If this can handle routing 10g this is a great choice to use as a router. It's actually quite difficult to find a gateway that's around this price and ISPs (at least here in Canada, or my part of Canada) are offering internet over 1Gbps at the same price as gigabit, but their routers are awful.
kelvie
I didn't measure performance, I was talking about battery life, but no, I didn't do any benchmarks.
Even Intel has these. I think this patch set goes a bit further and takes into account the silicon lottery differences between cores (according to the patch series)
I'm using the patch set on my framework 7840u and didn't notice a difference though, though this is really YMMV.
The steam deck won't pull past 3A anyway (all usb C cables are rated for 3A), so unless you're using a USB-A to C cable, you should be getting full speed, unless the cable is damaged.
Proxmox is a lot more user friendly than virt-manager (yes I've used both, but I just started using proxmox).
Right, I know EFI images are stored in the EFI partition, but with secure boot, only signed images can be executed, so they'd need to steal someone's signing key to do this.
That's.... Stored in the EFI partition or changeable in userspace?
So I don't get it, I have my entire boot image in a signed EFI binary, the logo is in there as well. I don't think I'm susceptible to this, right? I don't think systemd-boot or the kernel reads an unsigned logo file anywhere. (Using secure boot)
While it is good to be cognizant of this, playing AAA games for the same amount of time as the inference (a few seconds ?) is the same as this, right? Since they use the same GPU on consumer hardware.
Have you tried playing with the flow control settings on your ubiquiti switch? I was having problems streaming video games until I toggled that setting (forget if it was on or off, though).
An opposing viewpoint here, from a couple of rice snobs -- I've spent 30+ years (my entire life) with a rice cooker so I've never questioned not owning one.
Ours broke (the gasket did, after 10 years), and the company that made it no longer exists (Sanyo), so we tried just cooking rice on the stovetop for a year before we bought a new one. It's now been 2 years without a rice cooker, and we don't plan on buying one of those fancy Korean ones I've been eyeing.
We found the rice tastes better (a bit of burning at the bottom adds flavour), and we don't need another appliance taking up space. The only thing I miss is the keep warm functionality, but now we just freeze the leftover rice and microwave it (or make fried rice with it).
And now we have more counter and cupboard space to buy other gadgets, as we're cooking enthusiasts.
For large amounts of rice we luckily have a pressure cooker.
Don't know why, but this title just made me realize that King Arthur and Robin Hood are both brands of flour.