Let's all laugh at some irrelevant design aspects of the screen and call Apple users fags totally ignoring the fact that, you know, the device has a 600 billion operations per second NEURAL engine in it. Nobody mentions that, who cares... look the screen is not perfectly rectangular!
Nicely done. The technology board, ladies and gentlemen.
Wow faggot, that buzzword definitely makes up for the down syndrome looking screen. (You)
Nicholas Hall
'ideal'
satisfying one's conception of what is perfect; most suitable. "the swimming pool is ideal for a quick dip" synonyms: perfect, best possible, consummate, supreme, excellent, flawless, faultless, exemplary, classic, model, ultimate, quintessential, picture-perfect "ideal flying weather" antonyms: bad 2. existing only in the imagination; desirable or perfect but not likely to become a reality. "in an ideal world, we might have made a different decision" synonyms: unattainable, unachievable, impracticable, chimerical; More
Brandon James
A processor or something dedicated to doing machine learning (statistics algorithms). My guess would be something similar to a GPU doing vector operations in parallel.
Bentley Parker
Or the government of the country said company is operating in?
Juan Roberts
>Real time processing.
LOL
Isaac Cook
the neural engine is probably just a graphics card with less features, so it focuses on multiplying large matrices. Maybe they also do the processing to get the inputs, but that can be a lot harder to assure real time for.
Nicholas Taylor
>600 billion operations per second
My seven year old Radeon 6950 can do 2700 billion operations per second.
Henry Perry
>satisfying one's conception of what is perfect; most suitable Yes?
Joshua Perry
You expect every person you see in a coffee shop to fit your personal conception of what is perfect? How sad.
Liam Stewart
Now tell me what can it do or you are retarded
Chase Brooks
>He didn't get the 6970 Pleb
Luis Gray
A neural engine is a bit inferior to a blast processor, from a technical perspective.
Nathan Richardson
>He unironically bought the 6970 and doesn't even feel bad about it.
Ethan Stewart
Can someone pls explain non-realtime processing?
Austin Cooper
The Ryzen CPU uses a neural network to solve the branch prediction issue, boosting the general performance of the machine, and doing something much more useful than a face recognizer to unlock phones.
Jason Cruz
>Qualcomm's Hexagon DSP is way better lol
Angel Campbell
Wow. Many poor people in this thread
Alexander Rodriguez
This is really interesting user! So AI can be used even to improve the performance of PCs?
Julian James
Fuck off iFag. My Raspberry Pi 3 Model B is much more useful than any RottenFruit.inc's product.
William James
Yes, but it will exclusively used to alter your behavior to buy more products/services.
Evan Robinson
>Engage discussion on an anonymous image board >Being a tripfag and closet redditor.
Pick only one
Chase Butler
>Fuck off iFag. My Raspberry Pi 3 Model B is much more useful than any RottenFruit.inc's product. Poorfag detected.
Tyler Hughes
Thank god the American century is over
Levi Martin
So they're trying to offload all AI/chatbot/voice analysis computations from apple servers to peoples' phones? can't wait to see this battery chart.
Grayson Ross
>muh raspberri pi connected to my Tee Vee Get a job, manchild.
Luis Nelson
Claiming someone can't purchase an iProduct because of his current financial situation doesn't make you look wealthy and/or successful. It only confirms the iProduct being a social status symbol and puts you in the lower social class that needs such a product.
Isaac Martin
I actually use a rpi3 this way. It's comfy as fuck.
Ian Edwards
It's not true AI, but a weird solution to a weird problem. Basically machine code have those jump instructions that may or may not be taken, depending on a value of a flag, and the end result of the flag is generally defined on an instruction pretty close the jump. But as CPUs work like a factory threadmill, where each instruction is executed little by little on "pipeline stages", you must know like 20 instructions ahead of the time if the branch will be taken or not, or you end half processing 20 instructions that you weren't supposed to, so you need to discard all of em and take 20 cycles just doing the right path. So the better the CPU is at guessing, better performance you get out of the chip.
What AMD presumably did was to get a neural network engine, "train" it to recognize situations where the branch will or will not be taken by running a fuckload of programs with it watching the results and ended up with a thing they don't actually know how it work but work.
Joseph Foster
the neural engine thing is marketing fluff. the real interesting bit is that instead of buying an off the shelf solution from say.... Qualcomm they decided to make their own custom solution. which implies they're using an algorithm that off the shelf parts couldn't do fast enough or at all to whatever specifications they were targeting, and to have someone like Qualcomm produce a solution just for them would have taken too long and cost more in the end.
Ryder Martin
This is fascinating. And one of the most interesting application of "AI" I heard of ... Thank you so much for the explanation that was understandable even to a layman like myself
Camden Russell
Or they figured they don't want to depend on other manufacturers for yet another piece of hardware.
Camden Clark
>muhh bait
getting replies is too easy nowadays
Landon Allen
Neural processor or ai processor is just a processor that can do lot of parallel operations with low precision numbers. 16 bit or even 8 bit.
Kayden Bailey
But can it blend? $1000 warning
Carter Thomas
>shills Apple >makes Bill Gates richer
Caleb Phillips
This. Any asshole with a McJob can afford the payments on an iPhone, even the absurdly expensive X. An asset needs to break 100k before it's worth being a symbol of wealthy status.
Colton Anderson
> Implying Huawei didn't do it first with their Kirin 970