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by PEJOE
2046 days ago
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I would be interested in knowing how much compute happens away from Linux. My impression is that almost nobody uses windows for theses tasks, but anecdotes are not data. There are of course workstation type acceleration tasks like simulation that are very windows heavy(e.g. ANSYS), but I am not privy to the breakdown of compute demand per segment. > What AMD needs to do to "win" an HPC GPU launch is to have an event which is 95% "How we fixed ROCm, and here is our full software roadmap and support guarantee for the next 5 years" and the remaining 5% "oh btw here is our new silicon, it's really fast and shiny". This is a great point. NVDA has worked on CUDA for years and has a great ecosystem of material and questions on places like stackexchange. AMD will have to work very purposefully to close the gap, but it seems like they are aware and headed in the right direction. |
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AMDs linux support has been somewhere between no-assed to half-assed for the preceding decade. I think they believed that the world will return to windows for everything. That ship has sailed, long ago. The point about CUDA being usable up/down the HW stack is quite salient. When I develop GPU things, I start on my laptop GTX1060. Test on my deskside RTX2060, and run them on V100s. Code is in Julia, C, Fortran, so it should work anywhere with good underlying library support. I've got a zen laptop with integrated Radeon. No dice, can't do computing on it (yet).
AMDs function/library support is nascent, and will take years to get to a viable point for many.
I am hoping ... hoping ... that AMD sees this as an opportunity long term, and not a short term expense that must provide immediate ROI. SW ecosystems drive the HW purchases, but there is usually a lag of years before this engine really gets started.
AMD needs to be in this for the long haul.