Google Tensor processing units

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Tensor processing unit
Tensor processing units (or TPUs) are application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC) developed specifically for machine learning. Compared to graphics processing units (which as of 2016 are frequently used for the same tasks), they are designed explicitly for a higher volume of reduced precision computation with higher IOPS per watt (e.g. as little as 8-bit precision[1]), and lack hardware for rasterisation/texture mapping.[2] The chip has been specifically designed for Google’s TensorFlow framework, however Google still uses CPUs and GPUs for other machine learning.[3] Other AI accelerator designs are appearing from other vendors also and are aimed at embedded and robotics markets.

Google has stated that its proprietary tensor processing units were used in the AlphaGo versus Lee Sedol series of man-machine Go games.[2] Google has also used TPUs for Google Street View text processing, and was able to find all the text in the Street View database in less than five days. In Google Photos, an individual TPU can process over 100 million photos a day. It is also used in RankBrain which Google uses to provide search results.[4] The tensor processing unit was announced in 2016 at Google I/O, although the company stated that the TPU had been used inside their datacenter for over a year prior.[3][2]

The chip size can fit in a hard drive slot within a data center rack according to Google Distinguished Hardware Engineer Norm Jouppi.[3]

See also Edit

Vision processing unit a similar device specialised for vision processing.
TrueNorth a similar device simulating spiking neurons instead of low precision tensors.
Neural processing unit
References Edit

^ Armasu, Lucian (2016-05-19). “Google’s Big Chip Unveil For Machine Learning: Tensor Processing Unit With 10x Better Efficiency (Updated)”. Tom’s Hardware. Retrieved 2016-06-26.
^ a b c Jouppi, Norm (May 18, 2016). “Google supercharges machine learning tasks with TPU custom chip”. Google Cloud Platform Blog. Google. Retrieved 2017-01-22.
^ a b c “Google’s Tensor Processing Unit explained: this is what the future of computing looks like”. TechRadar. Retrieved 2017-01-19.
^ “Google’s Tensor Processing Unit could advance Moore’s Law 7 years into the future”. PCWorld. Retrieved 2017-01-19.

Last edited 12 days ago by PirateImpulse

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Google Tensor processing units was last modified: July 13th, 2017 by Jovan Stosic