They could break the trend and offer a "buy now" button instead of offering quotes and coffee chats. It's very likely that will kickstart the software snowball with early adopters.
Nobody is going to drop millions on an unproven platform.
> Seems kind of weird at this price point.
Yeah that $234K server is too much for people to do a trial. It has 8xMI300X GPUs along with a bunch of other shit.
Give me a single MI300X GPU in PCIe form factor for $20K and I'd very seriously consider. I'm sure there are many people who would help adapt the ecosystem if they were truly available.
> Give me a single MI300X GPU in PCIe form factor for $20K and I'd very seriously consider. I'm sure there are many people who would help adapt the ecosystem if they were truly available.
I know this isn't what you're looking for entirely, but my business, Hot Aisle, is working on making MI300x available for rental. Our pricing isn't too crazy given that the GPU has 192GB and one week minimum isn't too bad. We will add on-demand hourly pricing as soon as we technically can.
I'm also pushing hard on Dell and AMD to pre-purchase developer credits on our hardware, that we can then give away to people who want to "kick the tires".
Why would you be looking to dip your toe into the AMD ecosystem for the first time using an MI300X? It doesn't make any sense. It's not entry level hardware.
I'm not looking to enter the ecosystem, I'm already deep in it and want to fix the AMD problem so that I can build big projects around it and undercut everyone who's using Nvidia.
You can purchase H100 and A100 PCIe cards over the counter. They're great for compiling CUDA code, testing code before you launch a multi-node job into a cluster, and for running evaluations.
AMD has nothing of the sort, and it's hurting them.
I cannot blow 250K on an SMCI server, nor do I have the electricity setup for it. I can blow 20K on a PCIe GPU and start contributing to the ecosystem, or maybe prove out an idea on one GPU before trying to raise millions from a VC to build a more cost-effective datacenter that actually works.
They could break the trend and offer a "buy now" button instead of offering quotes and coffee chats. It's very likely that will kickstart the software snowball with early adopters.
Nobody is going to drop millions on an unproven platform.
> Seems kind of weird at this price point.
Yeah that $234K server is too much for people to do a trial. It has 8xMI300X GPUs along with a bunch of other shit.
Give me a single MI300X GPU in PCIe form factor for $20K and I'd very seriously consider. I'm sure there are many people who would help adapt the ecosystem if they were truly available.