jvican 2 hours ago

If you're interested in this resource, I highly recommend checking out Stanford's CS336 class. It covers all this curriculum in a lot more depth, introduces you into a lot of theoretical aspects (scaling laws, intuitions) and systems thinking (kernel optimization/profiling). For this, you have to do the assignments, of course... https://cs336.stanford.edu/

antirez 4 minutes ago

Context: he is one of the MLX developers, a skilled ML researcher.

steveharing1 5 minutes ago

The documentation is really helpful enough to get started

NSUserDefaults an hour ago

Been doing it since the day I was born. The beginnings were hard but I’m getting there.

baalimago 2 hours ago

Train your LM from scratch*

I doubt you have a machine big enough to make it "Large".

  • mips_avatar an hour ago

    You can fully train a 1.6b model on a single 3090. That’s a reasonably big model.

  • nucleardog an hour ago

    Hey now! I've got a half terabyte of RAM at my disposal! I mean, it's DDR4 but... it's RAM!

    And it's paired with 48 processor cores! I mean, they don't even support AVX512 but they can do math!

    I could totally train a LLM! Or at least my family could... might need my kid to pick up and carry on the project.

    But in all seriousness... you either missed the point, are being needlessly pedantic, or are... wrong?

    This is about learning concepts, and the rest of this is mostly moot.

    On the pedantic or wrong notes--What is the documented cut-off for a "large" language model? Because GPT-2 was and is described as a "large" language model. It had 1.5B parameters. You can just about get a consumer GPU capable of training that for about $400 these days.

    • Malcolmlisk 12 minutes ago

      Then rewrite the title and call it "learn how to do a non usable llm from scratch"

hiroakiaizawa 2 hours ago

Nice. What scale does this realistically reach on a single machine?

  • lynx97 38 minutes ago

    Model: 36L/36H/576D, 144.2M params

    runs on a Blackwell 6000 Max-Q, using 86GB VRAM. Training supposedly takes 3h40m

iamnotarobotman 2 hours ago

This looks great for a first introduction to training LLMs, and it looks simple enough to try this locally. Great job!