Sponsored Content by Oracle

It’s More Than GPUs: Suno Founder Talks Infrastructure Choices for Generative AI Startups

Startup Suno AI helps consumers generate their own music online with a very simple interface. Unlike many startups that focus on text-based generative AI, Suno takes on the very different problem of building, testing, and serving models for audio. The Cambridge, Mass. company employs Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) AI infrastructure and other services to create and run these models.

Below, Leo Leung, Vice President, Oracle Tech and OCI chats with Mikey Shulman CEO of Suno AI, about what generative AI startups want and need from their providers.  The interview was edited for length and clarity.

Leung: What should AI startup founders be thinking about when it comes to foundational technology and infrastructure?

Shulman: The first thing would be picking very carefully where you want to innovate and that really means picking very carefully where you don’t want to innovate. Before Suno, we learned that things like system administration aren’t really places where you move the needle. So, we focus all day and all night on figuring out the right way to model audio and plugging that in. We are open about the fact that we borrow so much from the open-source community for things like making transformer models on text and it’s lovely to not have to reinvent the wheel there. We don’t just think about models that map A to B since that’s not how most humans think about interacting with these things. Ultimately, we are trying to build products that people love to use and figuring out what the foundational technology is to help ensure a pleasurable experience for the user.

Leung: It would be interesting to hear more about the data of music and the different types of workloads music represents. Can you talk a bit more about that and how that maybe influenced your choice of infrastructure or technology underneath?

Shulman: Music, or audio in general, is very far behind images and text in terms of modeling. The key problem is how to represent audio in a way that should be intelligible to transformers? There are hiccups, one being transformers work on what are called tokens, but they’re discreet things and audio is not a discreet signal, it’s a continuous wave. Furthermore, the problem for audio, especially high-quality audio, is it’s sampled at either 44 kilohertz or 48 kilohertz —one second of audio will have roughly 50,000 samples. That’s just way too many samples and we need some way to take this very high frequency signal and kind of smush it down into something more manageable. We spend a lot of time innovating on what is the right way to take this very quickly sampled continuous signal and represent it as a much more slowly sampled discreet signal. 

Leung:  Did that influence the kind of infrastructure you needed or are you thinking about the same infrastructure but again trying to reduce the data to a place where you could put it into those models?

Shulman: Definitely. Just like any other machine learning model, these things aren’t super cheap to run. You want to do things quickly both in production, but also even when you’re just experimenting. We are constantly trying to make things better so having some elasticity of compute, having availability of compute is important. 

Leung: That is a good lead into my next question, which is what needs have changed for you and the company that you couldn’t have predicted as you scaled?

Shulman:  When we started the company, the first thing we did was buy the biggest GPU box that you can safely plug into a home outlet and start to train the initial models there. That box sits unplugged in the next room. We did not really anticipate just how much scale matters for your models, your experiment throughput, and the way you roll things out to people. This is a cliche, but humans are very bad at reasoning about exponential growth. And so, despite having a PhD in physics, I too am very bad about reasoning about exponential growth. That certainly caught us by surprise. We also did not realize the extent to which products can come to market that take care of some of these concerns. For example, when we first logged into our Oracle cluster, it was like you just had everything we needed there. It was kind of a weird moment because it was not just a machine that you’re starting to do everything. It is a cluster. It is like this was a product built for people like me. I get all the creature comforts that I need to do really good work.

Leung: When I talk infrastructure, everyone gravitates just towards the GPUs, but there’s more than just processors. From your perspective, what other important components of AI infrastructure do you leverage?

Shulman:  I think one concentric circle out from GPUs is all the fit and finish that is on our cluster. Whether that is the ability to add users, launch jobs, have network-attached storage, have fast SSDs, all the things that let us utilize the GPUs, that’s amazing. Storage buckets for larger bits of data or user-generated content, etc. We need all kinds of things to make the products run smoothly without GPUs on the training side. Whether that’s a service to deliver content quickly, whether it’s user management and queue management and lots of building blocks–some of them we build, some of them we buy. 

Leung: What are those special problems and solutions that you feel are specific to generative AI?

