• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Interview with AMD's Senior Vice President and Chief Software Officer Andrej Zdravkovic: UDNA, ROCm for Radeon, AI Everywhere, and Much More!

AleksandarK

News Editor
Staff member
Joined
Aug 19, 2017
Messages
2,579 (0.97/day)
A few days ago, we reported on AMD's newest expansion plans for Serbia. The company opened two new engineering design centers with offices in Belgrade and Nis. We were invited to join the opening ceremony and got an exclusive interview with one of AMD's top executives, Andrej Zdravkovic, who is the senior vice president and Chief Software Officer. Previously, we reported on AMD's transition to become a software company. The company has recently tripled its software engineering workforce and is moving some of its best people to support these teams. AMD's plan is spread over a three to five-year timeframe to improve its software ecosystem, accelerating hardware development to launch new products more frequently and to react to changes in software demand. AMD found that to help these expansion efforts, opening new design centers in Serbia would be very advantageous.

We sat down with Andrej Zdravkovic to discuss the purpose of AMD's establishment in Serbia and the future of some products. Zdravkovic is actually an engineer from Serbia, where he completed his Bachelor's and Master's degrees in electrical engineering from Belgrade University. In 1998, Zdravkovic joined ATI and quickly rose through the ranks, eventually becoming a senior director. During his decade-long tenure, Zdravkovic witnessed a significant industry shift as AMD acquired ATI in 2006. After a brief stint at another company, Zdravkovic returned to AMD in 2015, bringing with him a wealth of experience and a unique perspective on the evolution of the graphics and computing industry.



Here is the full interview:


Aleksandar: So, regarding the new opening of the center in Serbia, what is it going to be about? Is it going to be about software or hardware, AI or anything else?

Andrej: Primarily it is software for team we have right now. Large part of the team is working on the virtualization of our graphics processor for the data centers. We have a team working on compilers. We have the team working on content protection and security, which is going to be expanding into further security aspects. And we have a team working on AI technologies for data center developing our ROCm subsystem for data center. New team, that we just established, is working on ROCm for Radeon. We're extending our ROCm subsystem to Radeon graphics products, so everybody can get to use AI on AMD APUs and Radeon GPUs. Going further, we are not limiting Serbia team to these technologies. This is going to be a full-fledged design center, we are going to have RTL design, hardware verification and many other hardware and software technologies as an option. It really will depend on the available talent and on the ability to link to [local] universities. Virtually creating talent.

TechPowerUp: What made you come to Serbia, is it the local talent or anything else?

Andrej: Few different things. Definitely the availability of the qualified engineering talent. We started with a provider of outside services. We recognized the capability, and we have grown the initial, relatively small core, to the sizeable team of engineers that are working for us now. I personally have to insist the local talent is phenomenal because I graduated from the university here. It is very important that engineers we hire are very interested to learn and step up to new challenges. We started to work with Serbian universities, to partner and grow the next [generation] talent.

TechPowerUp: So, you were discussing ROCm. How easy it is for development right now and how easy it will be in the future for developers to write ROCm software and adapt from other accelerators for AI and machine learning to AMD ROCm accelerators.

Andrej: Great question. Today the challenge for ROCm developers is that they need to work on a big data center, [Instinct MI] machine intelligence type products. The access to that kind of a high-end product is limited, usually to developers in big companies like Microsoft. Also, the cost of that access is pretty high. We are bringing ROCm as a subsystem on the Radeon graphics products, desktop graphics products, or any Radeon APU powering desktops and notebooks. Developers will be provided with everyday access to ROCm. ROCm subsystem and the language that sits above it, which is "HIP", is very interesting for many developers from a perspective of being completely open. Compared to our competition, we have the system that is open top-to-bottom, completely open source. Any development, any contribution, and debugging is much easier for developers. We also provide the tools that allow a developer to take an AI application designed for CUDA and use the application that is called "HIPIFY" to transfer it from CUDA to run directly on HIP and ROCm.

TechPowerUp: How reliable is HIPIFY for enterprise applications?

