Gemma, ollama and many other models are open source too. In fact, deepseeks models are based on Ollama.
Gemma, ollama and many other models are open source too. In fact, deepseeks models are based on Ollama.
Yeah, it’s a budget Wurstbrot, but perfectly serviceable.
So, you fucked up and it’s postgres’ fault?
Maybe I’m too autistic to read her, but that woman is not mourning looking.
You could have photoshopped some swifties or Beatles groupies being broken, like the heads of South Park Canadians.
I understand, though, that you’re not a peak performance when overheated. Thermal throttling affects us all.
These patches do offer some benefits for cloud providers or in general orgs that host a bunch of different products on potentially the same machine.
I could see benefits in them, especially if the v3 or whatever addresses some of the issues.
Opposed to the Chinese corporations which are famously basically charity organizations?
What exactly is your point? Your moving goalposts to completely different planets.
Producing literally hundreds of a single type of airplane with orders for the next decade or so isn’t exactly “nothing to show for”.
And even if you discount the actual sales, getting billions in development budget from the US government is pretty good for business.
You could easily throw the components into an old tower case.
Getting the PSU to fit could be a bit tricky due to the rather short cables.
Workstations, like real workstations, are another beast and not what’s typically referred to as “office PCs”, those are indeed rather sff builds.
Again, optiplex sff 3060 as an example, it has two SATA ports, one x16 and one x1 (I think) PCIe, and looking at the PCB, apparently there’s a version with m.2 slots. Sure, not exactly server grade storage, but if you manage to find some version with m.2 slots or invest 10€ for a cheap SATA card, you can get enough storage attached.
GPU wise, absolutely no idea. My optiplex has a wx3100 that I got for cheap and its self reported power draw never goes under 5W, but since this machine is a desktop, it doesn’t run all day.
Sorry, but you’re either pulling those numbers out of your ass or haven’t kept up with the real world for 25 years.
The numbers I’ve posted above are measured using an external meter. I’m German, I have a vested interest in knowing how much power my devices pull.
And you don’t think, office PCs pay attention to power consumption, given they are intended to run 8h a day?
My optiplex sff runs at about 10-15W in idle, and it’s an i5 6500. The t variant in my elitedesk runs at 5W.
If you don’t need actually public DNS, something like Tailscale might be an option.
Wait, so some people just have a dangling piece of colon attached to nothing but their anus?
Honestly, it could be kind of cool.
If you’re doing it right, the juxtaposition of “profound” graphical appearance and nonsensical/banal text content can be funny.
I have no local thrift store, and the speakers you can find here are often too big. I just wanted small cheap speakers to listen to YouTube videos and essentially an extension cord to plug my (proper) headphones into.
I mean, soundwise they’re fine. Not awesome, but for the price perfectly ok. It’s just that everything else is crap for no reason.
I bought a cheap set of speakers for my workshop PC.
They have two buttons. One is the combined mode/on/off button. Short press turns it on, another short press cycles through different modes, which are not explained anywhere, but have different LED colors. One mode (line in) looks almost exactly like the red standby led, it just has a bit of a blue LED also lit. Pressing it long turns it off.
The second button switches between a regular and a “speech bubble” mode. I’m not sure what that’s supposed to do. However, longpressing that button switches between speakers and headphones.
Then there’s the volume knob. It’s extremely non-linear and has a delay of a second or two, so you have to be really precise. The volume knob is also not really synced to the headphone amp, so each time you put on headphones, you have to turn the volume like crazy, and then remember to turn it down again.
And the maximum fuck you: the speakers are so lightweight, that they slip around when trying to press the buttons, so you always need two hands.
Absolute garbage. Why are they going out of their way to create a worse product? It doesn’t make sense.
I already thought about that, but never really could justify switching.
I would argue, though, that it’s not customization, but rather packages themselves changing over time and sometimes just break.
And sometimes you have crap like a full boot partition, because apt decided to keep all Linux versions for some reason.
The carelessness. Mac OS is far from perfect, but it just happily chugs along. Linux often creates problems by just existing for too long. It’s gotten much much better, but it’s still not good.
And most importantly for me personally: they seem to disregard people using multiple windows.
I rarely work in one window, and having a large screen for only one app is pretty stupid.
Gnome feels like it’s intended for small screen devices like tablets.