3 New Groundbreaking AI Chips Explained

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
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    Timestamps:
    00:00 - Intro
    00:33 - New Blackwell GPU Explained
    06:35 - Demand for AI Chips
    07:01 - New 4 trillion transistors Chip
    10:04 - Why do we need Huge Chips?
    14:04 - New Analog Chip Explained
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 511

  • @AnastasiInTech
    @AnastasiInTech  Před měsícem +31

    Go to l.linqto.com/anastasiintech and use my promo code ANASTASI500 during checkout to save $500 on your first investment with Linqto

    • @Zero-oq1jk
      @Zero-oq1jk Před měsícem +2

      You said before we will get RISC-V. Will we? I mean Consumer PC.

    • @langhans156
      @langhans156 Před měsícem +3

      Cerebras is not! outperforming Moore's law. Moore's law states that the density of transistors will double every few years. In what way does the Cerebras chip outperform other chips according to this metric?

    • @JakeWitmer
      @JakeWitmer Před měsícem

      Please forgive me if you have already covered carbon nanotube bundle memory from Nantero, or nanodomain progress from Xyvex. If you have not covered extending Moore's law using Kurzweil's favored paradigm (nanotube arrays / "pistons"), could you? They might be able to store "state" without using energy or magnetism, but physical position read by lasers, for speed and resilience (MRIs + implants = safe). I know this is more theoretical than your recent videos, but Nantero did have a functional product...
      I apologize in advance if you've covered this already. Your channel is amazing! Thank you for the wonderful updates!

    • @clarkwallcraft2741
      @clarkwallcraft2741 Před měsícem +1

      @AnastasilnTech would you consider sharing your investment portfolio? I am very new at doing my own investments and I would be very interested in which startups you like. Doesn't have to be $ amounts and I will not consider your words as investment advice, "disclaimer".

    • @hdcomputerkeith
      @hdcomputerkeith Před měsícem

      I GPU mine and rent them out to ai or POUW like FLUX for renting. I avoided the 4090s but getting ready to buy the 5090. I hated the heat that vram ddr6x puts out , so i hope the drr7 vram fixed that heat issue. I own 20 evga 3070 drr6 gpus . SO ya lets go 5090 GPUs! Before xmas

  • @anirudhapandey1234
    @anirudhapandey1234 Před měsícem +47

    As an engineer from this industry, I would like to say this channel is very informative and UpToDate.

  • @igorkogan9138
    @igorkogan9138 Před měsícem +122

    Hi Anastasia. Congrats! Another “huge” podcast. You are the only CZcamsr uniquely qualified to bring the latest innovations in AI/processor technologies. I’ve been retired now for two years, after spending 40 years as a semiconductor equipment design engineer in Silicon Valley. So it’s especially fascinating to realize that not only Moore's law still relevant and striving, some technologies carry a promise to far exceed any expectations. Thank you, again for being such an enthusiast of your profession. P.S. it is especially fascinating that the first time I’ve even heard about private equity portfolio was on your program. Even your commercials are educating. 😊

    • @FloridaMeng
      @FloridaMeng Před měsícem +3

      Yep. She's the cornerstone for all ai and technology matters for me.

    • @tehgriefer9317
      @tehgriefer9317 Před měsícem +6

      Not like the auto-proclaimed "Tech-Unicorn" Annia is the real deal.

    • @inspectorcrud
      @inspectorcrud Před měsícem +1

      I wonder what your personal liability could be with respect to private equity investments.

    • @Sven_Dongle
      @Sven_Dongle Před měsícem +3

      Morse law? Gordon Moore meets Samuel Morse? 40 years, eh?

    • @v1kt0u5
      @v1kt0u5 Před měsícem +3

      She's amazing indeed... but the only one? this is a disrespect for some others!

  • @RonLWilson
    @RonLWilson Před měsícem +39

    Way back when I was getting my BSEE in the 70's I always loved analog computers and am glad to see them now making a comeback!

    • @kristas-not
      @kristas-not Před měsícem +2

      how many modern ee or cs majors understands what an operational amplifier (op-amp) is or even realizes what the ”op” really meant?