Andrej: We find that HIPIFY is very reliable and very straightforward. We also find it's usually quite performant. Further optimizations are always welcomed, of course, but we find that out to the shoot, it works OK. There are some aspects that introduce complexity because the hardware subsystems are not the same. If the application is using these constructs and some of the lower level function calls, that are hardware specific, that is something that HIPIFY cannot translate. We don't find it that often, other than in applications that are extremely, extremely optimized. But then, if somebody had a will to optimize the application to an extreme level, we are going to help them optimize for HIP/ROCm

TechPowerUp: So AMD's strategy is to provide ROCm support across the entire stack, edge-to-core-to-cloud. All of these cases?

Andrej: Correct.

TechPowerUp: Regarding the new UDNA: We heard that UDNA is combining RDNA and CDNA to single architecture for GPU. So if that's going to be something that's going to be developed here or parts of it developed here or something else?

Andrej: Yeah, that's new. The portions of that new work will be developed in Serbia. We are working to define the next aspects of what's going to be developed here. The technology is moving very, very fast, so access to good engineers thank can learn quickly is extremely, extremely important. This is what we have in Serbia. Along the lines of your question on the combination of new technologies in notebook computers powered by AMD, we are major player in what we call an "AI PC", That is actually immersion of everything. This is the device that has a CPU, that has GPU, and it has a new unit, the NPU. We are opening the world of low power AI using the NPU in combination with the new Windows operating system, supporting the new features that Microsoft announced for NPU. In addition to running the most advanced AI on the NPU you can also execute AI applications on AMD GPU and on AMD CPU.

TechPowerUp: That's very exciting. Exciting because the true power of architecture lies in low power solutions, not high-power high-performance solutions when you give them power and massive TDPs, it is much easier to run than something constrained like smaller NPUs.

Andrej: That is correct. The interesting way to look at it is: we always need to find the balance. There are applications that require high-power solutions, that they are natively designed to work on, let's say with larger data formats, FP16, FP32... and large data sizes. So, some of the applications of the artificial intelligence require these formats and large memory would be run on various types of GPUs. Either RDNA or Machine Intelligence [Instinct MI] GPUs. If you go into the large language models, something like ChatGPT, or that kind of apps, a lot of these actually run perfectly well on the data formats like INT8 or INT4. So, we run that on the NPU on the low power executing very, very quickly, equally quickly, or even faster, as you would on GPU, using much less power. And that's where the AI PC starts playing. NPU combined with APU offers something for every aspect of human need in a PC, AI PC. And beauty of AMD is that we have all the solutions to offer to all these aspects of the need.

TechPowerUp: Take an application and distribute it across all teams. Get it developed fast?

Andrej: Exactly. That is where Serbia team comes. One more ace in our portfolio.

TechPowerUp: What is the future product you are most excited about? Is it something from the software side that is upcoming or something from the hardware side?

