models without impacting performance. What Phison’s aiDAPTIV does is use high-performance, extreme-endurance NAND flash as an AI cache, storing tokens to be recalled for later use.
In a fresh development, together, Phison and Intel are working to demonstrate the technology for programs vendors, which could eventually optimize their own apps for the technology. The collaboration focuses on enabling Phison’s technology on Intel AI PC services powered by Intel Core Ultra processors, including support for the OpenVINO toolkit, the two firms said.
According to the latest update, it also assumes that users will want to run “full fat” versions of their AI models, rather than quantized models that trade accuracy for lower memory requirements and higher speed. Of course, assuming users want to run AI locally instead of in the cloud with ChatGPT or Claude.
Industry observers note that the joint work is being performed using Phison’s Pascari AI100E family of specialized SSDs, which are designed for high endurance and sustained performance. That suggests that a successful implementation may require a laptop maker to specifically buy the Pascari SSDs. At press time, a 1TB Pascari AI100E in an M.2 2280 configuration costs $2,516 at Best Buy. The aiDAPTIV concept sounds simple enough, but there’s a potential catch.
In a fresh development, optane, based on 3D XPoint memory, was an entirely fresh type of memory co-developed between Intel and Micron, and it behaved more like traditional memory than flash. But a lack of consumer demand forced Intel to shut down its Optane SSDs in 2021 before writing off half a billion dollars in inventory a year later. Intel has gone down that road before.
According to the latest update, while memory vendors publicly agreed, privately they trashed Rambus and its licensing requirements. The lesson? A technical advantage is one thing, but being forced into a single supplier or technology is another thing altogether. We’ll see how this all plays out. A quarter century ago, I also covered the arrival, delays and eventual demise of Direct Rambus DRAM, in which memory manufacturers were asked to sign on to a partnership between Intel and Rambus over a specific type of PC memory.
The report highlights that he has authored over 3,500 articles for PCWorld alone, covering PC microprocessors, peripherals, and Microsoft Windows, among other topics. Mark has written for publications including PC Magazine, Byte, eWEEK, Highly adopted Science and Electronic Buyers' News, where he shared a Jesse H. Neal Award for breaking news. He recently handed over a collection of several dozen Thunderbolt docks and USB-C hubs because his office simply has no more room. Mark has written for PCWorld for the last decade, with 30 years of experience covering technology.