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TensorRT
NVIDIA® TensorRT™ is an SDK for high-performance deep learning inference on NVIDIA GPUs. This repository contains the open source components of TensorRT.
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> It's not rocket science to implement matrix multiplication in any GPU.
You're right, it's harder. Saying this as someone who's done more work on the former than the latter. (I have, with a team, built a rocket engine. And not your school or backyard project size, but nozzle bigger than your face kind. I've also written CUDA kernels and boy is there a big learning curve to the latter that you gotta fundamentally rethink how you view a problem. It's unquestionable why CUDA devs are paid so much. Really it's only questionable why they aren't paid more)
I know it is easy to think this problem is easy, it really looks that way. But there's an incredible amount of optimization that goes into all of this and that's what's really hard. You aren't going to get away with just N for loops for a tensor rank N. You got to chop the data up, be intelligent about it, manage memory, how you load memory, handle many data types, take into consideration different results for different FMA operations, and a whole lot more. There's a whole lot of non-obvious things that result in high optimization (maybe obvious __after__ the fact, but that's not truthfully "obvious"). The thing is, the space is so well researched and implemented that you can't get away with naive implementations, you have to be on the bleeding edge.
Then you have to do that and make it reasonably usable for the programmer too, abstracting away all of that. Cuda also has a huge head start and momentum is not a force to be reckoned with (pun intended).
Look at TensorRT[0]. The software isn't even complete and it still isn't going to cover all neural networks on all GPUs. I've had stuff work on a V100 and H100 but not an A100, then later get fixed. They even have the "Apple Advantage" in that they have control of the hardware. I'm not certain AMD will have the same advantage. We talk a lot about the difficulties of being first mover, but I think we can also recognize that momentum is an advantage of being first mover. And it isn't one to scoff at.
[0] https://github.com/NVIDIA/TensorRT
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