Andrej: Of course, you know that I cannot disclose the future products until we are ready to disclose them. Coming from the software world, the innovations in software and in AI are phenomenal. I think we are going to see the combination of both. The way we are looking at technology at AMD is that we are offering solutions for more and more verticals. Everything that we are doing recently, acquisition of Silo, which is bringing huge AI knowledge and competency, or just recently announced plan to acquire ZT Systems. We want to position ourselves as system provider, not to compete with system providers, but to grow that knowledge how to build systems and solutions. The next thing from AMD in general will be more of a combination of everything to provide solutions to our customer. Looking at that software becomes a huge part of it. My title, the Chief Software Officer, kind of shows that importance and level of recognition that AMD is putting into software. We are far from the classical semiconductor company that we were maybe 20 years ago. We are creating solutions to the world's most important challenges.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Joined
Nov 27, 2023
Messages
2,313 (6.43/day)
System Name The Workhorse
Processor AMD Ryzen R9 5900X
Motherboard Gigabyte Aorus B550 Pro
Cooling CPU - Noctua NH-D15S Case - 3 Noctua NF-A14 PWM at the bottom, 2 Fractal Design 180mm at the front
Memory GSkill Trident Z 3200CL14
Video Card(s) NVidia GTX 1070 MSI QuickSilver
Storage Adata SX8200Pro
Display(s) LG 32GK850G
Case Fractal Design Torrent (Solid)
Audio Device(s) FiiO E-10K DAC/Amp, Samson Meteorite USB Microphone
Power Supply Corsair RMx850 (2018)
Mouse Razer Viper (Original) on a X-Raypad Equate Plus V2
Keyboard Cooler Master QuickFire Rapid TKL keyboard (Cherry MX Black)
Software Windows 11 Pro (23H2)
While the interview is interesting and appreciated, I think one question that is important and wasn’t asked (possibly due to a fear of it being too direct) is this - how exactly does AMD plan on pulling away existing NV customers (i.e most of the market) from CUDA with this? Yes, it’s an alternative, sure, but WHY do they think that those who got used to and organized their workflow already around CUDA and its established software support just to go for an untested “new thing”, regardless of whether or not HIPIFY will be easy or not to use as a translation for their software? Like, what’s the carrot here? Especially since he admits that there are cases when HIPIFY either won’t work perfectly or require extensive optimization. So far it seems like the plan is “it’s gonna be great, totally, and it would be REALLY nice if a lot of customers would adopt it instead of staying with established player because of… reasons”.
 
Joined
Jan 3, 2021
Messages
3,482 (2.46/day)
Location
Slovenia
Processor i5-6600K
Motherboard Asus Z170A
Cooling some cheap Cooler Master Hyper 103 or similar
Memory 16GB DDR4-2400
Video Card(s) IGP
Storage Samsung 850 EVO 250GB
Display(s) 2x Oldell 24" 1920x1200
Case Bitfenix Nova white windowless non-mesh
Audio Device(s) E-mu 1212m PCI
Power Supply Seasonic G-360
Mouse Logitech Marble trackball, never had a mouse
Keyboard Key Tronic KT2000, no Win key because 1994
Software Oldwin
how exactly does AMD plan on pulling away existing NV customers (i.e most of the market)
I'll just note that there are also potential NV customers out there. A considerable number of them. If AMD focuses on those and offers good software and support, as they are promising to do, they can capture a good share of customers who would otherwise go elsewhere (not just to NV!)

Compare that to the rise of Epyc. How was AMD able to sell any chips when everyone already had all the CPUs they could ever need, and no one was ever fired for buying Intel?
 
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Messages
12,337 (5.77/day)
Location
Midlands, UK
System Name Nebulon B
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D
Motherboard MSi PRO B650M-A WiFi
Cooling be quiet! Dark Rock 4
Memory 2x 24 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR5-4800
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 6750 XT 12 GB
Storage 2 TB Corsair MP600 GS, 2 TB Corsair MP600 R2
Display(s) Dell S3422DWG, 7" Waveshare touchscreen
Case Kolink Citadel Mesh black
Audio Device(s) Logitech Z333 2.1 speakers, AKG Y50 headphones
Power Supply Seasonic Prime GX-750
Mouse Logitech MX Master 2S
Keyboard Logitech G413 SE
Software Bazzite (Fedora Linux) KDE
While the interview is interesting and appreciated, I think one question that is important and wasn’t asked (possibly due to a fear of it being too direct) is this - how exactly does AMD plan on pulling away existing NV customers (i.e most of the market) from CUDA with this? Yes, it’s an alternative, sure, but WHY do they think that those who got used to and organized their workflow already around CUDA and its established software support just to go for an untested “new thing”, regardless of whether or not HIPIFY will be easy or not to use as a translation for their software? Like, what’s the carrot here? Especially since he admits that there are cases when HIPIFY either won’t work perfectly or require extensive optimization. So far it seems like the plan is “it’s gonna be great, totally, and it would be REALLY nice if a lot of customers would adopt it instead of staying with established player because of… reasons”.
Imo, the correct approach is focusing on what they can offer to the customer, and not on what they have compared to Nvidia. A penis measurement contest always results in losers. For that, this is a good interview.

