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AMD Wants To Know If You'd Like Ryzen AI Support On Linux

github.com Linux? · Issue #2 · amd/RyzenAI-SW

https://www.phoronix.com/news/AMD-Ryzen-AI-Open-Source-Demo AMD Has Open-Source Ryzen AI Demo Code - But Only For Windows

Linux? · Issue #2 · amd/RyzenAI-SW

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(IMO, they should've limited comments,and gone with reaction count there, its looks mess right now )

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  • Can someone quickly explain what this is about?

    • This is the first time I'm hearing about this, but this is how they describe it on their product page:

      The AI-Powered Future of Windows Devices

      Build, explore, and immerse yourself on select laptops with Ryzen™ AI built in. With dedicated AI accelerator hardware seamlessly integrated on-chip and software that intelligently optimizes tasks and workloads, CPU and GPU resources are freed up to enable optimal performance.

      But based on the examples they have on github, it sounds like it might be useful to run generic AI compute stuff. I haven't seen any details about what memory it uses, since especially LLMs require large amounts of fast memory. If it can use all the system RAM it might provide medium-fast inference of decent models, similar to M1/M2 Macs. If it has dedicated RAM it'll probably be even faster but possibly extremely limited in what you can do with it.

      • if it can use all the system RAM it might provide medium-fast inference of decent models

        Yeah, I get what you mean -- if I can throw 128GB or 256GB of system memory and parallel compute hardware together, that'd enable use of large models, which would let you do some things that can't currently be done other than (a) slowly, on a CPU or (b) with far-more-expensive GPU or GPU-like hardware. Like, you could run a huge model with parallel compute hardware in a middle ground for performance that doesn't exist today.

        It doesn't really sound to me like that's the goal, though.

        https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-demoes-ryzen-ai-at-computex-2023

        AMD Demoes Ryzen AI at Computex 2023

        AI for the masses.

        The goal for the XDNA AI engine is to execute lower-intensity AI inference workloads, like audio, photo, and video processing, at lower power than you could achieve on a CPU or GPU while delivering faster response times than online services, thus boosting performance and saving battery power.

        Much of the advantage of having an inbuilt AI engine resides in power efficiency, a must in power-constrained devices like laptops, but that might not be as meaningful in an unconstrained desktop PC that can use a more powerful dedicated GPU or CPU for inference workloads -- but without the battery life concerns.

        I asked McAfee if those factors could impact AMD's decision on whether or not it would bring XDNA to desktop PCs, and he responded that it will boil down to whether or not the feature delivers enough value that it would make sense to dedicate valuable die area to the engine. AMD is still evaluating the impact, particularly as Ryzen 7040 works its way into the market.

        That sounds like the goal is providing low-power parallel compute capability. I'm guessing stuff like local speech recognition on laptops would be a useful local, low-power application that could take advantage of parallel compute.

        The demo has it doing facial recognition, though I don't really know where there's a lot of demand for doing that with limited power use today.

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