depending entirely on ONE (quite violent at that) country for the world’s compute is insane in the first place. i’m not well read into the decade long chinese effort to make these chips, but i’m rooting for at least some modest success.
from a quick search it seems their previous iteration, the MTT S90 already supports all modern apis and is already comparable to mid-range nvidia/amd chips from a few gens ago.
which is impressive and it’d probably already cover most usecases, but it seems to be of limited production/availability so far.
They’ve made substantial progress in the past 10 years. Sadly, the lack of access to EUVL machines is what’s really holding them back from making higher end and more competitive technologies.
They are actively working on making EUVL machines domestically, which would be incredible given ASML is the only organization in the world that currently makes them. Still, it’ll probably not be till the 2030s that they actually can get into production with that.
If this is a topic that interests you, GamersNexus did an awesome hour-long deep dive into a couple Chinese chip companies and what they’ve been making and how they are being unfairly handicapped by the west, and the incredible progress they are making despite that. This is sort of perfect timing for Chinese players to enter the market given Western companies are gouging consumers and losing the good will, pretty much every PC enthusiast in the world would be happy to buy Chinese products over Western ones based strictly on price of performance is up to par.
I am interested in the state of the Linux drivers for their graphics cards. Are they open or closed? Is it possible to update the kernel and continue using their driver, or do I have to wait for a new version from the manufacturer for a new kernel version every time(if it closed source)?
I usually used AMD GPU all the time because of the open source driver and the convenience associated with it. Maybe someone knows something about it.
I’d expect they will be Linux friendly just because there’s a big push towards using Linux in China now since they want to decouple from western proprietary tech. I guess we’ll have to wait to see once they become generally available though.
Good questions. I tried looking for some information but didn’t find much and their website refuses to load for me
Programmed in Forth! Yay!
This is not mentioned anywhere.
It’s a joke. Charles Moore invented Forth.
I know all about Forth. I was wondering whether I was missing something.