What I would have liked to know more about is the future of Radeon. Namely, when is RDNA 4 coming, what's next, and what can we expect with the arrival of UDNA (the answer to that question was vague as heck).
 
Joined
Jul 10, 2022
Messages
340 (0.39/day)
Location
France
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700X3D
Motherboard MSI MPG B550I GAMING EDGE WIFI Mini ITX
Cooling Noctua NH-U12S Chromax Black
Memory Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro SL 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) 3600MHz CL18
Video Card(s) AMD RX 6750XT Reference Design
Storage 2.5 TB 2.5" SSD / 3 TB HDD
Display(s) ASUS 27" 165HZ VG27WQ / Vertical 16/10 iiyama 25" 75Hz ProLite XUB2595WSU-B1
Case be quiet! Dark Base 700 RGB
Audio Device(s) PSB Alpha P3 / LOXJIE A30 Amp
Power Supply EVGA SuperNOVA 650 GA
Mouse Cooler master MM720
Keyboard Roccat horde
VR HMD Oculus Rift S (please Valve, release a new headset)
Software Windows 10
What I would have liked to know more about is the future of Radeon. Namely, when is RDNA 4 coming, what's next, and what can we expect with the arrival of UDNA (the answer to that question was vague as heck).
I think considering the role of Andrej Zdravkovic, all question directly specified to Radeon and the video games side of thing will just be too far from him and what he do at AMD. The question about UDNA was the closest thing related to RDNA he answered and he wasn't able to say (too) much about it, so I don't think there's more to dig with him.
 
Joined
Mar 12, 2009
Messages
1,141 (0.20/day)
Location
SCOTLAND!
System Name Machine XX
Processor Ryzen 7600
Motherboard MSI X670E GAMING PLUS
Cooling 120mm heatsink
Memory 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30
Video Card(s) RX5700XT 8Gb
Storage 280GB Optane 900p
Display(s) 19" + 23" + 17"
Case ATX
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster Z
Power Supply 800W
Software Windows 11
I still don't understand why it's taken so long for them to do this, I remember cracking passwords on the X1950XTX as it was a compute monster for its time. it was obvious to everyone that GPU computing was going to be a thing.
 
Joined
Dec 12, 2016
Messages
1,827 (0.63/day)
Compare that to the rise of Epyc. How was AMD able to sell any chips when everyone already had all the CPUs they could ever need, and no one was ever fired for buying Intel?
That’s a good comparison but I feel Epyc rose up due to computing power density. So many more cores per 1U space than Intel during the first generations of Epyc. I’m not sure if density advantages will play out in the compute GPU space.
 
Joined
Dec 25, 2020
Messages
6,692 (4.69/day)
Location
São Paulo, Brazil
System Name "Icy Resurrection"
Processor 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition
Motherboard ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 APEX ENCORE
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM
Memory 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V
Video Card(s) ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition
Storage 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD
Display(s) 55-inch LG G3 OLED
Case Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition
Power Supply EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold
Mouse Microsoft Classic Intellimouse
Keyboard Generic PS/2
Software Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2
Benchmark Scores I pulled a Qiqi~
Imo, the correct approach is focusing on what they can offer to the customer, and not on what they have compared to Nvidia. A penis measurement contest always results in losers. For that, this is a good interview.

What I would have liked to know more about is the future of Radeon. Namely, when is RDNA 4 coming, what's next, and what can we expect with the arrival of UDNA (the answer to that question was vague as heck).

I agree. I have never read so much to make out practically nothing of it, though. It clearly looks like this guy has no vision or authority to make final decisions, which seems to be the problem with AMD nowadays. I fully expect this venture to fail yet again, if I may be perfectly honest here.
 
