Nvidia developed PTX, DeepSeek leveraged it to do some load balancing work they couldn’t do in CUDA. They still also use CUDA.
Nvidia developed PTX, DeepSeek leveraged it to do some load balancing work they couldn’t do in CUDA. They still also use CUDA.
It’s a Mastodon fork.
Okay I’m not Canadian (or USian for that matter), but it’s common for big companies to have many production facilities and many product lines, so similarly packaged and named products are made in different countries and nobody pays any attention. Common example in my country is that since like two decades ago, Põltsamaa Felix was acquired by the Norwegian company Orkla, they’ll make some things here in their Estonian facility (in Põltsamaa, the town the company was named after) and then they’ll make some in Latvia or Lithuania, some in Sweden, etc. Unless you look at the package AND it states the country, you’ll have no idea.
Shit, I missed that part. I thought it was in SMART that the hours came up.
Smartmontools -l farm
Holy fuck, 150 million?
I doubt it’ll ever be more efficient to buy than specialized machines at that price.
I’d get a motorcycle and a semi-nice camera (don’t wanna lose a flagship model when touching asphalt or something).
I also like gaming but I’m currently spending some 300 hours a month in front of one screen or another between job, freelancing and gaming. If I get to work less, I’ll also sacrifice some gaming time to get a bunch more outside time.
I’m not sure what Services means there though. It could very well include subscriptions rather than the actual servicing of their cars? Or maybe both?
Well yeah, they’re about as Swedish now as Chrysler is American. Maybe a tiny bit more.
Still, they produce a lot of cars in Sweden, are traded on the Swedish stock market and are headquarered in Göteborg.
Honestly, I think they’re doing better now than they were under Ford, but obviously they’ll never match the quality of Volvo’s old RWD bricks.
bumble-bee thingy
I was going to say wrong transformer because the technology was called nVidia Optimus
But apparently there’s an utility named Bumblebee to deal with it.
There are several programs that can check for disk info (S.M.A.R.T), so I’ll lay out some options for you
CrystalDiskInfo is free to use on Windows
For MacOS (where realistically you’d be doing this for an external drive as I believe they don’t show you much or anything at all on modern internal drives) you can get a free trial of DriveDX. There are probably other programs you can use for free, but if you only need to do it once, just get that because it does a really good job of letting you know what’s up. Just visualizes things in an easily newbie-understandable way.
Even outside the US, I think from is more common.
I can barely see how they were so popular up to now anyway. I, too, thought they were cool like 10 years ago, when they were the only real electric car (Leaf and I-Miev don’t count and we didn’t get the Bolt or Volt here, only Opel Ampera and Ampera-E, which are ultra rare). Then a couple of years later, I realized some things, in this order: 1) Tesla interiors are THE BLANDEST THING EVER, 2) Elon Musk’s been seeming increasingly weird starting with the cave diving incident, 3) Tesla quality control is absolute shite
Tesla changed the world by proving you CAN have good range and performance in an EV, but now they’re way past their prime. The Germans, Swedes, Koreans and now I believe EVEN THE CHINESE make better EVs. I have no experience with non-Tesla American EVs to comment on those, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they surpass Tesla in overall quality of vehicle in a few years too.
I’m not sure. Some people say that because they’re in Italy which is part of the N eyes, they’re not trustworthy.
Then there’s the fact that they haven’t been audited independently. The admin says it’s because audits are security theater not real proof of privacy, so he’d rather not give some 3rd party root access to the servers.
You can’t compete without doing it. Do you think Intel and AMD stopped doing it? Hell nah, people will find new exploits in a few years, I’m certain.
If you don’t do speculative execution, you’ll be left in the dust unfortunately.
If anything, this shows that there should be separate lines of CPUs for handling classified data and such, that don’t do it. But it would likely be prohibitively expensive to implement a separate product line.
AirVPN doesn’t.
I mean, Intel did it first and I do believe AMD and Qualcomm also followed suit.
Maybe they don’t own any firearms? Not sure what they’re supposed to do otherwise.
I’m willing to bet you haven’t shot up a single nazi gathering either.
Well it IS pretty nice to be able to tell people to go to jellyfin.example.com instead of example.com:8096, but you also get security benefits for using a properly set up reverse proxy. You don’t need to keep your ports open to the whole internet, only the reverse proxy accesses them. As far as the rest of the internet is concerned, you have :443 open.
Edit: Forgot to add, Caddy and NPM and such can also automatically renew your certificates!
Ooh I found the only other person who still prefers a mouse and keyboard it seems, going by the current trends and how much I hate them anyway
Your original comment was wrong on several counts and this one… just says nothing. I’m not sure what you’re trying to say even.