    • @k-c
      @k-c Před měsícem +2

      Analogue technology is way too underrated. Incredible knowledge has been lost.

    • @kristas-not
      @kristas-not Před měsícem

      @@monad_tcp those *are* digital, but there's a *lot* of talk/chatter about analog ai chips and analog neuromorphic chips.

  • @shahabdolatabadi4116
    @shahabdolatabadi4116 Před měsícem +80

    Ma'am, if you are a chip designer, I think a profound and clear tutorial for computer architecture and practical chip design would be a contribution.
    Thanks for your videos.

    • @v1kt0u5
      @v1kt0u5 Před měsícem +5

      Okay 🤣

    • @Ubya_
      @Ubya_ Před měsícem +9

      "profund and clear" and "tutorial" don't go really hand in hand. there's a reason why a degree takes years

    • @shahabdolatabadi4116
      @shahabdolatabadi4116 Před měsícem +5

      ​@@Ubya_
      Apparently, you haven't seen any of the many great courses available on CZcams, many of which far better than those courses by Ivy league universities. Simply put, you're wrong buddy.

    • @Gravity360
      @Gravity360 Před měsícem

      @@shahabdolatabadi4116 well that is actually an opinion. People learn based on several factors. Some are audio learners, some kinesthetic and then there's the one's who can just read the information. Some use a combination of the methods. But when it comes down to the 'course', it's honestly gonna be better if they use one or more of the known learning styles to present the information. Sometimes it can come down to having a analogy that is easy for people to relate the information to. Good example on this is computer networking being compared to the Mail/Postal system. I have found some CZcams video's very informative because they meet these standards and it makes it easier to digest the information for retention.

  • @douginorlando6260
    @douginorlando6260 Před měsícem +6

    You are creating for yourself a remarkable reputation as the source of accurate knowledgeable and relevant IC technology. And this reputation is a valuable commodity that can’t be easily replaced. CONGRATS.
    I’ve been around chip tech since the PDP8 computer was built on 7400 series Chips that only had a handful of gates per chip. There’s been many technology approaches & architectures over the years and you seem to have an accurate perspective of how the horse race of chip technology plays out.

  • @nahkanukke
    @nahkanukke Před měsícem +11

    I have watched your content from beginning and it have been very informative. I love the way you present science of computing. Keep these comming. Thanks Anastasi🐿

  • @rafaelruiz-tagle358
    @rafaelruiz-tagle358 Před měsícem +3

    As a person who has never been able to understand advance math, which has prevented me from becoming an electrical or mechanical engineer, I have always found this kind of technology incredibly fascinating.
    Anastasia, you always explain things so well, and you always keep the entire segment fascinating. You make it "easy" for an inept person like myself to understand this material, and you make me "want" to learn more. Thank you for all the wonderful videos make! I wish I would've had you as my math professor. Maybe I would've been able to fulfill my dream and become an engineer. 🙂

  • @bob38161
    @bob38161 Před měsícem +1

    Was looking forward to your video ever since the Blackwell event!! Thank you!

  • @bakedbeings
    @bakedbeings Před měsícem +10

    It was a bit easier to imagine useful outcomes for fp8 calculations, but 4 bit (1/8th precision!) is just wild. Fun times in computer science 🎉

    • @paultparker
      @paultparker Před měsícem +3

      Have you seen the paper about high performing one bit LLM’s? They actually require two bits, but they’re still half the size of an FP4.

  • @DaveShap
    @DaveShap Před měsícem +2

    Love your coverage. Great work. Thanks!

  • @imjody
    @imjody Před měsícem +1

    Love your deep dives into the latest technology, Anastasi! Thank you. :)

  • @pythonyousufparyani8407
    @pythonyousufparyani8407 Před měsícem +10

    Thank You for another video. I am gonna watch it now.

  • @nopponw2525
    @nopponw2525 Před měsícem +2

    Thank you very much. You simplify the field that I ever thought i cant understand it to be more reasonable conversation. Please keep making this video 🎉

  • @paullitzbarski2632
    @paullitzbarski2632 Před měsícem +1

    Your videos are awesome! They are to the point, up to date and with no distractions. I like your accuracy and enthusiasm, it is inspiring and makes appetite for all the current processor developments.