Joined
Nov 4, 2005
Messages
11,979 (1.72/day)
System Name Compy 386
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard Asus
Cooling Air for now.....
Memory 64 GB DDR5 6400Mhz
Video Card(s) 7900XTX 310 Merc
Storage Samsung 990 2TB, 2 SP 2TB SSDs, 24TB Enterprise drives
Display(s) 55" Samsung 4K HDR
Audio Device(s) ATI HDMI
Mouse Logitech MX518
Keyboard Razer
Software A lot.
Benchmark Scores Its fast. Enough.
I still don't understand why it's taken so long for them to do this, I remember cracking passwords on the X1950XTX as it was a compute monster for its time. it was obvious to everyone that GPU computing was going to be a thing.
Rainbow tables and the first generation of Folding at Home GPU powered.

The biggest reason ATI was able to do compute was Nvdia was improving performance through rounding and fewer bits and thus had incorrect math for it.
 
Joined
Mar 12, 2009
Messages
1,141 (0.20/day)
Location
SCOTLAND!
System Name Machine XX
Processor Ryzen 7600
Motherboard MSI X670E GAMING PLUS
Cooling 120mm heatsink
Memory 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30
Video Card(s) RX5700XT 8Gb
Storage 280GB Optane 900p
Display(s) 19" + 23" + 17"
Case ATX
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster Z
Power Supply 800W
Software Windows 11
Rainbow tables and the first generation of Folding at Home GPU powered.

The biggest reason ATI was able to do compute was Nvdia was improving performance through rounding and fewer bits and thus had incorrect math for it.
I forgot about running folding@home on them. I was more of a SETI guy lol
 
Joined
Mar 1, 2021
Messages
489 (0.36/day)
Location
Germany
System Name Homebase
Processor Ryzen 5 5600
Motherboard Gigabyte Aorus X570S UD
Cooling Scythe Mugen 5 RGB
Memory 2*16 Kingston Fury DDR4-3600 double ranked
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 6800 16 GB
Storage 1*512 WD Red SN700, 1*2TB Curcial P5, 1*2TB Sandisk Plus (TLC), 1*14TB Toshiba MG
Display(s) Philips E-line 275E1S
Case Fractal Design Torrent Compact
Power Supply Corsair RM850 2019
Mouse Sharkoon Sharkforce Pro
Keyboard Fujitsu KB955
Open up in Serbia is kind of dangerous. Yeah, in short and midterm you can gain many cheap staff and assets. In the long run, you will sooner or later lose that knowledge to Russian partners. You also should be prepared for paying and getting offered bribe money, since that is pretty common down there. How do I know, I have family & friends there and made some loose business......and let it put this mildly.....the mentality in this area of Europe is totally different compared to middle and Western Europe. Especially in regard to laws.....

Of course, AMD isn't stupid and will have contracts and many lawyers overwatch it, but I wouldn't go down this route just because it is cheap (which is the main reason why company open up stuff there).
 
Joined
Mar 12, 2009
Messages
1,141 (0.20/day)
Location
SCOTLAND!
System Name Machine XX
Processor Ryzen 7600
Motherboard MSI X670E GAMING PLUS
Cooling 120mm heatsink
Memory 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30
Video Card(s) RX5700XT 8Gb
Storage 280GB Optane 900p
Display(s) 19" + 23" + 17"
Case ATX
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster Z
Power Supply 800W
Software Windows 11
Open up in Serbia is kind of dangerous. Yeah, in short and midterm you can gain many cheap staff and assets. In the long run, you will sooner or later lose that knowledge to Russian partners. You also should be prepared for paying and getting offered bribe money, since that is pretty common down there. How do I know, I have family & friends there and made some loose business......and let it put this mildly.....the mentality in this area of Europe is totally different compared to middle and Western Europe. Especially in regard to laws.....

Of course, AMD isn't stupid and will have contracts and many lawyers overwatch it, but I wouldn't go down this route just because it is cheap (which is the main reason why company open up stuff there).
its all open source software, they just need to go to github.
 
Joined
Dec 6, 2022
Messages
381 (0.53/day)
Location
NYC
System Name GameStation
Processor AMD R5 5600X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550
Cooling Artic Freezer II 120
Memory 16 GB
Video Card(s) Sapphire Pulse 7900 XTX
Storage 2 TB SSD
Case Cooler Master Elite 120
Imo, the correct approach is focusing on what they can offer to the customer, and not on what they have compared to Nvidia
Adding to that, availability and price.

