Crazy Wisdom

Episode #522: The Hardware Heretic: Why Everything You Think About FPGAs Is Backwards

Jan 12, 2026
In this discussion, Peter Schmidt Nielsen, a hardware engineer and founder of Saturn Data, dives into the fascinating world of FPGAs and their transformative role in high-performance servers. He debunks common misconceptions about these devices, explaining their strengths and limitations compared to GPUs and CPUs. Peter highlights the importance of memory bandwidth, the unique architecture of vector databases, and addresses challenges in distributed systems like the CAP theorem. His insights on optimizing hardware for search technology are both technical and philosophical, making for an engaging conversation.
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FPGAs Are Niche, Not General-Purpose

  • FPGAs often underperform CPUs/GPUs and are best for narrow niches rather than general compute.
  • Peter Schmidt Nielsen calls them "crappy ASICs" that only shine for low-latency or extreme I/O needs.
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FPGAs As Massive I/O Expanders

  • Saturn Data uses FPGAs primarily as I/O expanders to access massive DRAM and flash arrays.
  • The design targets petabytes of flash with terabytes-per-second read bandwidth for sparse workloads like search.
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Access Patterns Beat Raw Specs

  • GPUs beat FPGAs on raw memory-bandwidth-per-dollar for many workloads.
  • But sparse access patterns across huge datasets can make FPGA-based architectures more cost-effective.
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