  • @RestlessBenjamin
    @RestlessBenjamin Před měsícem +6

    Great video today. I've heard a little bit about these new chips but your explanations really helped me understand why they are so important.

  • @knofi7052
    @knofi7052 Před měsícem +1

    I love your videos, Ana, because I am always learning amazing new things!😊 Happy Easter!😉

  • @iliasiosifidis4532
    @iliasiosifidis4532 Před měsícem +6

    I was excited about acceleration since 2021, that Blender changed from Cuda to Optix. Oh boy, same GPU, but 7 times faster renders!
    Acceleration is the future for sure

  •  Před měsícem +7

    Love how balance are always your videos! You almost never succumb to the hype! :)

  • @joe_limon
    @joe_limon Před měsícem +12

    There is a research paper showing scaling these networks down to binary and there was great efficiency, speed and memory gains.

  • @SarahSchiffer-mj5el
    @SarahSchiffer-mj5el Před měsícem +10

    Any chance you could cover Extropic AI and their new thermodynamic processors? I think it seems like a promising area of development but I havent seen it covered by any experts I trust

    • @AnastasiInTech
      @AnastasiInTech  Před měsícem +11

      I've read their light paper. It's interesting. I would be curious to learn more if anyone can connect me to them..

  • @ZoOnTheYT
    @ZoOnTheYT Před měsícem +8

    After watching some videos of Neurolinks first participant, Noland...I wonder if in the end the analog component digital is going to connect with for the most powerful, and most energy efficient output is our brains.

  • @JohnSmall314
    @JohnSmall314 Před měsícem +6

    Love the content, I've sent it to my friends

  • @bbamboo3
    @bbamboo3 Před měsícem +14

    My father taught me analog computing as a teenager, two pots could multiply. He was a rocket scientist and totally understood digital computing however he also continued to say that analog computing was not being used effectively. inertial guidance was partly analog in the beginning. How interesting to see the hybrid approach implemented in cmos.

    • @chriswininger3022
      @chriswininger3022 Před měsícem

      Jonathan Mills was one of my favorite professors in college. He was doing a lot of amazing work on modern analog computing and hybrids cns.iu.edu/docs/netscitalks/j-mills.pdf. Sadly he has sense passed. Great thinker, good teacher

  • @dongedye3193
    @dongedye3193 Před měsícem +2

    You have the best channel on You Tube! I really enjoyed the latest one: "This is Huge". Incredible info! Thanks!

  • @dchdch8290
    @dchdch8290 Před měsícem +5

    thank you for this great video !

  • @dchdch8290
    @dchdch8290 Před měsícem +20

    from 8bit to 4bit ... we are looking at the next Turing Award candidate here :D

    • @colinmiddleton9444
      @colinmiddleton9444 Před měsícem

      So they have found that you get better and more efficient intelligence with less accuracy. It all makes sense now. That explains everything.

    • @almightysapling
      @almightysapling Před měsícem +1

      No need to stop there. Just read a paper that claims you can drop to 1.58 bits (just 0 and +/- 1) and get basically the same quality.

    • @Sven_Dongle
      @Sven_Dongle Před měsícem +1

      @@almightysapling BS

    • @yahiiia9269
      @yahiiia9269 Před měsícem

      @@Sven_Dongle It's true.

  • @marcovillani4427
    @marcovillani4427 Před měsícem +4

    Amazing!!!!Congrats

  • @aipsong
    @aipsong Před měsícem +1

    Another great video!!!! Thanks!!!

  • @TickerSymbolYOU
    @TickerSymbolYOU Před měsícem +1

    Awesome breakdown of some of the most important technologies in the world!