Ngreedias backorder log is huge and same for their prices.

But if you have similar hardware at lower price and available AND tools to pass the CUDA trap, then you will have an option to your AI needs.

So situation like this wont be repeated: :)

 
Joined
Dec 25, 2020
Messages
6,692 (4.69/day)
Location
São Paulo, Brazil
System Name "Icy Resurrection"
Processor 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition
Motherboard ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 APEX ENCORE
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM
Memory 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V
Video Card(s) ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition
Storage 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD
Display(s) 55-inch LG G3 OLED
Case Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition
Power Supply EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold
Mouse Microsoft Classic Intellimouse
Keyboard Generic PS/2
Software Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2
Benchmark Scores I pulled a Qiqi~
Adding to that, availability and price.

Ngreedias backorder log is huge and same for their prices.

But if you have similar hardware at lower price and available AND tools to pass the CUDA trap, then you will have an option to your AI needs.

So situation like this wont be repeated: :)


All of this assumes AMD can develop a competent software stack. They have repeatedly proven that they cannot. Until they overcome this problem with a reliability track record, AMD will never be competitive... and the time it takes for that to happen, Nvidia will certainly increase their hardware's performance even further and improve their software as well.

This is going to be an Herculean task
 
Joined
Dec 6, 2022
Messages
381 (0.53/day)
Location
NYC
System Name GameStation
Processor AMD R5 5600X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550
Cooling Artic Freezer II 120
Memory 16 GB
Video Card(s) Sapphire Pulse 7900 XTX
Storage 2 TB SSD
Case Cooler Master Elite 120
All of this assumes AMD can develop a competent software stack. They have repeatedly proven that they cannot. Until they overcome this problem with a reliability track record, AMD will never be competitive... and the time it takes for that to happen, Nvidia will certainly increase their hardware's performance even further and improve their software as well.

This is going to be an Herculean task
I will admit that I dont know much about the difference between current AI craze and the supercomputer markets, but I will assume that AMD is not that far back since they keep winning those contracts, especially the supercomputers ones.

I mean, software must be taking advantage of their hardware.

That said, as stated in the interview, one of their biggest obstacle is that their software is running as expected on very expensive hardware (MI300), so few have access to transition/migrate away of CUDA.

But your point stands, they need to provide the tools for the customers. It does seems that they are taking that seriously and hopefully dont fail as before.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Dec 25, 2020
Messages
6,692 (4.69/day)
Location
São Paulo, Brazil
System Name "Icy Resurrection"
Processor 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition
Motherboard ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 APEX ENCORE
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM
Memory 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V
Video Card(s) ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition
Storage 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD
Display(s) 55-inch LG G3 OLED
Case Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition
Power Supply EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold
Mouse Microsoft Classic Intellimouse
Keyboard Generic PS/2
Software Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2
Benchmark Scores I pulled a Qiqi~
I will admit that I dont know much about the difference between current AI craze and the supercomputer markets, but I will assume that AMD is not that far back since they keep winning those designs.

I mean, software must be taking advantage of their hardware.

That said, as stated in the interview, one of their biggest obstacle is that their software is running as expected on very expensive hardware (MI300), so few have access to transition/migrate away of CUDA.

But your point stands, they need to provide the tools for the customers. It does seems that they are taking that seriously and hopefully dont fail as before.

Instinct's carved some marketshare because the hardware itself is extremely powerful, and software is being developed specifically for it as a result... but yeah
 
Joined
Mar 1, 2021
Messages
489 (0.36/day)
Location
Germany
System Name Homebase
Processor Ryzen 5 5600
Motherboard Gigabyte Aorus X570S UD
Cooling Scythe Mugen 5 RGB
Memory 2*16 Kingston Fury DDR4-3600 double ranked
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 6800 16 GB
Storage 1*512 WD Red SN700, 1*2TB Curcial P5, 1*2TB Sandisk Plus (TLC), 1*14TB Toshiba MG
Display(s) Philips E-line 275E1S
Case Fractal Design Torrent Compact
Power Supply Corsair RM850 2019
Mouse Sharkoon Sharkforce Pro
Keyboard Fujitsu KB955
its all open source software, they just need to go to github.
Yeah but now how you build up and train/teach your staff ;)

