Recently, AMD rolled out a new iteration of its Linux graphics card driver, officially confirming its support for the newly introduced professional graphics card, the Radeon PRO W7900D. This particular graphics card is positioned as AMD's bespoke offering tailored specifically for the Chinese market, drawing parallels to NVIDIA's lineup of compliant graphics cards, such as the RTX 4090D and RTX 5090D. At present, the precise specifications of the Radeon PRO W7900D remain undisclosed. Nonetheless, graphics cards of this exclusive nature generally feature diminished AI computing capabilities, memory capacity, and interconnect bandwidth. Moreover, the official authorities may choose not to reveal the intricate details of its specifications. The Radeon PRO W7900, AMD's previous flagship professional workstation graphics card, is constructed on the RDNA 3 architecture and powered by the Navi 31 chip. It boasts 6,144 stream processors, delivering a robust 61 TFlops of FP32 precision computing power. This is complemented by 48GB of GDDR6 ECC memory, with the entire card consuming 295W of power.