I was halfway through their whitepaper when I realized I had completely forgotten why I opened my laptop in the first place.
@OpenGradient is not giving me the same feeling as Bittensor. Bittensor is mostly about building an open marketplace for machine intelligence while OpenGradient seems much more focused on proving what AI actually did after it runs. That’s a pretty different angle.
One thing I am still not clear on is how the verification layer scales if thousands of agents are doing expensive inference at the same time. I get the basic idea but I don’t know man that’s the part I kept rereading.
Still the separation between GPU nodes doing the work and TEE nodes checking it feels more practical than trying to shove everything into one giant AI platform which is wild.
It’s different.
I am not saying I have figured the whole thing out after two hours but I walked away thinking this is infrastructure first not another model race.
What I am trying to figure out now is whether that verification design can stay efficient once the network is actually handling meaningful real world workloads.
$OPG
#OPG
@OpenGradient is not giving me the same feeling as Bittensor. Bittensor is mostly about building an open marketplace for machine intelligence while OpenGradient seems much more focused on proving what AI actually did after it runs. That’s a pretty different angle.
One thing I am still not clear on is how the verification layer scales if thousands of agents are doing expensive inference at the same time. I get the basic idea but I don’t know man that’s the part I kept rereading.
Still the separation between GPU nodes doing the work and TEE nodes checking it feels more practical than trying to shove everything into one giant AI platform which is wild.
It’s different.
I am not saying I have figured the whole thing out after two hours but I walked away thinking this is infrastructure first not another model race.
What I am trying to figure out now is whether that verification design can stay efficient once the network is actually handling meaningful real world workloads.
$OPG
#OPG