Also look how EKWB Serbia went.....well it was good for EK Serbias Manager xD
 
Joined
Oct 2, 2015
Messages
3,129 (0.94/day)
Location
Argentina
System Name Ciel / Akane
Processor AMD Ryzen R5 5600X / Intel Core i3 12100F
Motherboard Asus Tuf Gaming B550 Plus / Biostar H610MHP
Cooling ID-Cooling 224-XT Basic / Stock
Memory 2x 16GB Kingston Fury 3600MHz / 2x 8GB Patriot 3200MHz
Video Card(s) Gainward Ghost RTX 3060 Ti / Dell GTX 1660 SUPER
Storage NVMe Kingston KC3000 2TB + NVMe Toshiba KBG40ZNT256G + HDD WD 4TB / NVMe WD Blue SN550 512GB
Display(s) AOC Q27G3XMN / Samsung S22F350
Case Cougar MX410 Mesh-G / Generic
Audio Device(s) Kingston HyperX Cloud Stinger Core 7.1 Wireless PC
Power Supply Aerocool KCAS-500W / Gigabyte P450B
Mouse EVGA X15 / Logitech G203
Keyboard VSG Alnilam / Dell
Software Windows 11
Finally, just 17-20 years late.
 
Joined
Dec 6, 2022
Messages
381 (0.53/day)
Location
NYC
System Name GameStation
Processor AMD R5 5600X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550
Cooling Artic Freezer II 120
Memory 16 GB
Video Card(s) Sapphire Pulse 7900 XTX
Storage 2 TB SSD
Case Cooler Master Elite 120
Instinct's carved some marketshare because the hardware itself is extremely powerful, and software is being developed specifically for it as a result... but yeah
Then fingers crossed they can bring the software stack up to speed asap.
 
Joined
Mar 12, 2009
Messages
1,141 (0.20/day)
Location
SCOTLAND!
System Name Machine XX
Processor Ryzen 7600
Motherboard MSI X670E GAMING PLUS
Cooling 120mm heatsink
Memory 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30
Video Card(s) RX5700XT 8Gb
Storage 280GB Optane 900p
Display(s) 19" + 23" + 17"
Case ATX
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster Z
Power Supply 800W
Software Windows 11
AMD was trying to do what all the big RISC companies did back in the day by having supercomputer silicone, the problem is the developers need systems to work on and if your only option is 10k workstations then you are screwed, this is how x86 took over the server market, not because it was technically better but because it could be set up and ran from cheap hardware that developers could work on. a lot of webservers used to just be desktop pcs that were good enough, this is where Nvidia is, they have consumer hardware developers can use before they scale up and this is what AMD is missing, they can't get developers to work on AMD software if they do not have the hardware to run it.
 
Joined
Feb 21, 2006
Messages
2,221 (0.32/day)
Location
Toronto, Ontario
System Name The Expanse
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D
Motherboard Asus Prime X570-Pro BIOS 5013 AM4 AGESA V2 PI 1.2.0.Cc.
Cooling Corsair H150i Pro
Memory 32GB GSkill Trident RGB DDR4-3200 14-14-14-34-1T (B-Die)
Video Card(s) XFX Radeon RX 7900 XTX Magnetic Air (24.10.1)
Storage WD SN850X 2TB / Corsair MP600 1TB / Samsung 860Evo 1TB x2 Raid 0 / Asus NAS AS1004T V2 20TB
Display(s) LG 34GP83A-B 34 Inch 21: 9 UltraGear Curved QHD (3440 x 1440) 1ms Nano IPS 160Hz
Case Fractal Design Meshify S2
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi + Logitech Z-5500 + HS80 Wireless
Power Supply Corsair AX850 Titanium
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB SE
Keyboard Corsair K100
Software Windows 10 Pro x64 22H2
Benchmark Scores 3800X https://valid.x86.fr/1zr4a5 5800X https://valid.x86.fr/2dey9c 5800X3D https://valid.x86.fr/b7d
All of this assumes AMD can develop a competent software stack. They have repeatedly proven that they cannot. Until they overcome this problem with a reliability track record, AMD will never be competitive... and the time it takes for that to happen, Nvidia will certainly increase their hardware's performance even further and improve their software as well.