  • @wintergreen4978
    @wintergreen4978 Před měsícem +4

    Thanks and wish you more success ❤

  • @user-tf9fi7dh2n
    @user-tf9fi7dh2n Před měsícem

    Love the hardwork and dedication that you put in making these videos for us Anastasi👏👏👍

  • @vrendus522
    @vrendus522 Před měsícem +1

    Interesting talk, thanks Anastasi. Dan :)

  • @kinshin67
    @kinshin67 Před měsícem +1

    Your insights are deep and your explanations are outstanding.

  • @sirousmohseni4
    @sirousmohseni4 Před měsícem +2

    Thanks for the video.

  • @2smoulder
    @2smoulder Před měsícem

    Anastasi...you smashed this future new chip design review.

  • @Printman3332
    @Printman3332 Před měsícem +1

    I like how well you explain things very good. 👍 👍

  • @tom-et-jerry
    @tom-et-jerry Před měsícem +3

    whaoooo i'm waiting for this new technology (analog chip with capacitors) with great impatience ! it will blow my mind ! I love all your videos ! I'm a programmer.

  • @drewbizdev
    @drewbizdev Před měsícem +1

    Another excellent video Anastasi. Technology is going crazy. 🙂

  • @hightechfarmers
    @hightechfarmers Před měsícem +1

    Appreciate your expertise. Would love to hear your comparison with Dojo architecture. They too use one of the special packaging processes from TSMC to put 25 die on a single wafer as I understand it. Seems like that would improve yield on final chip integrated wafer higher than single chip all in yield. You get to pick the 25 best yield in smaller chips and assemble them on a larger package with only interconnect which seems similar to Blackwell but at a whole other scale. Would love to hear your thoughts.

  • @BilichaGhebremuse
    @BilichaGhebremuse Před měsícem

    Great but little bit deep knowledge to understand..great work summarized

  • @everettputerbaugh3996
    @everettputerbaugh3996 Před měsícem +1

    IBM was the computer to beat in the 1050s, 60s, and 70s. They started out using 4 bit words (Binary Coded Decimal) and moved through Extended B.C.D. (6 bit words) to 8 bit words (ASCII). Some modern equip. uses Unicode (16 bit words) which can represent nearly every written language in use today. The size of the work affects the amount of work the chip can do in a given bit of time and especially how much physical memory is used for each character. IF all you are doing is math, you don't need big words.

  • @rrangel1968
    @rrangel1968 Před měsícem

    Awesome video Anastasi!

  • @willykang1293
    @willykang1293 Před měsícem +3

    1. Jensen Huang: It’s ok, hopper.😂😂
    2. TSMC had to make the fabs super clean so they must change those filters on top of the fabs so frequently maybe once within three months. And those activated carbons inside the filters must completely new, they cannot bear the cost if those activated carbons are reused even.
    3. Morris Chang once lived in a house maybe close to 20 years ago and it’s just next to my brother house now, by the way.

  • @BrianFedirko
    @BrianFedirko Před měsícem +1

    DTA: Decade of Technoloical Advancement. It's a good acronym. DTA does seem to be applicable to this era in time. Analog is a good use of the letter "A" too, as I love the concept of analog computing and chips. It would be nice to someday print 100 electronic devices on a single wafer, and use them out of pocket at a whim. The phone is starting to become this, but I'm sure some smarty pants can collect more divergent ideas on a new multi device. I'd love to be able to microwave a pizza from my pocket... haha. Gr8! Peace ☮💜

  • @zelogarno4478
    @zelogarno4478 Před měsícem +1

    It is very interesting! Thanks!

  • @danobrien3601
    @danobrien3601 Před měsícem +1

    Thanks for the updates .. Always thought analog computing was undervalued ..and that giant chip thats just incredible

  • @user-vh1td2tw1b
    @user-vh1td2tw1b Před měsícem +1

    I am grateful for your podcast. Thank you

  • @BilichaGhebremuse
    @BilichaGhebremuse Před 18 dny

    Excellent explanation

  • @mordokai597
    @mordokai597 Před měsícem +2

    lol, i'm trying to pay attention, but i keep thinking "OMG! she's waving a wafer around again" xD I still remember "the incident" with the shattered wafer ;)

