Difference between revisions of "RAPIDS"
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{#seo: | ||
+ | |title=PRIMO.ai | ||
+ | |titlemode=append | ||
+ | |keywords=artificial, intelligence, machine, learning, models, algorithms, data, singularity, moonshot, Tensorflow, Google, Nvidia, Microsoft, Azure, Amazon, AWS | ||
+ | |description=Helpful resources for your journey with artificial intelligence; videos, articles, techniques, courses, profiles, and tools | ||
+ | }} | ||
[http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=RAPIDS+NVIDIA Youtube search...] | [http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=RAPIDS+NVIDIA Youtube search...] | ||
+ | [http://www.google.com/search?q=RAPIDS+NVIDIA+deep+machine+learning+ML+artificial+intelligence ...Google search] | ||
* [[NVIDIA]] | * [[NVIDIA]] |
Revision as of 22:16, 2 February 2019
Youtube search... ...Google search
The RAPIDS data science framework includes a collection of libraries for executing end-to-end data science pipelines completely in the GPU. It is designed to have a familiar look and feel to data scientists working in Python. The RAPIDS suite of open source software libraries gives you the freedom to execute end-to-end data science and analytics pipelines entirely on GPUs. It relies on NVIDIA® CUDA® primitives for low-level compute optimization, but exposes that GPU parallelism and high-bandwidth memory speed through user-friendly Python interfaces. RAPIDS also focuses on common data preparation tasks for analytics and data science. This includes a familiar DataFrame API that integrates with a variety of machine learning algorithms for end-to-end pipeline accelerations without paying typical serialization costs. RAPIDS also includes support for multi-node, multi-GPU deployments, enabling vastly accelerated processing and training on much larger dataset sizes. RAPIDS Getting Started | NVIDIA