• @Zarxrax@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    154 months ago

    They didn’t just “happen to be around”. They created the entire ecosystem around machine learning while AMD just twiddled their thumbs. There is a reason why no one is buying AMD cards to run AI workloads.

    • @sanpo@sopuli.xyz
      link
      fedilink
      English
      114 months ago

      One of the reasons being Nvidia forcing unethical vendor lock in through their licensing.

    • @towerful@programming.dev
      link
      fedilink
      English
      24 months ago

      I feel like for a long time, CUDA was a laser looking for a problem.
      It’s just that the current (AI) problem might solve expensive employment issues.
      It’s just that C-Suite/managers are pointing that laser at the creatives instead of the jobs whose task it is to accumulate easily digestible facts and produce a set of instructions. You know, like C-Suites and middle/upper managers do.
      And NVidia have pushed CUDA so hard.

      AMD have ROCM, an open source cuda equivalent for amd.
      But it’s kinda like Linux Vs windows. NVidia CUDA is just so damn prevalent.
      I guess it was first. Cuda has wider compatibility with Nvidia cards than rocm with AMD cards.
      The only way AMD can win is to show a performance boost for a power reduction and cheaper hardware. So many people are entrenched in NVidia, the cost to switching to rocm/amd is a huge gamble