The Instinct MI300 is AMD's data-center GPU accelerator aimed at AI and high-performance computing workloads. When a product moves from launch event to a named entry in the annual report, it has entered the formal product record, and AMD's newly filed 10-K does exactly that for the MI300 Series.
The filing is the FY2023 Form 10-K (sec.gov; accession 0000002488-24-000012). It describes the AMD Instinct family of GPU accelerator products, including the Instinct MI200 and MI300 Series, as data-center GPUs for computing workloads. The MI300 now appears alongside the prior-generation MI200 in the catalog.
Why does the placement matter? A data-center GPU accelerator is the kind of part that competes for AI training and inference budgets. Listing MI200 and MI300 together in the data-center GPU description signals a product generation cadence in the most contested segment of the market, recorded where the company is formally accountable for the claim.
The architecture is what makes MI300 a data-center part rather than a graphics chip: it pairs compute dies with high-bandwidth memory in an advanced package, the standard recipe for feeding AI math units enough data to stay busy. The 10-K's data-center-GPU framing reflects that positioning.
For an explainer reader, the lesson is to watch product names enter the filing record. The MI300's appearance in the annual report is the contemporaneous marker that AMD's accelerator line has a current-generation entry in the field - the baseline future filings will report against.
The primary source is the sec.gov 10-K; it was surfaced through EdgarBeast, an SEC-filing evidence index. To date a product's arrival in the business, read when it enters the 10-K - for MI300, that is the FY2023 annual report.