Is GPU rendering used today for VFX? From a quick google it seems that yes GPU based rendering is definitely an option, even if there's various reasons to still prefer CPU. So in your case was it really what you were aiming to do was pointless or simply your particular solution failed to succeed?
You're right that as a small player it's very hard to gain traction, even if the tech is fantastic because it's risky to switch your tech stack over. Though if you do do a good job with the tech I'd say you have a decent chance of an acquisition from a bigger player who wants a ready-made (or 90% of the way there) solution they can make their own. Perhaps you can call this an aquihire but I think you're significantly underplaying the potential upside of this exit. Imagine this startup is seen as having a great ternary transformer solution and ternary transformers are the way to go you could get multiple large players eyeing up an acquisition to get ahead pushing the price up.
My feeling is custom ASICs for ternary transformers is a great area to look at. There is a genuine chance of providing a significant step up from GPUs in terms of power efficiency and potentially performance. Plenty of risk of course, ternary models might just not perform as well as the full fat equivalents and building custom silicon, especially as a start-up, comes with all kinds of issues.
Yes by small studios with the agility to change their workflow without too much friction, and whose projects are small enough to fit into the constraints of GPU renderers, but largely not by huge studios who already have in-house CPU farms and whose projects need hundreds of gigs of RAM to render anyway.
You're right that as a small player it's very hard to gain traction, even if the tech is fantastic because it's risky to switch your tech stack over. Though if you do do a good job with the tech I'd say you have a decent chance of an acquisition from a bigger player who wants a ready-made (or 90% of the way there) solution they can make their own. Perhaps you can call this an aquihire but I think you're significantly underplaying the potential upside of this exit. Imagine this startup is seen as having a great ternary transformer solution and ternary transformers are the way to go you could get multiple large players eyeing up an acquisition to get ahead pushing the price up.
My feeling is custom ASICs for ternary transformers is a great area to look at. There is a genuine chance of providing a significant step up from GPUs in terms of power efficiency and potentially performance. Plenty of risk of course, ternary models might just not perform as well as the full fat equivalents and building custom silicon, especially as a start-up, comes with all kinds of issues.