The Reference Layer for AI Compute Markets
Neutral economic standards that make GPU infrastructure comparable, priceable, and financeable.
GPU infrastructure now underpins AI development, capital allocation, and national strategy. The market still has no trusted economic standard.
Performance varies by workload and configuration. Cost varies by term, utilization, and power. Pricing is opaque and rarely comparable across operators.
Without a neutral reference layer, capital is deployed against data that cannot be compared. FLOPS sets standardized economic measures for GPU markets so procurement, deployment, and risk can be assessed on common terms.
Raw performance metrics do not define economic reality
Benchmark scores do not explain real GPU economics. They strip away the operational conditions, power, cooling, network, software stack, contract terms, that determine what infrastructure actually costs and delivers.
Raw metadata has no meaning without execution context. Operator-run results are the ground truth, but they only become useful once they are standardized and made comparable. That is the work FLOPS does.
Separating and reconnecting the dimensions
Meaningful comparison treats GPU performance as the interaction of three dimensions, not a single score.
Separating them makes performance interpretable. Reconnecting them makes it comparable across the market.
Workloads
Performance is workload-dependent. Different models, architectures, precision modes, and execution patterns stress different subsystems. Benchmarks that collapse these distinctions obscure the behaviors operators and buyers care about.
Infrastructure context
Identical hardware performs differently depending on its operational context. Network topology, cooling, power delivery, software stack, and multi-tenancy effects all shape real-world outcomes. Without this context, performance data lacks explanatory power.
Operator-executed results
Ground truth comes from production environments. Results generated and validated by operators reflect sustained behavior under real conditions but only become meaningful when standardized and placed in context.