Noise Suppression, AMD's answer to NVIDIA RTX Voice
It's been a little over two years since NVIDIA introduced RTX Voice, and we've been waiting for AMD to respond with its own technology for the same purpose.
An abnormally long period, in fact, makes me wonder if the firm decided to wait to see how well NVIDIA's proposal was accepted among its users before deciding whether to get to work on this.
And now it appears that they have finally given color to the notion that this technology proposes, and as a result, they have developed AMD Noise Suppression, which, while not yet officially disclosed, has been mistakenly filtered by their own firm, as we can read in Wccftech.
And it is that, by accident, AMD would have broadcast the official presentation video ahead of time, a film that has already been erased (or perhaps concealed), but that was viewed and captured by many users in the period it remained public.
As you might expect, AMD Noise Suppression is built on artificial intelligence, specifically deep learning, a branch of AI on which a large portion of the software solutions produced by AMD and NVIDIA for their graphics cards are based.
And, as the name implies, its job is to provide environmental noise suppression technology when we use the PC to have videoconferences, capture videos, transmit via internet platforms, and so on.
According to the accidentally published video, AMD Noise Suppression technology is already ready to reach users, which, when combined with the fact that the company has already published on its website how to enable the function when it is available, leads us to believe that we won't have to wait too long before she's released.
Perhaps it is timed to coincide with the release of the AMD Radeon RX 7000? It is possible, but we believe that storing such a technology "in the fridge" till October-November is a mistake.
As a result, we believe AMD will not allow so much time to pass between the presentation and release of AMD Noise Suppression; instead, we believe it would make more sense to wait for it until the beginning of September when students return to school.
And, as previously stated, NVIDIA has already offered a similar technology for more than two years, in addition to incorporating it into NVIDIA Broadcast. Intentionally postponing it while it is available wastes valuable time in improving its competitive position versus NVIDIA.
Post by Bryan C.