News: 0001598471

  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

AMD GAIA 0.14 Released With Native Support For Linux & macOS

([AMD] 89 Minutes Ago AMD GAIA)


Early this year AMD [1]announced the open-source GAIA project for "Generative AI Is Awesome" as a showcase of AI support atop their Ryzen AI NPUs and other hardware. That began as a Windows-only project but in September [2]AMD added Linux support to GAIA but only using Vulkan acceleration for AI on Radeon GPUs. Now today GAIA 0.14 is available with "native" support for both macOS and Linux.

AMD's GAIA is a a showcase for [3]AI chat agents and other LLM agents on AMD consumer hardware . With today's v0.14 release they are promoting "native macOS and Linux support" but it's not immediately clear if this Linux support now allows for Ryzen AI NPU use on Linux or if ROCm can now also be leveraged or if it's still limited to Vulkan acceleration like in prior releases. After all, macOS now has "native" support too but without any Ryzen AI NPU possibilities under macOS.

The release notes are rather bare when it comes to any new Linux references and their cited pull requests are for a non-public repository that isn't accessible to external/public individuals.

AMD GAIA 0.14 adds a document Q&A assistant for interacting with your local documents using agentic RAG for semantic searching, image extract from PDFs, and other auto-discovery features of your documents. There are also code agent improvements and other enhancements with the GAIA 0.14 release.

I'll be trying out AMD GAIA 0.14 soon to see how the "native" Linux support is working out and just how well rounded the hardware support is. For those wanting to try out AMD GAIA as an AI demonstrator can find it on [4]GitHub .



[1] https://www.phoronix.com/news/AMD-GAIA-Open-Source

[2] https://www.phoronix.com/news/AMD-GAIA-GenAI-Linux-Support

[3] https://www.phoronix.com/news/AMD-GAIA-0.13

[4] https://github.com/amd/gaia/releases/tag/v0.14.0



Brief History Of Linux (#23)

Linus Torvalds certainly wasn't the only person to create their own
operating system from scratch. Other people working from their leaky
basements did create their own systems and now they are sick that they
didn't become an Alpha Geek like Torvalds or a Beta Geek like Alan Cox.

Linus had one advantage not many else did: Internet access. The world was
full of half-implemented-Unix-kernels at the time, but they were sitting
isolated on some hacker's hard drive, destined to be destroyed by a hard
drive crash. Thankfully that never happened to Linux, mostly because
everyone with Net access could download a copy instead of paying shipping
charges to receive the code on a huge stack of unreliable floppy disks.

Indeed, buried deep within a landfill in Lansing, Michigan sits a stack of
still-readable 5-1/4 floppies containing the only known copy of "Windows
Killer", a fully functional Unix kernel so elegant, so efficient, so
easy-to-use that Ken Thompson himself would be jealous of its design.
Unfortunately the author's mother threw out the stack of floppies in a
bout of spring cleaning. The 14 year old author's talents were lost
forever as his parents sent him to Law School.