  • @jamesjohn2537
    @jamesjohn2537 Před měsícem +1

    Hahahaha is 😂😂😂 first time seeing you telling jokes out of the blue. Cheers 🎉 have great Easter

  • @twinkletoe-s
    @twinkletoe-s Před měsícem +1

    Wow I had no idea someone was using the "interconnects" as a capacitor. Concidering that is already occurring within a chip. That is genius and opens a massive area for alternative computing methods. It could reduce heat/power and need for additional transistors very exciting stuff I need to do some research on this thanks you

  • @CliftonDavis-je7qu
    @CliftonDavis-je7qu Před měsícem +2

    Thank you Anastasia your great

  • @Ryan-qt9jm
    @Ryan-qt9jm Před měsícem +1

    Awesome video! Great info here :) I especially appreciated the lead on private equity investing. Thanks

  • @yougeo
    @yougeo Před měsícem +1

    I think her explanation is interesting of the double chip in makes me realize that it really isn't some great breakthrough but it was actually the second choice that Jensen had to make because tmsc could not make the next great density improvements with the greater scale.
    That's interesting to know. It's also interesting to know that their costs are going to go up and their margins may not be as high. One thing I've never understood though is why TM sc isn't the company that makes all the margins and why they let some company like Nvidia which just gives them designs and doesn't make anything why they let in video make the margins.

  • @amribraheem8674
    @amribraheem8674 Před měsícem +4

    How does Cerebras deal with the cooling problem over such area?

  • @En1Gm4A
    @En1Gm4A Před měsícem +6

    you got telescope images on your phone background + plus points on that

  • @dchdch8290
    @dchdch8290 Před měsícem +7

    We need bigger GPUs ! 😎

    • @mdo5121
      @mdo5121 Před měsícem +1

      the man can really sell it...right

  • @danmarquez3971
    @danmarquez3971 Před měsícem +1

    Anastasi is insanely amazing! She is incredibly smart to understand this technology, and simultaneously, beautiful enough to be a super model! She represents the next step in human evolution!

  • @alexb.6800
    @alexb.6800 Před měsícem +1

    Idea for the next video: make a review of your stock picks related to semiconductors and related industry.

  • @gamesndrinks
    @gamesndrinks Před měsícem +92

    Who else ran to the channel at sublight speed

  • @416dl
    @416dl Před měsícem +6

    Some of these concepts are so elusive for non-technical types such as myself at least. Thank you for presenting great information along with superb and clear explanations that include helpful, and I presume accurate, visuals. Will always look forward to delving deeper without fear with your particularly effective guidance. Buona Pasqua.

  • @billknight7342
    @billknight7342 Před měsícem +3

    Wasn't Apple's Ultra chip a dual well before this "first time" chip?

  • @DrGazza
    @DrGazza Před měsícem

    Hi Anastasia, I enjoy and learn from your well presented videos. Just one comment, in your discussion on analogue computing you seem to suggest that transistors do digital processing and (correctly) that capacitors and resistors do analogue processing. Is this correct? Transistors are commonly used in analogue ccts such as audio amplifiers. I now that in digital ccts they are used as switches, is there a cost in using them in analogue mode (i.e. energy, thermal costs)?

  • @justfellover
    @justfellover Před měsícem +3

    While there is statistical variation in the exact release date of individual advances, Moore's law marches on.

  • @michaelurban1937
    @michaelurban1937 Před měsícem

    Love you, Anastasia!

  • @glasperlinspiel
    @glasperlinspiel Před měsícem +1

    It’s fun to see you so excited about analog. I think we need an app that translates your body language into an investment indicator!

  • @donaldhenderson1870
    @donaldhenderson1870 Před měsícem +1

    Never heard about analog chip. Very cool indeed!

  • @HarryLewinASR
    @HarryLewinASR Před měsícem +1

    Great video. Where does Dojo fit in this scheme.? Does it have any advantages?

