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4Runner

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Why is Intel’s GPU program having problems?​

Sep 2, 2022 by Charlie Demerjian
...
In this case Intel is literally developing the DG2 drivers all over the world as they do for many things, hardware and software. The problem this time is that key parts of the drivers for this GPU, specifically the shader compiler and related key performance pieces, were being done by the team in Russia. On February 24, Russia invaded Ukraine and the west put some rather stiff sanctions on the aggressor and essentially cut off the ability to do business in the country.
Even if businesses decided to stick with Russia, it would have been nearly impossible to pay the wages of their workers due to sanctions on financial institutions and related uses of foreign currencies. In short Intel had a key development team cut off almost overnight with no warning.
...
Poor old Charlie is still chasing Intel vs AMD vs Nvidia.

The biggest mistake Intel made with GPU was that it abandoned Larrabee in 2009. Around that time, the GPU market was dominated by Nvidia and ATI (acquired by AMD in 2006). After that, the GPU market has been a 2-horse race between Nvidia and AMD. Nvidia started GPGPU line based on its GPU architecture. AMD followed shortly after. It is actually GPGPU that is actually being used in super computers first and then bitcoin and now AI engines.

The rumor back in 2009 said that Intel had a decent short at a 3-horse race if it had kept the Larrabee project and improving on it. But like the mobile cpu segment, Intel abandoned Larrabee and never caught up in the GPU segment.
 

gelgoog

Lieutenant General
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Larrabee was crap. It was basically a bunch of Pentium cores in a ring bus. Intel continued funding it for way longer than it should have. You had later iterations of it, called Xeon Phi, like Knights Landing.
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No one but Intel could fund this piece of crap for 4 whole process generations with the pitiful amount of sales it had. It was a boutique product only used in some HPC platforms. It never was able to compete vs a GPU and in fact the products that came out had no graphic output port. It was just used for compute.
 

Temstar

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"Even today new challenges continue to arise, making the situation more volatile. But as in the past our government will work closely with the industry to get through these challenging times," she added.

"Time and again Taiwan has proven its agility and resilience in meeting challenges and ensuring that our semiconductor industry maintains its world-leading status."
Tsai seems determined to keep TSMC in Taiwan, I don't think Raimondo would like that sound of that, getting fetch that toolbox.
 

ansy1968

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Tsai seems determined to keep TSMC in Taiwan, I don't think Raimondo would like that sound of that, getting fetch that toolbox.
You don't say....lol

You don't say - quickmeme
 

Appix

Senior Member
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U.S. Senate panel advances bill to boost support for Taiwan​

Legislation gives $4.5bn in security assistance over 4 years

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- A U.S. Senate committee on Wednesday approved legislation that would significantly enhance U.S. military support for Taiwan, including provisions for billions of dollars in additional security assistance, as China increases military pressure on the democratically governed island.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee backed the Taiwan Policy Act of 2022 by 17-5, despite concerns about the bill in U.S. President Joe Biden's administration and anger about the measure from Beijing.

The strong bipartisan vote was a clear indication of support from both Republicans and Biden's fellow Democrats for changes in U.S. policy toward Taiwan, such as treating it as a major non-NATO ally.

Sponsors said the bill would be the most comprehensive restructuring of U.S. policy toward the island since the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 -- the bedrock of U.S. engagement with what China views as one of its provinces since Washington opened up relations with Beijing that year.

"We need to be clear-eyed about what we are facing," said Sen. Bob Menendez, the committee's Democratic chairman, while stressing that the United States does not seek war or heightened tensions with Beijing.

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U.S. Senate panel advances bill to boost support for Taiwan​

Legislation gives $4.5bn in security assistance over 4 years
https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%252Fimages%252F5%252F3%252F1%252F9%252F42229135-3-eng-GB%252FCropped-166322455920220915%2520Washington%2520Capitol%2520building.jpg

Sponsors say the Taiwan Policy Act of 2022 would be the most comprehensive restructuring of U.S. policy toward the island since the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979. © Reuters
September 15, 2022 16:17 JST
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- A U.S. Senate committee on Wednesday approved legislation that would significantly enhance U.S. military support for Taiwan, including provisions for billions of dollars in additional security assistance, as China increases military pressure on the democratically governed island.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee backed the Taiwan Policy Act of 2022 by 17-5, despite concerns about the bill in U.S. President Joe Biden's administration and anger about the measure from Beijing.
The strong bipartisan vote was a clear indication of support from both Republicans and Biden's fellow Democrats for changes in U.S. policy toward Taiwan, such as treating it as a major non-NATO ally.

Sponsors said the bill would be the most comprehensive restructuring of U.S. policy toward the island since the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 -- the bedrock of U.S. engagement with what China views as one of its provinces since Washington opened up relations with Beijing that year.
"We need to be clear-eyed about what we are facing," said Sen. Bob Menendez, the committee's Democratic chairman, while stressing that the United States does not seek war or heightened tensions with Beijing.

"If we want to ensure Taiwan has a fighting chance, we must act now," said Sen. Jim Risch, the committee's top Republican, arguing that any change in the status quo for Taiwan would have "disastrous effects" for the U.S. economy and national security.

Taiwan's presidential office thanked the Senate for its latest show of support, saying the bill will "help promote the Taiwan-U.S. partnership in many ways," including security and economic cooperation.

The bill would allocate $4.5 billion in security assistance for Taiwan over four years, and supports its participation in international organizations.


The act also includes extensive language on sanctions toward China in the event of hostilities across the strait separating the mainland from Taiwan.

When the bill was introduced in June, China responded by saying it would be "compelled to take resolute countermeasures" if Washington took actions that harmed China's interests.

"We haven't discussed any specifics," Hsiao Bi-khim, Taiwan's de facto ambassador to Washington, told reporters at an event at the Capitol when asked if she has had discussions with the White House over specific sanctions.

"We talked about integrated deterrence in a broader sense of the need to explore different tools to ensure that the status quo in the Taiwan Strait can be maintained," Hsiao said.

"We talked about integrated deterrence in a broader sense of the need to explore different tools to ensure that the status quo in the Taiwan Strait can be maintained," Hsiao said.

She said she had expressed "gratitude" to Congress for the legislation. "Given the complication of different views here in the United States too, we're hoping that we can reach some consensus on security, which is our top priority," she said.

The committee's approval paved the way for a vote in the full Senate, but there has been no word on when that might take place. To become law, it must also pass the House of Representatives and be signed by Biden or win enough support to override a veto.

The White House said on Tuesday it was in talks with members of Congress on how to change the act to ensure that it does not change long-standing U.S. policy toward Taiwan that it considers effective.
The Taiwan bill is likely to be folded into a larger piece of legislation expected to pass late this year, such as the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), an annual bill setting policy for the Department of Defense.

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