Deep learning for robotics

This page summarizes the projects mentioned and recommended in the original post on /r/buildapc

Our great sponsors
  • WorkOS - The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS
  • InfluxDB - Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale
  • SaaSHub - Software Alternatives and Reviews
  • raisimLib

    Visit www.raisim.com

    I am doing a MSc on robotics with a focus on machine learning, especially attention based architectures. There is a lot simulation and reinforcement learning going on. I have a funding of ~2500$ for the hardware system (no flexibility here, cannot use it for cloud either). I used pcpartpicker.com to select compatible components, as shown below. I am not located in the western part of the world; which means I have difficulty accessing some components and prices are higher here than that of pcpartpicker.com. That is why I am aiming towards 2000 - 2200$ range in the pcpartpicker.com. - Overall, what do you think of my planned setup? - Since there is a lot of simulation planned including rigid body dynamics with contact (libraries like https://github.com/raisimTech/raisimLib, https://github.com/deepmind/mujoco), I need some powerful CPU to use these libraries. I know that Intel has MKL over AMD; however, I am not sure how relevant that is for my case. The robotics simulators are generally written with C++, uses Eigen or their own math libraries. I feel like there is a lot of linear algebra involved and Intel combined with MKL should give me less headache. I have chosen i9-12900K, but what about AMD Ryzen9 5950X for example? - There is a new generation of rigid body simulators which use GPU instead of CPU (https://github.com/google/brax, https://developer.nvidia.com/isaac-gym). I do not think they are as mature as the previously mentioned simulators. Perhaps I am mistaken. Shall I focus on them instead? In terms of hardware that means I can downgrade the CPU to Ryzen5, and upgrade to RTX3080, roughly. - Do you think this system is easy to upgrade in future? What can I change to make it easier for long-term use and upgrades? Thanks for any help!

  • mujoco

    Multi-Joint dynamics with Contact. A general purpose physics simulator.

    I am doing a MSc on robotics with a focus on machine learning, especially attention based architectures. There is a lot simulation and reinforcement learning going on. I have a funding of ~2500$ for the hardware system (no flexibility here, cannot use it for cloud either). I used pcpartpicker.com to select compatible components, as shown below. I am not located in the western part of the world; which means I have difficulty accessing some components and prices are higher here than that of pcpartpicker.com. That is why I am aiming towards 2000 - 2200$ range in the pcpartpicker.com. - Overall, what do you think of my planned setup? - Since there is a lot of simulation planned including rigid body dynamics with contact (libraries like https://github.com/raisimTech/raisimLib, https://github.com/deepmind/mujoco), I need some powerful CPU to use these libraries. I know that Intel has MKL over AMD; however, I am not sure how relevant that is for my case. The robotics simulators are generally written with C++, uses Eigen or their own math libraries. I feel like there is a lot of linear algebra involved and Intel combined with MKL should give me less headache. I have chosen i9-12900K, but what about AMD Ryzen9 5950X for example? - There is a new generation of rigid body simulators which use GPU instead of CPU (https://github.com/google/brax, https://developer.nvidia.com/isaac-gym). I do not think they are as mature as the previously mentioned simulators. Perhaps I am mistaken. Shall I focus on them instead? In terms of hardware that means I can downgrade the CPU to Ryzen5, and upgrade to RTX3080, roughly. - Do you think this system is easy to upgrade in future? What can I change to make it easier for long-term use and upgrades? Thanks for any help!

  • WorkOS

    The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.

  • brax

    Massively parallel rigidbody physics simulation on accelerator hardware.

    I am doing a MSc on robotics with a focus on machine learning, especially attention based architectures. There is a lot simulation and reinforcement learning going on. I have a funding of ~2500$ for the hardware system (no flexibility here, cannot use it for cloud either). I used pcpartpicker.com to select compatible components, as shown below. I am not located in the western part of the world; which means I have difficulty accessing some components and prices are higher here than that of pcpartpicker.com. That is why I am aiming towards 2000 - 2200$ range in the pcpartpicker.com. - Overall, what do you think of my planned setup? - Since there is a lot of simulation planned including rigid body dynamics with contact (libraries like https://github.com/raisimTech/raisimLib, https://github.com/deepmind/mujoco), I need some powerful CPU to use these libraries. I know that Intel has MKL over AMD; however, I am not sure how relevant that is for my case. The robotics simulators are generally written with C++, uses Eigen or their own math libraries. I feel like there is a lot of linear algebra involved and Intel combined with MKL should give me less headache. I have chosen i9-12900K, but what about AMD Ryzen9 5950X for example? - There is a new generation of rigid body simulators which use GPU instead of CPU (https://github.com/google/brax, https://developer.nvidia.com/isaac-gym). I do not think they are as mature as the previously mentioned simulators. Perhaps I am mistaken. Shall I focus on them instead? In terms of hardware that means I can downgrade the CPU to Ryzen5, and upgrade to RTX3080, roughly. - Do you think this system is easy to upgrade in future? What can I change to make it easier for long-term use and upgrades? Thanks for any help!

NOTE: The number of mentions on this list indicates mentions on common posts plus user suggested alternatives. Hence, a higher number means a more popular project.

Suggest a related project

Related posts