Shulman: This is an area that is quickly evolving and things that you can take for granted today, you’re not necessarily sure you can take for granted tomorrow. Can I fit my model on one card today? Maybe I can and in a month I can’t which would screw everything up. Something like Modal is amazing. It lets us launch workers on GPUs extremely easily.

Look, generative AI is very compute intensive, and GPUs are annoying for software developers. They break a very sacred hardware-software abstraction barrier, and that has a way of rearing its head everywhere. I think that’s why a lot of this stack can be a little difficult to navigate.

But it’s not all GPUs, there’s also a ton of CPU work that goes into these things. There’s audio processing in general. When I daydream, it’s like maybe my cloud provider has made me not really care what cards I’m using. That would be swell the same way I don’t necessarily care if I get spun up on an Intel CPU or an AMD CPU in my cloud machine. Why should I care exactly what card it is? 

Leung: Going beyond the tech, what other support should AI startups be looking for from their service providers?

Shulman:  We’re always asking: “How much pain can my provider take away so I can focus on the stuff that is my comparative advantage?” Every company’s answer here is going to be different. In a more research-heavy company, there’s going to be a lot of research tooling and experiment management and job management, etc. In a less research-heavy company, maybe it’s the world’s fastest CDN because I need to deliver content to people. I’m always thinking about what are we doing that we shouldn’t be doing and how do we stop doing that? And very often there are solutions out there, you just have to know where to look.

Leung: My final question is how should fast-growth AI companies think about costs?

Shulman: For AI companies, a big fraction of your spend is compute, so that’s something you have to think about judiciously. Sometimes you can find some slightly cheaper solutions, but the cost savings can be far outweighed by the reliability and the flexibility of going with a real provider. There’s a lot of things popping up and going away, and we want to be around in 10 years so that means we should probably be trying to do business with companies that are also going to be around in 10 years. If you have a plan to start using somebody and then get off them in a year, that needs to be a very conscious decision and not one that we should make lightly. That’s part of why we picked OCI – trust.

Are you building your company and evaluating cloud provider options? Learn more about OCI’s broad selection of ISVs that offer AI services to help accelerate your development and deployment here.

 


This article is presented by TC Brand Studio. This is paid content, TechCrunch editorial was not involved in the development of this article. Reach out to learn more about partnering with TC Brand Studio.

More TechCrunch

The first time I saw Google’s latest commercial, I wondered, “Is it just me, or is this kind of bad?” By the fourth or fifth time I saw it, I’d…

Dear Google, who wants an AI-written fan letter?

Though MatPat retired from YouTube, he’s still pretty busy. In fact, he’s been spending a lot of time on Capitol Hill.

MatPat, the first big YouTuber to successfully exit his company, is lobbying for creators on Capitol Hill

Featured Article

A tale of two foldables

Samsung is still foldables’ 500-pound gorilla, but the company successes have made the category significantly less lonely in recent years.

A tale of two foldables

The California Department of Motor Vehicles this week granted Nuro approval to test its third-generation R3 autonomous delivery vehicle in four Bay Area cities, giving the AV startup a positive…

Autonomous delivery startup Nuro is gearing up for a comeback

With Ghostery turning 15 years old this month, TechCrunch caught up with CEO Jean-Paul Schmetz to discuss the company’s strategy and the state of ad tracking.

Ghostery’s CEO says regulation won’t save us from ad trackers

Two years ago, workers at an Apple Store in Towson, Maryland were the first to establish a formally recognized union at an Apple retail store in the United States. Now…

Apple reaches its first contract agreement with a US retail union

OpenAI is testing SearchGPT, a new AI search experience to compete directly with Google. The feature aims to elevate search queries with “timely answers” from across the internet and allows…

OpenAI comes for Google with SearchGPT

Indian cryptocurrency exchange WazirX announced on Saturday a controversial plan to “socialize” the $230 million loss from its recent security breach among all its customers, a move that has sent…

WazirX to ‘socialize’ $230 million security breach loss among customers

Stay up-to-date on the latest funding news for Black and women founders.

