elvith

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 38 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Docker evolved into Podman! Podman forgot daemon and learned rootless!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

You can run Stable Diffusion XL on 8GB of VRAM (to generate images). For beginners, there's e.g. the open source software Fooocus, which handles quite a lot of work for you - it sends your prompt to a GPT-2 model (running on your PC) to do some prompt engineering for you and then uses that to generate your images and generally features several presets, etc. to get going easily.

Jan (basically an open source software that resembles ChatGPT and allows you to use several AI models) can run in 8GB, but only for 3B models or quantized 7B models. They recommend at least 16GB for regular 7B models (which they consider "minimum usable models"). Then there are larger, more sophisticated models, that require even more.

Jan can run on CPU in your regular RAM. Since it's chatting with you, it's not too bad, when it spits out words slowly, but GPU is / would be nice here...

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

Hard to say. I was an early adopter of FullHD, always had the equivalent of an xx80 card. Then I stepped back a bit with the 970, as it was the best upgrade path for me (considering I was only upgrading the GPU and the CPU would very likely be the bottle neck moving forward). I was thinking to move to higher resolutions with my new PC. Then my PSU fried my mainboard, CPU and GPU while covid and crypto currencies cause huge price spikes on almost every component and I had to pay way to much for what I'd get performance wise. That's why I'm running a 2060 super now and stay on FHD.

I might consider upgrading the next time I need a new PC, as this left me in an awkward spot: If I want a higher resolution, I need a new monitor. If I buy one, I'd need a new GPU probably, too. And since my CPU would now be a bottleneck for the rig I should also change that in this process. Then I might want a new mainboard, as I'm currently only running on DDR-4 RAM, and so... the best way forward is basically a new PC (I might save some money by keeping my NVMe drive, etc...).

I'm not sure, what I'm going to do in the future. Up until around the GTX 970, you could get a decent rig that plays current games in FHD on ultra or very high and would continue doing for about 1-2 years. If you degrade to medium - high, probably 4-5 years. You could get that easily for ~900-1000 bucks (or less). Nowadays, the GPU alone can get you close to this price range...

I get it. 1080p is about 2.1 megapixels, while 1440p is already 3.69 megapixels - that's 75% more pixels and thus, you need way more performance to render it (or rather raster and shade it). But still... I don't like these prices.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 10 months ago (6 children)

I have a 2060 super with 8GB. The VRAM is enough currently for FHD gaming - or at least isn't the bottle neck, so 12 GB might be fine with this use case BUT I'm also toying around with AI models and some of the current models already ask for 12 GB VRAM to run the complete model. It's not, that I would never get a 12 GB card as an upgrade, but you'd be sure, that I'd do some research for all alternatives and then it wouldn't be my first choice but a compromise, as it wouldn't future proof me in this regard.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

Ich glaube nicht, dass zumindest Teile der CxU irgendwas demokratisches repräsentieren

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

Adding to that - its only works, if you're following the community that you want to post in. Otherwise your post won't be accepted on Lemmy. You can test this with e.g. [email protected] (or rather @[email protected] on mastodon)

[–] [email protected] 10 points 10 months ago (10 children)

Or you can host your own instance quite easily. If you want just a new instance, pick one from the list above. Everyone who intends to run a public instance can enter it there and you're sure, that this person intends that instance to be public.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

...who usually require you to download their app, too - sadly

[–] [email protected] 6 points 11 months ago

CMG’s website addresses this with a section that starts “We know what you are thinking…”

“Is this legal? YES- it is totally legal for phones and devices to listen to you. That's because consumers usually give consent when accepting terms and conditions of software updates or app downloads,” the website says.

Well, yes, but actually no. No idea how this might play out in other parts of the world than the US. But in most places, you'd usually need consent of all parties, that are involved. If my neighbor were to install an (infected) app like this, then carries his phone around and talks to me, I did not consent and it would be illegal to record me, even if he were not tricked into consenting, but did knowingly accept it. Worse yet, in the last scenario, he might be on the hook for legal consequences, too...

Besides that legal minefield, I thinks it's a bluff. The tech is either way less accurate than they claim, or quite ressource intensive by either eating through your data plan on a mobile phone or draining your battery. My bet is on a PR stunt.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

Yeah, but in case I’m on a server, I’m going to free all the other trapped users, too! (Although I’d probably just terminate the ssh session then)

[–] [email protected] 14 points 11 months ago (4 children)

Help, how do I exit vi?

Ctrl+Alt+F2
sudo killall vim

Hmmm.... never thought about that, honestly, but it makes sense

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

They won't hand out fines every few weeks easily. And usually you cannot get fined twice for the same thing. BUT it was a (albeit able bit exaggerated) projection what could happen, if you constantly ignore the court orders and continue breaking the law. At first, you might get some time to change your processes, get compliant, ... but when it won't stop, you get fined again. And it won't be lenient the further you stress it. Also that's just the fine for the GDPR violation itself. Ignoring court orders, violating the law continuously,... will get you other fines - assuming you don't change you behavior.

It will take a while to get there, sure and I think Meta will try to continue processing this data as mich as they can, but the EU doesn't look like they're joking too much.

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