Tech and AIGoogle unveils TurboQuant, a new AI memory compression algorithm...

Google unveils TurboQuant, a new AI memory compression algorithm — and yes, the internet is calling it ‘Pied Piper’

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If Google’s AI researchers had a sense of humor, they would have called TurboQuant, the new, ultra-efficient AI memory compression algorithm announced Tuesday, “Pied Piper” — or, at least that’s what the internet thinks.

The joke is a reference to the fictional startup Pied Piper that was the focus of HBO’s “Silicon Valley” TV series that ran from 2014 to 2019.

The show followed the startup’s founders as they navigated the tech ecosystem, facing challenges like competition from larger companies, fundraising, technology and product issues, and even (much to our delight) wowing the judges at a fictional version of TechCrunch Disrupt.

Pied Piper’s breakthrough technology on the TV show was a compression algorithm that greatly reduced file sizes with near-lossless compression. Google Research’s new TurboQuant, is also about extreme compression without quality loss, but applied to a core bottleneck in AI systems. Hence, the comparisons.

Google Research described the technology as a novel way to shrink AI’s working memory without impacting performance. The compression method, which uses a form of vector quantization to clear cache bottlenecks in AI processing, would essentially allow AI to remember more information while taking up less space and maintaining accuracy, according to the researchers.

They plan to present their findings at the ICLR 2026 conference next month, along with the two methods that are making this compression possible: the quantization method PolarQuant and a training and optimization method called QJL.

Understanding the math involved here is something researchers and computer scientists may be able to do, but the results are exciting the wider tech industry as a whole.

If successfully implemented in the real world, TurboQuant could make AI cheaper to run by reducing its runtime “working memory” — known as the KV cache — by “at least 6x.”

Some, like Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince, are even calling this Google’s DeepSeek moment — a reference to the efficiency gains driven by the Chinese AI model, which was trained at a fraction of the cost of its rivals on worse chips, while remaining competitive on its results.

Still, it’s worth noting that TurboQuant hasn’t yet been deployed broadly; it’s still a lab breakthrough at this time.

That makes comparisons with something like DeepSeek, or even the fictional Pied Piper, more difficult. On TV, Pied Piper’s technology was going to radically change the rules of computing. TurboQuant, meanwhile, could lead to efficiency gains and systems that require less memory during inference. But it wouldn’t necessarily solve the wider RAM shortages driven by AI, given that it only targets inference memory, not training — the latter of which continues to require massive amounts of RAM.



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