Infosys’ end‑to‑end AI push
Infosys has rolled out a ‘silicon to application’ AI strategy that aims to cover the full stack from hardware to enterprise applications. The company describes this approach as an integrated AI offering rather than isolated pilots, signalling a market move toward end‑to‑end vendor solutions (timesofindia.indiatimes.com).
Infosys is trying to sell artificial intelligence as one connected stack, from the chips that run models to the software employees use. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com) The company’s new pitch, described as “silicon to application,” was reported on April 16 from Bengaluru and centers on targeted investments and partnerships across each layer of the artificial intelligence system. At the hardware layer, the report said, Infosys is working with Nvidia and Intel. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com; infosys.com; nvidianews.nvidia.com) Infosys has spent the past year building the software layers on top of that hardware. Its Topaz offering says it includes more than 12,000 artificial intelligence assets, more than 150 pre-trained models and more than 10 artificial intelligence platforms, while a newer “Topaz Fabric” product is described as a multi-layer system that ties together infrastructure, models, data, applications and workflows. (infosys.com; infosys.com) That matters for clients because many corporate artificial intelligence projects have stalled between pilot tests and full deployment. Infosys and Intel said on March 3 that the next phase of their partnership is aimed at helping enterprises move “from AI pilots to production at scale.” (infosys.com) Infosys is also telling investors that the market is getting big enough to justify a broader land grab. On February 17, the company said its “AI first value framework” is designed to capture an artificial intelligence services opportunity of more than $300 billion, and a company transcript says Infosys is already doing artificial intelligence work for 90% of its largest 200 clients. (infosys.com; infosys.com) The phrase “silicon to application” is corporate shorthand for the full route an artificial intelligence system takes. Chips provide computing power, software tools manage models and data, and business applications turn that machinery into tasks like coding, search, customer service or document processing. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com; infosys.com) Infosys has been filling in those layers with alliances. In 2026 alone, it announced collaborations with Anthropic for regulated-industry artificial intelligence systems, Cognition to deploy the coding agent Devin, and Harness for software delivery and governance tied to Topaz Fabric. (infosys.com; infosys.com; infosys.com) The company had already moved earlier on agent software. On May 29, 2025, Infosys said it launched more than 200 enterprise artificial intelligence agents with Google Cloud, giving it a catalog of ready-made tools before this broader full-stack push. (infosys.com) The bet is that buyers want fewer disconnected pilots and more vendors willing to assemble the whole system. Infosys is now packaging that idea as a service company’s version of the full stack. (timesofindia.indiatimes.com; infosys.com)