Stay up-to-date on the amount of venture dollars going to underrepresented founders

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the U.S. Commerce Department agency that develops and tests tech for the U.S. government, companies and the broader public, has re-released a…

NIST releases a tool for testing AI model risk

Max Space’s expandable habitats promise to be larger, stronger, and more versatile than anything like them ever launched, not to mention cheaper and lighter by far than a solid, machined…

Max Space reinvents expandable habitats with a 17th-century twist, launching in 2026

Payments giant Stripe has acquired a four-year-old competitor, Lemon Squeezy, the latter company announced Friday. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. As a merchant of record, Lemon Squeezy calculates…

Stripe acquires payment processing startup Lemon Squeezy

iCloud Private Relay has not been working for some Apple users across major markets, including the U.S., Europe, India and Japan.

Apple reports iCloud Private Relay global outages for some users

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. To get Startups Weekly in your inbox every Friday, sign up here. This…

Legal tech, VC brawls and saying no to big offers

Apple joins 15 other tech companies — including Google, Meta, Microsoft and OpenAI — that committed to the White House’s rules for developing generative AI.

Apple signs the White House’s commitment to AI safety

The language is ambiguous, so it’s not clear whether X is helping itself to all user data for training Grok or whether this processing refers only to user interactions with…

Privacy watchdog says it’s ‘surprised’ by Elon Musk opting user data into Grok AI training

Sound Search on TikTok is somewhat similar to YouTube Music’s song detection tool that lets you find the name of a song by singing, humming or playing it. 

TikTok rolls out a new feature that lets you find songs by singing or humming them

Skip, a wearable tech startup that began as a secretive project inside Alphabet, exited stealth this week to announce a partnership with outdoor clothing specialist Arc’teryx. The deal is the…

Alphabet X spinoff partners with Arc’teryx to bring ‘everyday’ exoskeleton to market

Ledger, a French startup mostly known for its secure crypto hardware wallets, has launched a new mid-range device, the Ledger Flex. Available now, priced at $249, the dinky hardware wallet…

Ledger launches Ledger Flex, a mid-range hardware crypto wallet

The good news is that you can switch off the new data-sharing setting and also delete your conversation history with the AI. 

Here’s how to disable X (Twitter) from using your data to train its Grok AI

Regulators gave SpaceX the all-clear to return to launch two weeks after the Falcon 9 rocket experienced an anomaly on orbit.

SpaceX cleared to resume Falcon 9 launches while FAA investigation remains open

Madison Long and Simone May founded Clutch in 2020 to help connect people to businesses looking for marketing and content creation.

Digital marketing startup Plaiced has acquired Precursor Ventures-backed Clutch

With the CrowdStrike update continuing to cause havoc across the planet, a startup has raised $13.5 million to at least improve some level of security for the kinds of devices…

ZeroTier raises $13.5M to help avert CrowdStrike-like network problems

Apple has reduced prices of its iPhone models in India by 3-4% following a cut in import duties in the South Asian market.

Apple cuts iPhone price in India amid China slowdown

MNT-Halan, a fintech unicorn out of Egypt, is on a consolidation march. The microfinance and payments startup has raised $157.5 million in funding and is using the money in part…

Egypt’s MNT-Halan banks $157.5M, gobbles up a fintech in Turkey to expand

The energy transition is a marathon, not a sprint. But opportunities for acceleration are growing. Swedish startup Greenely* has just spotted one. It’s closing an €8 million Series A funding…

Energy tech startup Greenely grabs €8M to reach more households and support Europe’s energy transition

The Floorr offers tools for conducting sales, hosting tailored styling sessions, creating mood boards, and engaging in text or voice chats with clients, all in one place. 

Luxury fashion startup The Floorr empowers personal stylists with tools to grow their businesses

A decade-old drama involving VC David Sacks and Rippling founder Parker Conrad has blown up on X with many among the Silicon Valley elite taking sides.

Here’s why David Sacks, Paul Graham and other big Silicon Valley names had a brawl on X over VC behavior

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s text-generating AI chatbot, has taken the world by storm since its launch in November 2022. What started as a tool to hyper-charge productivity through writing essays and code…

ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot

Autonomous vehicle software startup Applied Intuition has closed a $300 million secondary sale just four months after raising a $250 million Series E round, yet another sign of how white-hot…

Applied Intuition closes $300M secondary four months after raising $250M