Microsoft is getting in gear for the impending rise of hardware-accelerated local AI tools, and while the first steps might seem boring, they’re important nonetheless.
Yes, I’m going to talk about Task Manager – wait, don’t leave! I know, it’s hardly the most glamorous topic out there, but this an important development. AMD has announced that it’s working with Microsoft to add support for the former’s latest neural processing units (NPUs) in Windows; specifically, enabling the Microsoft Compute Driver Model (MCDM) for the AMD chips, which will enable Task Manager to monitor NPU resource usage the same way it does for the CPU, GPU, and your other components.
It’s probably a relief for AMD, because its biggest rival, Intel, already has MCDM support for its own on-chip NPUs, despite Team Red being first to the NPU market. AMD praised Microsoft for acknowledging the importance of neural processing hardware, noting that AI use – which can be accelerated by a local NPU – is likely to burgeon in the coming years and commending Microsoft’s efforts to “keep pace with the added complexity of PCs”.
What does this mean for you?
Every major chipmaker, including AMD, is currently on board the AI bandwagon, and that means dedicated hardware in your device for powering AI workloads. ‘Local’ AI has many advantages over currently-available cloud-based AI tools such as ChatGPT, such as faster processing times, no need for a constant internet connection, and superior user security; so it’s not hard to see why NPUs have become the new gold rush target.
In practice, that means we’re going to see more and more laptops and desktop PCs (and also phones and tablets!) featuring these dedicated AI chips as standard. Microsoft’s upcoming integration for AMD’s NPUs is specifically for the new Ryzen 8040 series of chips, which are laptop-only processors. While the initial functionality will be limited to monitoring the NPU within Task Manager, it paves the way for full hardware-accelerated AI within Windows.
But even just Task Manager integration is good and important – and if you don’t use Task Manager, you should. It’s an invaluable tool for keeping track of how efficiently your computer is running, letting you see if your system is bottlenecking on a single component or chewing up power when running specific programs; it’s an especially useful tool especially for laptop users, who can use it to fine-tune their power settings for better battery life.
I was pleased to see that AMD agrees with my assessment, with a spokesperson saying the resource allocation tracking is “particularly important in notebooks where end users may choose to maximize battery life by controlling where certain workloads run or adjusting global power settings”. Even if your laptop doesn’t have an NPU (most don’t at present), Task Manager can help you squeeze the most out of its battery life.
In any case, we’re probably only a year or two away from seeing all the best laptops featuring their own onboard NPUs, so Microsoft probably couldn’t afford to drag its heels any longer. It’s not quite clear from AMD’s blog post whether this is a Windows 11-exclusive update or will apply to older versions of the OS too, but it wouldn’t surprise me if it’s the former – as we know, Microsoft really wants you to update!
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