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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)P
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2
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53
Joined
11 mo. ago

  • I'm no licensing expert and I was responding to the previous comment that said someone can fork it and then make it proprietary. So If they already have dominant market position, they could force people to use a proprietary version.

  • Is rust-coreutils being developed by Canonical? Then it sounds like shooting themselves in the foot. Why give competitors a chance to take over a vital package that is at the core of their OS?

  • I started from zero with Forgejo, so Gitea is not a consideration. I just don't need latest and greatest as long as security is covered. But I finally noticed that v15 is the new LTS, so that's what I hope to run during the next couple of years.

  • Well, before your response, v11 was the latest LTS release, received security patches and did all I wanted it to do. Now, I actually did look at the new release and found out that 15 is a new LTS. So, thank you! I guess it's time to review the breaking changes and get prepared.

  • I'm happily running v11 LTS - I have enough to do besides dealing with breaking changes every 3 months.

  • Being responsible with powerful technology starts with knowing who is using it.

    The fuck it does. Claude is already censored - you can't get a recipe of a poison, schematics for a bomb, an advice on how to hide a body. If you can, then it's Anthropic engineers didn't do their job.

    Knowing who is using it helps either with conditional censorship, or helping governments to track people based on their prompts, or just plainly lying and using data for analytics and training. All these easons are shit.

    And don't tell me this is to protect the kids again. Let the parents do their job.

  • Wow, I didn't think you were running 176GB worth of GPUs on a consumer board! I don't have an extra board, and my gaming PC that has 9070XT is not a good basis for multi GPU build - it has a cheap mATX motherboard with too few slots and lanes. So it's going to be a new build. Used EPYC boards look interesting for that.

  • Thanks! I was running some models on my RX 9070XT, but only Ollama works flawlessly. I couldn't make llama.Cpp to run Gemma4 or the newer Qwen - maybe I'm hitting that incompatibility, but probably it's the skill issue.

    P40 doesn't look very appealing. 32 GB V100 costs about the same as 2xP40, less VRAM in total, but it's faster, will use less power.

    But I'm not sure if I follow you on the PCIe... If I run a model that spans multiple GPUs, doesn't PCIe bandwidth matter?

  • Thank you! This is really helpful. 32 GB V100 or pair of 5060ti s looks very interesting, and about the same price. Does running multiple GPUs require any special hardware? I mean apart from the motherboard with 2+ PCIe x16 slots?

  • Not this one. It IS a new shiny one, they coat $300-$400 more on eBay than in stores due to limited supply.

  • LocalLLaMA @sh.itjust.works

    Anyone's using Intel Arc B70 Pro?

  • Look at maple ai (trymaple.ai). This looks like one of the most privacy oriented projects in the space

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  • Nice! You kinda answered my next question already with this web tool. I was curious if you are getting any useful results from the model itself without feeding it with good data first or relying on hardcoded tools. 4b model must be really dumb for anything even little complicated. I see you recommend to run two models - is it in parallel or the router can control backend and switch models?

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  • This looks awesome! Can you share the real life use cases for this? What are you using it for?

  • I would not keep up any hopes on Ubuntu. Canonical will comply with any laws

  • He's been put in psychiatric institution today, reportedly

  • Does the increased density mean that the speed also goes up? It would be nice if a 7200 RPM drive could finally saturate SATA3 bandwidth.

  • All right, I think you are right on the curling upwards. I started another print, which is also using similar hexagonal sides, but is more massive - hexagons are larger, and walls are thicker. And it warps up visibly! When these overhanging arms on upper part of hexagons start printing, they just warp up while cooling. Then when nozzle comes back for the next layer, it hits the warped edges, pushing filament to the sides and making these artifacts. It didn't break any segments, as they are thicker, but I bet that's what happened in the original print.

    On the new thicker print, the base of the model lifted up from the bed on one side at some point. I was watching the first two layers, so this happened some time later. Gonna try to slow down the print, lower nozzle temp a bit, bump up the bed temp a bit. Will see what happens.

  • But... but... but they are pretty!

  • Thanks! I'm a beginner, got the printer about two months back. I didn't do any special tuning apart from auto leveling the bed.

    I printed a temp tower with this filament, and it was okay from my viewpoint. Long overhangs were droopy on lower temperatures, and it had stringing from pointy ends on higher temps. I printed a few PETG prints before, but nothing with such fine details as this hexagonal thing.

    Can you point me to some good source of info about tuning? For a noob like me it is hard to tell good resource from slop-compiled one...

  • 3DPrinting @lemmy.world

    Help! What is wrong?