Why do you say that? Deep Learning was accelerating well before that (I would argue it has been accelerating for its entire existence).
AlexNet was a state-of-the-art image recognition net for a (relatively) brief amount of time. It wasn't the first CNN to use GPU acceleration, and it was quickly eclipsed in terms of ImageNet performance.
Regardless, I think bringing up AlexNet kinda invalidates your initial point. Although yes, it turns out that the two were a great match, CNNs and modern GPUs were clearly developed independently of each other, as evidenced by the many, many iterations of both before they were combined.
is this schmidhuber's alt? sure they existed before AlexNet was where it really took off. just look at the number of citations. right paper, right time. CNNs were uniquely suited to the hardware at the time. because of their efficiency due to symmetry and suitability to GPGPU computing. not because of their history.
AlexNet was a state-of-the-art image recognition net for a (relatively) brief amount of time. It wasn't the first CNN to use GPU acceleration, and it was quickly eclipsed in terms of ImageNet performance.
Regardless, I think bringing up AlexNet kinda invalidates your initial point. Although yes, it turns out that the two were a great match, CNNs and modern GPUs were clearly developed independently of each other, as evidenced by the many, many iterations of both before they were combined.