Why are we comparing a programing language and a GPU. This is a category error. Programing languages do not do any operations. They perform no FLOPs, they are the thing the FLOPs are performing.
"The I7-4770K and preform 20k more Flops than C++" is an equally sensible statement (i.e. not)
Not really. GPU many cores, at least for fp32, gives you 2 to 4 order of magnitudes compared to high speed CPU.
The rest will be from "python float" (e.g. not from numpy) to C, which gives you already 2 to 3 order of magnitude difference, and then another 2 to 3 from plan C to optimized SIMD.
If you want a written resource I have a blog post about the mathematics behind building a feed forward from scratch, https://max-amb.github.io/blog/the_maths_behind_the_mlp/. Kinda focuses on translation from individual components to matrix operations.
It’s just linear algebra. Work your way from feed forward to CNN to RNN to LSTM to attention then maybe a small inference engine. Kaparthy’s llama2.c is only ~300 lines on the latter and it pragma simds so you don’t need fancy GPUs
>For example, getting good performance on a dataset with deep learning also involves a lot of guesswork. But, if your training loss is way lower than your test loss, you're in the "overfitting" regime, and you're wasting your time if you try to increase the capacity of your model.
Generally, posting a link-only reply without further elaboration comes across as a bit rude. Are you providing support for the above point? Refuting it? You felt compelled to comment, a few words to indicate what you’re actually trying to say would go a long way.
>We show that a variety of modern deep learning tasks exhibit a "double-descent" phenomenon where, as we increase model size, performance first gets worse and then gets better.
Right, isn't double descent one of the reasons why modern Extremely Large Language Models work at all? I think I heard somewhere that basically all today's "smart" (reasoning, solving math problems, etc) LLMs are trained in the "double descent" territory (whatever this means, I'm not entirely sure).
wild
"The I7-4770K and preform 20k more Flops than C++" is an equally sensible statement (i.e. not)
The rest will be from "python float" (e.g. not from numpy) to C, which gives you already 2 to 3 order of magnitude difference, and then another 2 to 3 from plan C to optimized SIMD.
See e.g. https://github.com/Avafly/optimize-gemm for how you can get 2 to 3 order of magnitude just from C.
https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.02292