Infosys deepens collaboration with Intel to scale enterprise AI
Infosys and Intel expanded their strategic collaboration to move enterprise Artificial Intelligence (AI) initiatives from pilot stages into production, focusing on scaling production-ready deployments, optimizing performance, and delivering measurable enterprise outcomes across industries.
The effort combined Infosys Topaz Fabric with Intel's high-performance compute platforms and modular hardware and software stacks to advance open standards across the edge-to-cloud stack and to accelerate secure, scalable, and cost-efficient enterprise AI deployments.
Infosys Topaz Fabric was described as a purpose-built agentic services suite and a multi-layer AI fabric that unified infrastructure, models, data, applications, and workflows into a composable, agent-ready ecosystem; the collaboration referenced Intel Xeon processors, Intel Gaudi AI accelerators, and the Intel AI Process Control System (PCS) as target platforms.
The companies co-innovated on the design, development, optimization, and benchmarking of AI workloads across those Intel platforms and emphasized right-sized AI architectures that balanced performance, security, and Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) for mission-critical use cases such as IT operations, developer productivity, and automation workflows; the work also combined data integration, model management, performance monitoring, and built-in security and supported advanced AI agents that could access enterprise data, coordinate tasks, and operate with appropriate controls.
“Our collaboration with Intel reflects Infosys' commitment to embedding AI deeply and responsibly across enterprise operations. By bringing together Intel's compute leadership and the capabilities of Infosys Topaz, we are enabling enterprises to unlock AI value at scale – securely, cost–effectively, and with clear business impact. This aims to help our clients institutionalize AI at the core of their operations and transform their AI journey.” Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys, said.
The release included forward-looking statements about future growth prospects and potential risks that were described as intended to qualify for the 'safe harbor' under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.