| ▲ | afavour 15 hours ago | |||||||
Chicken/egg. NVidia tooling is lacking surely in part because the hardware wasn’t usable on macOS until now. Now that it’s usable that might change. | ||||||||
| ▲ | frollogaston 10 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Nvidia GPUs were usable on Intel Macs, but compatibility got worse over time, and Apple stopped making a Mac Pro with regular PCIe slots in 2013. People then got hopeful about eGPUs, but they have their own caveats on top of macOS only fully working with AMD cards. So I've gotten numb to any news about Mac + GPU. The answer was always to just get a non-Apple PC with PCIe slots instead of giving yourself hoops to jump through. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | fg137 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
Until there is official support for Mac coming from nvidia, I don't think anything will happen. > the hardware wasn't usable on macOS This eGPU thing is from a third-party if I understand correctly. I don't see why nvidia would get excited about that. If they cared about the platform, they would have released something already. | ||||||||
| ▲ | bigyabai 11 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Nvidia tooling like CUDA has worked on AArch64 UNIX-certified OSes since June of 2020: https://download.nvidia.com/XFree86/Linux-aarch64/ The software stack has been ready for Apple Silicon for more than a half decade. | ||||||||