OpenPOWER Foundation implementation programs bring member organizations together to build commodity hardware, silicon, and infrastructure — shared platforms that the entire POWER ecosystem benefits from equally.
Programs focused on building commodity silicon and platform infrastructure that regulated enterprises and sovereign-compute deployments can rely on — open by design, US-manufactured, auditable end-to-end.
Programs developing certified hardware platforms and compute accelerators — reference designs, validated systems, and inference infrastructure that OEMs and end users can build on.
A community-developed, POWER ISA-compliant processor core designed for integration into SoCs and FPGA platforms — production-ready reference implementation for chip designers.
An open hardware AI inference accelerator for POWER-native deployments — fully auditable from silicon to firmware, with coherent memory fabric for low-latency inference at the edge and in the data center.
An Open Compute Project-spec server platform built on POWER — enabling ODMs to deliver validated, OCP-compliant systems to regulated enterprise and hyperscale buyers.
Programs building the management, service processor, and interconnect layers that complete a sovereign, fully auditable POWER server stack.
An open, auditable baseboard management interface for POWER servers — designed for regulated environments where out-of-band management firmware must be transparent and verifiable.
An open implementation of the POWER Flexible Service Processor — enabling transparent, field-auditable service processor firmware in compliance-sensitive deployments.
An initiative to establish Osmosis as the open coherent accelerator fabric for POWER — enabling high-bandwidth, zero-copy memory-coherent connections between POWER processors and AI accelerators. Advancing patent license grants from consortium founders to make the full stack freely deployable.
Programs are member-driven efforts that pool resources, expertise, and buying power to create infrastructure that benefits every participant — not just the organizations that funded it.
Regulated enterprises write their compliance requirements — DORA, FIPS, FedRAMP, HIPAA — directly into the program specification. The platform is designed to solve real procurement problems.
Hyperscalers, ODMs, and silicon fabs join as builder partners — each contributing design resources, manufacturing capacity, or system qualification to the shared platform.
Everything produced — silicon architecture, firmware, attestation specifications — is governed by independent foundations under open licenses. No single vendor can lock the outcome.
Cooperative procurement pricing, shared certification work, and collective bargaining power mean that every member gets outcomes that no single organization could achieve alone.
Whether you're a regulated enterprise, a hyperscaler with in-house silicon, an ODM, or a silicon fab — there's a role in the open POWER ecosystem for you.