--- date: '2023-01-22T11:07:18' hypothesis-meta: created: '2023-01-22T11:07:18.838647+00:00' document: title: - Who Owns the Generative AI Platform? | Andreessen Horowitz flagged: false group: __world__ hidden: false id: 771i6ppEEe2RxNtz0udwZw links: html: https://hypothes.is/a/771i6ppEEe2RxNtz0udwZw incontext: https://hyp.is/771i6ppEEe2RxNtz0udwZw/a16z.com/2023/01/19/who-owns-the-generative-ai-platform/ json: https://hypothes.is/api/annotations/771i6ppEEe2RxNtz0udwZw permissions: admin: - acct:ravenscroftj@hypothes.is delete: - acct:ravenscroftj@hypothes.is read: - group:__world__ update: - acct:ravenscroftj@hypothes.is tags: - ai - generative ai - gpu target: - selector: - endContainer: /div[1]/div[1]/main[1]/div[1]/div[1]/article[1]/main[1]/div[1]/div[1]/div[1]/div[1]/p[35]/span[2] endOffset: 111 startContainer: /div[1]/div[1]/main[1]/div[1]/div[1]/article[1]/main[1]/div[1]/div[1]/div[1]/div[1]/p[35]/span[1] startOffset: 0 type: RangeSelector - end: 23838 start: 23155 type: TextPositionSelector - exact: Other hardware options do exist, including Google Tensor Processing Units (TPUs); AMD Instinct GPUs; AWS Inferentia and Trainium chips; and AI accelerators from startups like Cerebras, Sambanova, and Graphcore. Intel, late to the game, is also entering the market with their high-end Habana chips and Ponte Vecchio GPUs. But so far, few of these new chips have taken significant market share. The two exceptions to watch are Google, whose TPUs have gained traction in the Stable Diffusion community and in some large GCP deals, and TSMC, who is believed to manufacture all of the chips listed here, including Nvidia GPUs (Intel uses a mix of its own fabs and TSMC to make its chips). prefix: ' top AI chip startups combined. ' suffix: ' Infrastructure is, in other wor' type: TextQuoteSelector source: https://a16z.com/2023/01/19/who-owns-the-generative-ai-platform/ text: Look at market share for tensorflow and pytorch which both offer first-class nvidia support and likely spells out the story. If you are getting in to AI you go learn one of those frameworks and they tell you to install CUDA updated: '2023-01-22T11:07:18.838647+00:00' uri: https://a16z.com/2023/01/19/who-owns-the-generative-ai-platform/ user: acct:ravenscroftj@hypothes.is user_info: display_name: James Ravenscroft in-reply-to: https://a16z.com/2023/01/19/who-owns-the-generative-ai-platform/ tags: - ai - generative ai - gpu - hypothesis type: annotation url: /annotations/2023/01/22/1674385638 ---
Other hardware options do exist, including Google Tensor Processing Units (TPUs); AMD Instinct GPUs; AWS Inferentia and Trainium chips; and AI accelerators from startups like Cerebras, Sambanova, and Graphcore. Intel, late to the game, is also entering the market with their high-end Habana chips and Ponte Vecchio GPUs. But so far, few of these new chips have taken significant market share. The two exceptions to watch are Google, whose TPUs have gained traction in the Stable Diffusion community and in some large GCP deals, and TSMC, who is believed to manufacture all of the chips listed here, including Nvidia GPUs (Intel uses a mix of its own fabs and TSMC to make its chips).
Look at market share for tensorflow and pytorch which both offer first-class nvidia support and likely spells out the story. If you are getting in to AI you go learn one of those frameworks and they tell you to install CUDA