Originally posted by kattjaevel
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
AMD Working To Release MES Documentation & Source Code
Collapse
X
-
I absolutely agree with the "upside down" world idea. Serious companies collaborate together without much public drama. AMD should have made some public answer to tinycorp whinings and bring the work on. We now see that the work was going on and something just materialized, but it looks to me that tinycorp whined a lot without give the material time to do the job.
Actually AMD was very open if it is true that tiny corp CEO was able to talk with AMD CEO, one worth's nothing yet and the other has billion dollars capitalization.
- Likes 7
Comment
-
Originally posted by Quackdoc View PostIt's not enterprise, it's no where close to enterprise scale.
Originally posted by Quackdoc View Postalso prices would go up anyways.
Originally posted by hajj_3 View PostTinycorp is using the 7900XTX and an nvidia gpu (not sure which model).
Originally posted by hajj_3 View PostUnless you are buying the 7900XTX it is unlikely you will face any potential price increase.
Also, what we saw with mining is that even when an adjacent card was popular with miners, it would push up prices on cards around it, as demand for the popular card got displaced towards others.Last edited by coder; 05 April 2024, 05:33 AM.
- Likes 4
Comment
-
Sigh, AMD needs to learn from Nvidia CUDA as it will run on a lowly GT1030, not spectacularly mind but it runs and a breeze to install. Most users only care if something is easy to install and it does what it says it does. Frankly ROCm is a mess and the way AMD are currently trying to position it for high end and latest cards only is doomed to failure and suicide, not to mention being a pain in the arse to install.
PS Mike, the website is really slow today, almost DDos like slow.
- Likes 7
Comment
-
Originally posted by coder View PostActually, they have previously complained that they expected to get a lot of community contributions from their open sourcing, but instead have gotten very little.
Instead it's more like. "I know this is an error. You OWE the community to fix this."
So instead of greedy GPU manufacturers, you get a greedy community.
- Likes 5
Comment
-
Originally posted by Slartifartblast View PostSigh, AMD needs to learn from Nvidia CUDA as it will run on a lowly GT1030, not spectacularly mind but it runs and a breeze to install. Most users only care if something is easy to install and it does what it says it does. Frankly ROCm is a mess and the way AMD are currently trying to position it for high end and latest cards only is doomed to failure and suicide, not to mention being a pain in the arse to install.
PS Mike, the website is really slow today, almost DDos like slow.
Unless cuda was perfect from day one (which happened over 15 years ago, but who's counting)
Also, as usual, they tried to do the right thing by depending in OpenCL and that burned them.
But hey, it's easier to simply trash them no matter what they do.
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Originally posted by milkylainen View Post
Exactly this. Usually people invest 0% time helping out with the shoveling.
Instead it's more like. "I know this is an error. You OWE the community to fix this."
So instead of greedy GPU manufacturers, you get a greedy community.
They get no help from then community yet the anti foss bastards at ngreedia have an army of ass-kissers doing all the work under the most imposible circumstances without any help from them.
- Likes 3
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by milkylainen View PostExactly this. Usually people invest 0% time helping out with the shoveling.
Instead it's more like. "I know this is an error. You OWE the community to fix this."
So instead of greedy GPU manufacturers, you get a greedy community.
While "the community" is way more trustworthy than any given corporation, there are some who ascribe saintly qualities to the community. Instead, community greed can and at times does reach omnipresence.
Also, it is worth noting that "the community" is often more driven by necessity after official corporate support ends. It's like an extra few years of free support tacked onto the end. But for right now, it is a fair expectation that AMD should be the ones doing the work and that's not community greed at all. That's called a contractual obligation on AMD's part.Last edited by ezst036; 05 April 2024, 10:36 AM.
- Likes 2
Comment
Comment