  • @rsum123able
    @rsum123able Před měsícem +1

    Hi Anastasia. Always love your content! Tesla also creates its' own chips coupled with Nvidia's chips. 👍

  • @duncan94019
    @duncan94019 Před měsícem

    Thank you for your video. in the mid 70s I had a chance to be the early user of a hybrid computer (digital / analog computer) and in the 60s I had a chance to use an analog computer. I'm glad to see analog making a comeback. I think there are other interesting applications for analog. For example maybe it can be used in Ensemble modeling. (I recommend The Primacy of Doubt by Tim Palmer).

  • @ConstellationMushrooms

    I've always wanted to hear Anastasis educational story of her journey through college and work. She's multilingual, probably a total math wiz, absolutely gorgeous, and her excitement for chip design is always infectious. I wanna hear how that came to be! :)

  • @JohnSmith762A11B
    @JohnSmith762A11B Před měsícem +31

    Anastasi would make a great Chief Engineer on a starship. Now we just need to create the starship! Not the SpaceX one, more like the Enterprise.

  • @Integr8d
    @Integr8d Před měsícem +2

    When Anastasi goes to the car dealer to negotiate a purchase, they end up paying her.

  • @CliftonDavis-je7qu
    @CliftonDavis-je7qu Před měsícem +5

    Mind blown 🤯

  • @JD-jdeener
    @JD-jdeener Před měsícem +9

    It's so hard to concentrate on the content when it's being delivered by such an exceptional presenter. I do agree, these are exceptional times we are living in.

    • @shiccup
      @shiccup Před měsícem

      Lol it takes me like 3-4 times the watch time to actually finish the video because i have to pause and think about everything she brings up

  • @janmagrot
    @janmagrot Před měsícem

    Nice, thank you.

  • @GuidedBreathing
    @GuidedBreathing Před měsícem

    3:20 this is a bit fun to watch ☺️ ‘pathos’ too 😁

  • @SurfinScientist
    @SurfinScientist Před měsícem +1

    Good video! You obviously know what you are talking about.

  • @sanfordschoolfield710
    @sanfordschoolfield710 Před měsícem +3

    Thanks

  • @eagledctr7
    @eagledctr7 Před měsícem

    Thanks!

  • @theosib
    @theosib Před měsícem

    I wrote a workshop paper years ago that shows that lower precision can be compensated for just by including that limit in the training process. Backprop has to be done in floating point to accumulate small weight updates. But all forward calculations have to be done in fixed point. The imprecision causes prediction error, which backprop compensates for naturally.

  • @JoeLion55
    @JoeLion55 Před měsícem +2

    7:30 to be fair to Moore’s law… It doesn’t really state that transistors “per chip” doubles. It states that transistors “per area” doubles. The Cerebras chips are not breaking that - they are still putting the same number of transistors per square cm as the other N5 TSMC chips are. It’s just that historically “chip sizes“ have roughly been the same, more or less, generation to generation, due to manufacturing constraints, heat dissipation, system design constraints, package design, etc. So assuming the chips are roughly the same size, if transistors shrink then the transistor amount doubles from one generation to the next, then that roughly means transistors per chip has doubled. But in reality, the Moores law charts should all have transistors per square centimeter as the y-axis, not transistors per chip. (And for the pendants, of course Moore’s law has also been modified to indicate “performance per area” instead of just transistors per area).
    Having said all that, breaking free of the standard maximum die size as constrained by the photo mask and interlinking multiple dies together so they effectively function as one chip is a pretty incredible breakthrough, without using an interposer or other off-die layer like the Intel “Tiles” or AMD “chiplets” use.

    • @pentachronic
      @pentachronic Před měsícem

      Agree, this is misleading saying breaking Moore’s Law. Not true. Wafer scale has been done before. Thing new.

  • @zerorusher
    @zerorusher Před měsícem +1

    Since Nvidia was forced to use N4p, its safe to say that another leap on performance is almost guaranteed on next iteration from improvement alone.
    Regarding the decision to make FP4 the standard, the tradeoff between more parameters/less precision makes sense since there are recent studies showing that quantized models show negligible performance drop when compared with full precision, and that training models with lower precision from scratch may close the gap even further (given the right architecture, of course).
    About the hybrid chips using capacitors for addition, I wonder if another benefit on the future could be the ability to asynchronously discharge the accumulated charge when a certain threshold is reached. Such architecture could resemble neuron spikes and the way the human brain works asynchronously and with lower frequency.

