- Joined
- Mar 12, 2024
- Messages
- 49 (0.20/day)
System Name | SOCIETY |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 9 7800x3D |
Motherboard | MSI MAG X670E TOMAHAWK |
Cooling | Arctic Liquid Freezer II 420 |
Memory | 64GB 6000mhz |
Video Card(s) | Nvidia RTX 3090 |
Storage | WD SN850X 4TB, Micron 1100 2TB, ZFS NAS over 10gbe network |
Display(s) | 27" Dell S2721DGF, 24" ASUS IPS, 24" Dell IPS |
Case | Corsair 750D |
Power Supply | Cooler Master 1200W Gold |
Mouse | Razer Deathadder |
Keyboard | ROG Falchion |
VR HMD | Pimax 8KX |
Software | Windows 10 with Debian VM |
In what way? ROCm versus OneAPI? I haven't heard talk of OneAPI but I've heard mainly negative talk about ROCm - either that it's unavailable on hardware or unavailable on software you want to use. Or cases where AMD's forced to do operations with 32 bit width instead of 16 and therefore needs twice the VRAM to store it.Trouble is, AMD has its sights set on the AI market and it's miles ahead of Intel in that area, with a more widely accepted software stack.
Intel and AMD both have scored supercomputer deals recently. But I think such computers tend to work around software limitations that would burden other market segments, so I can't tell whether AMD or Intel is really meaningfully outdoing each other relative to Nvidia.
On the consumer side, https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/stable-diffusion-benchmarks showed intel had surprisingly competitive performance compared to amd. But, there's a few caveats. They were using Windows and all the AMD SD users I know claim the windows performance is a disaster compared to using AMD + Linux + SD. I haven't heard if the same is true for Intel because I don't know anyone who has even tried. On Nvidia it doesn't really matter, the performance between linux and windows for SD isnt that significant.