OpenSUSE is the first major Linux distribution to package up and offer Intel’s OpenVINO open-source AI toolkit within its package repository.
For those running openSUSE and wanting to experiment with OpenVINO for faster AI performance across Intel’s diverse range of CPUs / GPUs / NPUs / FPGAs, it’s now conveniently packaged up ion their package repository.
OpenSUSE users like on other Linux distributions could always have compiled the openVINO sources manually or relied on the official Intel binaries, but now it’s conveniently offered from the openSUSE package repository for quick deployments.
Today’s openSUSE news announcement notes: “openSUSE became the first Linux distribution to offer OpenVINO in its native repository.”
While optimized for Intel hardware, OpenVINO does work as well on AMD CPUs and Arm CPUs – as my ongoing OpenVINO benchmarks continue to show.
Those unfamiliar with the OpenVINO AI toolkit can learn more at Intel.com.
The original article contains 187 words, the summary contains 146 words. Saved 22%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
OpenSUSE is the first major Linux distribution to package up and offer Intel’s OpenVINO open-source AI toolkit within its package repository.
For those running openSUSE and wanting to experiment with OpenVINO for faster AI performance across Intel’s diverse range of CPUs / GPUs / NPUs / FPGAs, it’s now conveniently packaged up ion their package repository.
OpenSUSE users like on other Linux distributions could always have compiled the openVINO sources manually or relied on the official Intel binaries, but now it’s conveniently offered from the openSUSE package repository for quick deployments.
Today’s openSUSE news announcement notes: “openSUSE became the first Linux distribution to offer OpenVINO in its native repository.”
While optimized for Intel hardware, OpenVINO does work as well on AMD CPUs and Arm CPUs – as my ongoing OpenVINO benchmarks continue to show.
Those unfamiliar with the OpenVINO AI toolkit can learn more at Intel.com.
The original article contains 187 words, the summary contains 146 words. Saved 22%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!