  • @Hermas_360
    @Hermas_360 Před měsícem +2

    Great content but I must admit that the first time that got to your channel I thought that you were created by IA, anyway keep up the good work. saludos

  • @kostyanoob
    @kostyanoob Před měsícem +1

    Very good overview. Thanks, Anastasia.
    My comment is that a *solid software stack* is the real key to the adoption of every new hardware architecture out there. That's also the success behind nvidia...

  • @freddoflintstono9321
    @freddoflintstono9321 Před měsícem

    I wonder how you're going to power such a massive chip. It'll need a large amount of supply feeds. Fantastic episode - I learn something new every single time, thank you. I do like you getting animated about good ideas, nice.

  • @williamgidrewicz4775
    @williamgidrewicz4775 Před měsícem

    You mentioned photons and I am curious, is that involve splitting light into ultrasonic wavelengths for faster processing?

  • @Citrusfemboy
    @Citrusfemboy Před měsícem +1

    Commercial analog applications!? I’ve never heard of these EnCharge people, but they seem like the real deal! I’ve always been really fascinated with analog computers, so i’m really excited that they’re making a comeback!

  • @garyclouse7234
    @garyclouse7234 Před měsícem

    Can the code which identifies a defective A.I. core be incorporated into the A.I. model itself? Could this sort of error checking provide the model with a pathway to harness the error(s) detected? Could these errors be incorporated into the model as a "shortcut" to the fulfillment of one or more parameters written into the model? Just askin!

  • @anthonybelz7398
    @anthonybelz7398 Před měsícem

    Haven't really done any machine learning, but otherwise I'm a very experienced software developer - 4-bit applications can go some distance, but I have to wonder how 4-bit node-weightings can yield real neural-net performance at lo-energy; That said, I would say the chip-architecture could isolate the lo-bit consumption from hi-bit consumption transparently from any given executable layers; Disappointing if they haven't attended to this, but I would guess they have. Enjoying your briefings on modern chip-landscapes thanks Anastasi (Finally subscribed) 🐄

  • @taith2
    @taith2 Před měsícem +1

    When i think of it, regular RAM is also capacitor based
    Why didn't chip manufacturers slap a lot of capacitors in form of metal layers directly on chip?
    After all transistor cache doesnt scale well compated to logic gates
    It will require rewriting EDA software from the grounds up
    But gains will be astonishing in my opinion

  • @MikkoRantalainen
    @MikkoRantalainen Před měsícem

    It would be interesting to know how they implemented 4-bit multiplication. One could do it as a pure table lookup (there are only 256 possible results) but it's hard to tell if it's faster to do the full multiplication calculation in hardware instead. With the huge amount of transistors the new chips have, it might be faster to always compute everything on the fly.

  • @AdvantestInc
    @AdvantestInc Před měsícem

    Incredible insight into the cutting-edge developments in AI chip technology!

  • @jigglypuff4227
    @jigglypuff4227 Před měsícem

    My dear Anastasi, could you please do a video on CPU electromigration?

  • @gazzacroy
    @gazzacroy Před měsícem +1

    wow. it's just totally mind blowing

  • @dolfieaspeling9893
    @dolfieaspeling9893 Před měsícem

    Hi Anastasi , great info again. Just a quick fyi I had to re-subscribe 3 times between last week and this week. Dont know whats going on with youtube.

  • @Siderite
    @Siderite Před měsícem

    The Cerebras strategy is similar to what they were doing with hard drives before, when they had some space reserved to take the information lost by mechanically or magnetically bad clusters.

  • @MobyGoCollection
    @MobyGoCollection Před měsícem

    I wonder if they'll be able to do high quality analog audio streaming with this? Like, vinyl or tape through the computer without the downsides (hiss, flutter, crackling)

  • @anthonyrichards9512
    @anthonyrichards9512 Před měsícem +1

    ...thank you for sharing. I'm watching it now....