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Microsoft Introduces ND-series GPU for Azure

Azure customers can now get better performance with ND-series GPUs, build on NVIDIA’s Tesla-based P40 GPU. Microsoft says the new series brings double the performance and more memory.

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Microsoft Azure customers can now have more choice over their GPU with the announcement of the new ND-series. The company announced the GPU’s on Monday, and said the new sizings will be available soon. With the ND-series for Azure, users can deploy modern virtual machines for accelerated workloads.

The new series is designed for training and interface. Microsoft says the ND-series is powered by NVIDIA’s Tesla P40 GPU and is built on the Pascal Architecture.

This allows customers to get double the performance compared to older generations. Improvements in AI workloads are also available with the new series.

Microsoft is expanding the range because its NVIDIA Tesla-based GPUs have been a huge success. The company first launched these GPUs last year. The power and performance of the GPUs allowed Azure customers to expand their deep learning and artificial intelligence workloads.

Among the applications that have leveraged the Tesla-powered technology are speech training, autonomous vehicle technology, and image recognition. The ND-series builds on these capabilities and brings customers more power.

Improving Performance in Azure

Because of the larger memory size (24GB), customers can accommodate bigger neural net models. There is also RDMA and InfiniBand connectivity, which is a staple on the NC-series.

HPC workloads also get performance boosts from the new GPU series. This benefits modelling such as DNA sequencing, protein analysis, rendering, and more.

Microsoft says the new series shows how the cloud is transforming data and how people work:

“One of the promises of the cloud has always been agility. As your computational needs change and expand/shrink and as the models improve/mature, you want to leverage the latest and greatest hardware for computation without waiting for existing hardware to age. With Azure, this will now become possible.”

SourceMicrosoft
Luke Jones
Luke Jones
Luke has been writing about all things tech for more than five years. He is following Microsoft closely to bring you the latest news about Windows, Office, Azure, Skype, HoloLens and all the rest of their products.

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