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Der8auer’s video is worth a watch, he got one of the Redditor’s card:
Der8auer’s video is worth a watch, he got one of the Redditor’s card:
Yes, so R&D and finalizing the model weight is done on NVIDIA GPUs (I guess you need an excessive amount of VRAM).
Inference is probably gonna be offloaded to consumers in the end where the NPU is taking care of the inference cost (See Apple, Qualcomm etc)
Not the best on AI/LLM terms, but I assume that training the models was done on Nvidia, while inference (using the model/getting the data from the model) is done on Huawei chips
To add: Training the model is a huge single-cost expense, while inference is a continuous expense.
Are you by chance using an integrated GPU?
Noticed that my AMD Radeon 680M uses quite a lot of RAM as shared memory.
Using something like amdgpu_top
will show how much RAM your iGPU is using, metric is ‘GTT’
The whole downside is that not everyone is a data horder with space for videos
Some media players allows for streaming directly using yt-dlp, e.g.;
mpv <youtube url>
Will use yt-dlp if installed
One thing to try is to update the firmware of the controller, however that needs to be done on Windows, the Arch Wiki has some additional info where people explain pairing issues
There’s also a section on “able to pair but no inputs” in the troubleshooting section on the same Wiki page
Not what I expected, good thing you managed to get it solved!
That dump didn’t reveal any particular useful information, however it seems like multiple people are reporting issues with mesa + segfault, e.g. https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=301550
Mesa v24.3.2-1 in Arch should revert that issue, Mesa v24.3.1 seems to be the problem one
You could check the backtrace of one of your crashes
coredumpctl debug
> bt
And then dump that trace here
It might be related to Mesa/GPU drivers
Sounds like you might just be max’ing out the capacity of the coax cable as well (depending on length/signal integrity). E.g. ITGoat (not sure how trustworthy this webpage is, just an example) lists 1 Gbps as the maximum for coax while you would typically expecting less than that, again depending on your situation (cable length, material, etc)
What’s your situation into the wall? Depending on country/ISP/regulations they might give you up to 1000 Mbps under the assumption that it’s a single line going to a single user, however quite often that line is shared with potentially a lot of different customers.
Some countries allows you to buy packages where you have a standalone line going to your wall, however at an additional cost
If all nodes are connected through ethernet to each other (or at least one common node) you could go for OpenWRT’s ‘Dumb AP’ setup as well
Edit: Already mentioned here; https://feditown.com/comment/1980836
Maintainer has been absent for some time so kernel v6.11 and v6.12 isn’t supported OOTB, to get it to work with kernel v6.11 you need to pull the fix from: !48
If I remember correctly the default sudo timeout is set to 5 minutes on Yay, you should be able to increase it to something more reasonable
Additionally you can try and force use amdgpu
rather than radeon, by setting the kernel flags:
radeon.cik_support=0 radeon.si_support=0 amdgpu.cik_support=1 amdgpu.si_support=1 amdgpu.dc=1
Device initalization failed according to the Xorg logs;
dmesg
or journalctl -k
)Question is gonna be whether they can scale their DUV process, or if they have to get to EUV (without ASML) the next couple of years
No bios update, but you most likely received both microcode updates (which is what will fix/mitigate the Intel issue, the bios is only to ensure everybody gets the microcode update) and firmware updates (from linux-firmware
)
Of course non-mainlined (i.e. not in the linux kernel) firmware is a bit more iffy, luckily it’s getting slowly better with OEMs using fwupd
for those scenarios
Could it be an issue with the Nvidia drivers, boot with acpi=off and then install the (proprietary) nvidia drivers and then reboot to see if it boots normally now?
Maybe the LLMs they prompted didn’t know about the built-in SSH support, hence still recommends PuTTY? 🤔