There is already a lot of good Chinese DDR 5 memory on the market and it’s a matter of time before Chinese GPU’s and CPU’s proliferate. I remember people in the west global north were sceptic about the viability of Chinese electric cars ever existing just 5 years ago; Elon even laughed at the possibility. Tables turn fast when you have industrial capacity and central planning.
Chinese electric cars were always going to take off. RAM is just a commodity; if you sell the most bits at the lowest price and sufficient speed, it works.
If you’re in edge machine learning, if you write your own software stacks for niche stuff, Chinese hardware will be killer.
But if you’re trying to run Steam games? Or CUDA projects? That’s a whole different story. It doesn’t matter how good the hardware is, they’re always going to be handicapped by software in “legacy” code. Not just for performance, but driver bugs/quirks.
Proton (and focusing everything on a good Vulkan driver) is not a bad path forward, but still. They’re working against decades of dev work targeting AMD/Nvidia/Intel, up and down the stack.
I mean, I’d kill for a Chinese GPU. But software lock-in for your Steam back catalog is strong.
Also, have you been watching all the Chinese GPU announcements? They’re all in on datacenter machine learning ASICs too.
There is already a lot of good Chinese DDR 5 memory on the market and it’s a matter of time before Chinese GPU’s and CPU’s proliferate. I remember people in the west global north were sceptic about the viability of Chinese electric cars ever existing just 5 years ago; Elon even laughed at the possibility. Tables turn fast when you have industrial capacity and central planning.
Chinese electric cars were always going to take off. RAM is just a commodity; if you sell the most bits at the lowest price and sufficient speed, it works.
If you’re in edge machine learning, if you write your own software stacks for niche stuff, Chinese hardware will be killer.
But if you’re trying to run Steam games? Or CUDA projects? That’s a whole different story. It doesn’t matter how good the hardware is, they’re always going to be handicapped by software in “legacy” code. Not just for performance, but driver bugs/quirks.
Proton (and focusing everything on a good Vulkan driver) is not a bad path forward, but still. They’re working against decades of dev work targeting AMD/Nvidia/Intel, up and down the stack.