Umar Ahmad, AI@Edge Evangelist at Advantech, presents a practical overview of how edge AI projects move from concept to production, and why hardware choice is only one part of the equation. The talk focuses on how CPUs, GPUs, and NPUs fit different workloads, and why deployment, software readiness, thermal design, and lifecycle support often decide whether an AI product succeeds in the field. [https://www.advantech.com/](https://www.advantech.com/)
A central theme is the full AI workflow: data collection, transfer learning, model optimization, format conversion, application development, edge deployment, monitoring, and retraining. Advantech positions itself as a partner across that chain, with board support packages, drivers, benchmarking tools, SDK support, and engineering services designed to shorten the path from trained model to production-ready embedded system.
The compute discussion is grounded in real trade-offs. CPUs are described as a strong fit for general-purpose processing, rule-based AI, and lighter sensor or time-series workloads. GPUs remain the preferred option for deep learning, vision, and higher-throughput edge inference, while NPUs target lower-power AI acceleration for industrial automation and embedded vision. The point is not that one architecture wins, but that each one matches a different deployment profile.
One of the more useful parts of the presentation is the warning against treating TOPS as the only metric that matters. Umar Ahmad explains that TOPS mostly reflects raw INT8 compute and can be misleading without context. In real edge AI design, latency, throughput, power efficiency, thermal behavior, memory bandwidth, framework support, operating system compatibility, and development environment maturity are often more relevant than a headline performance number.
Recorded at Embedded World 2026 in Nuremberg, this Advantech presentation also touches on practical platform selection across Intel, NVIDIA, Qualcomm, Rockchip, NXP, and accelerator vendors such as Hailo, along with Ubuntu Pro support on NXP i.MX8 through Canonical. The result is a useful summary of how edge AI moves beyond demos into maintainable, scalable products built for 24/7 operation in industrial and vision-centric environments