This is going to be an Herculean task
Nothing is impossible they however will need to throw the kitchen sink and everything they have at it.

This is not like competing with Intel who fumbles the ball from time to time. Nvidia is a totally different animal.
 
Joined
Jul 3, 2019
Messages
322 (0.16/day)
Location
Bulgaria
Processor 6700K
Motherboard M8G
Cooling D15S
Memory 16GB 3k15
Video Card(s) 2070S
Storage 850 Pro
Display(s) U2410
Case Core X2
Audio Device(s) ALC1150
Power Supply Seasonic
Mouse Razer
Keyboard Logitech
Software 22H2
If the AI market is as BIG as some make it out be, AMD is poised to take its slice of the AI pie. nVidia can't supply and support it all. I hear the concerns around the software stack and ROCm, but i also hear that AMD is making significant progress on that front.
 
Joined
Oct 3, 2019
Messages
152 (0.08/day)
Processor Ryzen 3600
Motherboard MSI X470 Gaming Plus Max
Cooling stock crap AMD wraith cooler
Memory Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 16GB DDR4-3200MHz
Video Card(s) Sapphire Nitro RX580 8GBs
Storage Adata Gammix S11 Pro 1TB nvme
Case Corsair Caribide Air 540
Open up in Serbia is kind of dangerous. Yeah, in short and midterm you can gain many cheap staff and assets. In the long run, you will sooner or later lose that knowledge to Russian partners. You also should be prepared for paying and getting offered bribe money, since that is pretty common down there. How do I know, I have family & friends there and made some loose business......and let it put this mildly.....the mentality in this area of Europe is totally different compared to middle and Western Europe. Especially in regard to laws.....

Of course, AMD isn't stupid and will have contracts and many lawyers overwatch it, but I wouldn't go down this route just because it is cheap (which is the main reason why company open up stuff there).
While I agree with what you're saying about corruption, I think AMD is way too big and way too high profile an investor to face these sort of issues that small businesses will regularly face in the balkans (albania, north macedonia, bulgaria are pretty much the same situation). They're going to have "special attention" of sorts, from the higher levels of government, and probably skip all the corruption roadblocks.
 
Joined
Dec 6, 2022
Messages
381 (0.53/day)
Location
NYC
System Name GameStation
Processor AMD R5 5600X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550
Cooling Artic Freezer II 120
Memory 16 GB
Video Card(s) Sapphire Pulse 7900 XTX
Storage 2 TB SSD
Case Cooler Master Elite 120
AMD was trying to do what all the big RISC companies did back in the day by having supercomputer silicone, the problem is the developers need systems to work on and if your only option is 10k workstations then you are screwed, this is how x86 took over the server market, not because it was technically better but because it could be set up and ran from cheap hardware that developers could work on. a lot of webservers used to just be desktop pcs that were good enough, this is where Nvidia is, they have consumer hardware developers can use before they scale up and this is what AMD is missing, they can't get developers to work on AMD software if they do not have the hardware to run it.
Pretty much what I said, you said way more eloquent than myself.
 
Joined
Jun 19, 2024
Messages
105 (0.67/day)
I'll just note that there are also potential NV customers out there. A considerable number of them. If AMD focuses on those and offers good software and support, as they are promising to do, they can capture a good share of customers who would otherwise go elsewhere (not just to NV!)

Compare that to the rise of Epyc. How was AMD able to sell any chips when everyone already had all the CPUs they could ever need, and no one was ever fired for buying Intel?

Epyc runs existing (Intel) code without having to touch it at all.

The same can’t be said of AMD’s AI/compute products.
 
Top