Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Apple pulls ICEBlock from the App Store

    October 2, 2025

    Google is destroying independent websites, and one sees no choice but to defend it anyway

    October 2, 2025

    Shein is opening its first physical stores

    October 2, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » A Former Apple Luminary Sets Out to Create the Ultimate GPU Software
    Business

    A Former Apple Luminary Sets Out to Create the Ultimate GPU Software

    News RoomBy News RoomSeptember 29, 20253 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    Still, developers say that bringing code from Nvidia’s CUDA to ROCm isn’t a smooth process, which means they typically focus on building for just one chip vendor.

    “ROCm is amazing, it’s open source, but it runs on one vendor’s hardware,” Lattner told the crowd at AMD’s Advancing AI event in June. Then he made his pitch for why Modular’s software is more portable and makes GPUs that much faster.

    Lattner’s talk at AMD is representative of the kind of dance that Lattner and Davis need to do as they spread the Modular gospel. Today, Nvidia and AMD are both crucial partners for the firm. In a future universe, they’re also direct competitors. Part of Modular’s value proposition is that it can ship software for optimizing GPUs even faster than Nvidia, as there might be a months-long gap between when Nvidia ships a new GPU and when it releases an “attention kernel”—a critical part of the GPU software.

    “Right now Modular is complimentary to AMD and Nvidia, but over time you could see both of those companies feeling threatened by ROCm or CUDA not being the best software that sits on top of their chips,” says Munichiello. He also worries that potential cloud customers may balk at having to pay for an additional software layer like Modular’s.

    Writing software for GPUs is also something of a “dark art,” says Waleed Atallah, the cofounder and CEO of Mako, a GPU kernel optimization company. “Mapping an algorithm to a GPU is an insanely difficult thing to do. There are a hundred million software devs, 10,000 who write GPU kernels, and maybe a hundred who can do it well.”

    Mako is building AI agents to optimize coding for GPUs. Some developers think that’s the future for the industry, rather than building a universal compiler or a new programming language like Modular. Mako just raised $8.5 million in seed funding from Flybridge Capital and the startup accelerator Neo.

    “We’re trying to take an iterative approach to coding and automate it with AI,” Atallah says. “By making it easier to write the code, you exponentially grow the number of people who can do that. Making another compiler is more of a fixed solution.”

    Lattner notes that Modular also uses AI coding tools. But the company is intent on addressing the whole coding stack, not just kernels.

    There are roughly 250 million reasons why investors think this approach is viable. Lattner is something of a luminary in the coding world, having previously built the open source compiler infrastructure project LLVM, as well as Apple’s Swift programming language. He and Davis are both convinced that this is a software problem that must be solved outside of a Big Tech environment, where most companies focus on building software for their own technology stack.

    “When I left Google I was a little bit depressed, because I really wanted to solve this,” Lattner says. “What we realized is that it’s not about smart people, it’s not about money, it’s not about capability. It’s a structural problem.”

    Munichiello shared a mantra common in the tech investing world: He says he’s betting on the founders themselves as much as their product. “He’s highly opinionated and impatient, and also right a lot of the time,” Munichiello said of Lattner. “Steve Jobs was also like that—he didn’t make decisions based on consensus, but he was often right.”

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleOpenAI Teams Up With Oracle and SoftBank to Build 5 New Stargate Data Centers
    Next Article These Are the 15 New York Officials ICE and NYPD Arrested in Manhattan

    Related Posts

    Exclusive: Mira Murati’s Stealth AI Lab Launches Its First Product

    October 2, 2025

    Why One VC Thinks Quantum Is a Bigger Unlock Than AGI

    October 1, 2025

    A Journey Into the Heart of Labubu

    October 1, 2025

    Marissa Mayer Is Dissolving Her Sunshine Startup Lab

    October 1, 2025

    OpenAI Is Preparing to Launch a Social App for AI-Generated Videos

    October 1, 2025

    Broadcast TV Is a ‘Melting Ice Cube.’ Kimmel Just Turned Up the Heat

    September 30, 2025
    Our Picks

    Google is destroying independent websites, and one sees no choice but to defend it anyway

    October 2, 2025

    Shein is opening its first physical stores

    October 2, 2025

    NBCUniversal’s new YouTube TV deal covers YouTube, Peacock, and a new sports network

    October 2, 2025

    Redbox’s next product may be piracy lawsuits

    October 2, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    News

    You can still save on Xbox Game Pass Ultimate

    By News RoomOctober 2, 2025

    Microsoft recently announced price hikes for some tiers of Xbox Game Pass, including Ultimate and…

    Ring’s new Search Party feature is on by default; should you opt out?

    October 2, 2025

    Amazon now lets Prime members add items to completed orders

    October 2, 2025

    It’s your last chance to snag the Xbox Series S and X at its current price before they rise tomorrow

    October 2, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.