> Looking at his recent track record[1]
One might argue he's had a pattern for even longer. While he did do some early hypervisor glitching, even his PS3 root key release was basically just applying fail0verflow's ECDSA exploit (fail0verflow didn't release the keys specifically because they didn't want to get sued ... so that was a pretty dick move [1]).
For his projects, I think it's important to look at what he's done that's cool (eg, reversing 7900XTX [2], creating a user-space driver that completely bypasses AMD drivers for compute [3]) and separating it from his (super cringe) social media postings/self-hype.
Still, at the end of the day, here's hoping that someone at AMD realizes that having terrible consumer and workstation support will basically continue to be a huge albatross/handicap - it cuts them off basically all academic/research development (almost every single ML library and technique you can name/used in production is CUDA first because of this) and the non-hyperscaler enterprise market as well. Any dev can get a PO for a $500 Nvidia GPU (or has one on their workstation laptop already). What's the pathway for ROCm? (honestly, if I were in charge, my #1 priority would be to make sure ROCm is installed and works w/ every single APU installed, even the 2CU ones).
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_Computer_Entertainment_Am...
[2] https://github.com/tinygrad/7900xtx
[3] https://github.com/tinygrad/tinygrad/blob/master/docs/develo...