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by ryao
378 days ago
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I read tinygrad’s website: https://tinygrad.org/#tinygrad Under driver quality for AMD, they say “developing” and point to their git repository. If AMD had fixed the issues, they would instead say the driver quality is great and get more sales. They can still get sales even if they are honest about the state of AMD hardware, since they sell Nvidia hardware too, while your company would risk 0 sales if you say anything other than “everything is fine”, since your business is based on leasing AMD GPUs: https://hotaisle.xyz/pricing/ Given your enormous conflict of interest, I will listen to what George Hotz and others are saying over what you say on this matter. |
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Appreciate you diving more into my business. Yes, we are one of the few that publishes transparent pricing.
When we started, we got zero sales, for a long time. Nobody knew if these things performed or not. So we donated hardware and people like ChipsAndCheese started to benchmark and write blog posts.
We knew the hardware was good, but the software sucked. 16 or so months later, things have changed and sufficiently improved that now we are at capacity. My deep involvement in this business is exactly how I know what’s going on.
Yes, I have a business to run, but at the same time, I was willing to take the risk, when no-one else would, and deploy this compute. To insinuate that I have some sort of conflict of interest is unfair, especially without knowing the full story.
At this juncture, I don’t know what point you’re trying to make. We agree the software sucked. Tinygrad now runs on mi300x. Whatever George’s motivations were a year ago are no longer true today.
If you feel rocm sucks so badly, go the tinygrad route. Same if you don’t want to be tied to cuda. Choice is a good thing. At the end of the day though, this isn’t a reflection on the hardware at all.