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  2. PhyCV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PhyCV

    We use the Jetson Nano (4GB) with NVIDIA JetPack SDK version 4.6.1, which comes with pre- installed Python 3.6, CUDA 10.2, and OpenCV 4.1.1. We further install PyTorch 1.10 to enable the GPU accelerated PhyCV. We demonstrate the results and metrics of running PhyCV on Jetson Nano in real-time for edge detection and low-light enhancement tasks.

  3. PyTorch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PyTorch

    PyTorch Tensors are similar to NumPy Arrays, but can also be operated on a CUDA-capable NVIDIA GPU. PyTorch has also been developing support for other GPU platforms, for example, AMD's ROCm [26] and Apple's Metal Framework. [27] PyTorch supports various sub-types of Tensors. [28]

  4. CUDA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUDA

    In computing, CUDA (Compute Unified Device Architecture) is a proprietary [2] parallel computing platform and application programming interface (API) that allows software to use certain types of graphics processing units (GPUs) for accelerated general-purpose processing, an approach called general-purpose computing on GPUs.

  5. DeepSpeed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeepSpeed

    Features include mixed precision training, single-GPU, multi-GPU, and multi-node training as well as custom model parallelism. The DeepSpeed source code is licensed under MIT License and available on GitHub. [5] The team claimed to achieve up to a 6.2x throughput improvement, 2.8x faster convergence, and 4.6x less communication. [6]

  6. Moore Threads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moore_Threads

    Moore Threads Technology Co. Ltd (Chinese: 摩尔线程) is a Chinese technology company specializing in graphics processing unit (GPU) design, established in October 2020 by Zhang Jianzhong (张建中), the former global vice-president of Nvidia and general manager of Nvidia China. [1]

  7. Graphics processing unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphics_processing_unit

    Components of a GPU. A graphics processing unit (GPU) is a specialized electronic circuit initially designed for digital image processing and to accelerate computer graphics, being present either as a discrete video card or embedded on motherboards, mobile phones, personal computers, workstations, and game consoles.

  8. ROCm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROCm

    ROCm [3] is an Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) software stack for graphics processing unit (GPU) programming. ROCm spans several domains: general-purpose computing on graphics processing units (GPGPU), high performance computing (HPC), heterogeneous computing.

  9. CuPy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CuPy

    CuPy is an open source library for GPU-accelerated computing with Python programming language, providing support for multi-dimensional arrays, sparse matrices, and a variety of numerical algorithms implemented on top of them. [3] CuPy shares the same API set as NumPy and SciPy, allowing it to be a drop-in replacement to run NumPy/SciPy code on GPU.