Server - CMS _ Composable Memory System - Workstream - (2026-02-05)
Why It Matters
Defining the CMS roadmap now ensures resources target high‑growth AI memory needs and mitigates adoption risks, directly impacting the company’s competitive position in next‑gen compute.
Key Takeaways
- •Meeting focused on finalizing CMS workstream scope for 2026
- •Survey shows modest current composable memory use, strong AI interest
- •Only 15 responses; data bias toward internal CMS group
- •Security constraints limit sharing detailed vulnerability findings publicly
- •Next steps: gather external feedback, clarify pooling terminology, align timelines
Summary
The video records a CMS workstream meeting on February 5 2026 at the Reality Lab, where team members coordinated logistics, addressed security protocols, and outlined the agenda to lock down deliverables for the composable memory system this year.
A central focus was the review of an internal survey with only 15 respondents, revealing that roughly 40 % are using or planning composable memory, 38 % expect adoption within three to five years, and AI workloads show the highest current usage at about 45 %. Pooling memory adoption remains low at 27 %, and the limited sample is acknowledged as biased toward the CMS group.
Key remarks included the need to “make a case for general purpose compute and then for AI there is attraction,” and concerns that security policies prevent sharing detailed vulnerability findings. Participants stressed the importance of external customer feedback and clarified confusion between composable and pooled memory terminology.
The meeting’s outcome is a clarified roadmap: finalize scope, prioritize AI‑driven memory solutions, address adoption barriers, and expand survey outreach to obtain unbiased market data, guiding R&D investment and product planning for the upcoming year.
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