ROCM still barely works on Windows and it’s only recently been supported at all IIRC.
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AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What advice or tips do you have which sound like nonsense but really work?English
2·9 days agoYeah, Linux generally supports older hardware for much longer, but it’s not only that. Linux devs are fairly attentive about performance, clean code, consistent frameworks, etc, meanwhile Microsoft is out there making random OS components in React just because it’s a little easier. From what I’ve heard the culture there is to not care about how something is done as long as it works.
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What advice or tips do you have which sound like nonsense but really work?English
3·10 days agoi feel like in general there’s not usually much of a reason to upgrade after a single generation, regardless of the vendor, unless you have some very specific circumstances
yes, the b580 is good, but it’s not that good
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What advice or tips do you have which sound like nonsense but really work?English
3·10 days agoLinux performance improvements are most noticeable on lower end hardware, at the higher end performance VS windows is usually pretty random from what I’ve seen.
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What advice or tips do you have which sound like nonsense but really work?English
1·10 days agoI find that having a tissue in my nose, eating, sipping water, or playing an instrument that goes in my mouth all very effectively mitigate the urge to sneeze. When I get bad allergies or a cold I often have a constant strong urge to sneeze for up to half an hour at a time, so I sip water slowly for a while.
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Is the Raspberry Pi Still an Affordable SBC? I Don't Think SoEnglish
8·17 days agoI heavily dislike them locking down their cameras. Idk if that was a particularly recent move or not, but I would never consider the hardware as open if it has built in vendor locking functions.
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Is the Raspberry Pi Still an Affordable SBC? I Don't Think SoEnglish
2·17 days agoNot an LLM or a Pi Pico but I think this project is pretty cool regardless
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Is the Raspberry Pi Still an Affordable SBC? I Don't Think SoEnglish
11·17 days agoA few years ago I installed Linux on a $40 used Chromebook with 4gb RAM. It runs Blender, Freecad, Minecraft, Celeste, Portal, Kdenlive, etc perfectly acceptably. It has CPU performance a tiny bit worse than the Pi 5, but is x86 and comes with a mouse, keyboard, battery, etc.
I don’t think comparing performance over used PCs is ever going to be favorable for a pi, I think the reasons to get one are reliability, gpio, and the small form factor.
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Intel announced plans to start making GPUs, challenging NVIDIA's dominanceEnglish
2·19 days agoYes, it works out to a ton of power and money, but on the other hand, 2x the computation could be like a few percent better in results. so it’s often a thing of orders of magnitude, because that’s what is needed for a sufficiently noticeable difference in use.
basing things on theoretical tops is also not particularly equivalent to performance in actual use, it just gives a very general idea of a perfect workload.
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Intel announced plans to start making GPUs, challenging NVIDIA's dominanceEnglish
1·20 days agoAt the datacenter scale Gaudi 3 was pretty good, at least when it came out.
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Intel announced plans to start making GPUs, challenging NVIDIA's dominanceEnglish
2·20 days agoIntel GPU support?
ZLUDA previously supported Intel GPUs, but not currently. It is possible to revive the Intel backend. The development team is focusing on high‑quality AMD GPU support and welcomes contributions.
Anyways, no actual AI company is going to buy $100M of AI cards just to run all of their software through an unfinished community made translation layer, no matter how good it becomes.
OneAPI is decent, but apparently usually fairly cumbersome to work with and people prefer to write software in cuda as it’s the industry standard (and the standard in academia)
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Intel announced plans to start making GPUs, challenging NVIDIA's dominanceEnglish
5·20 days agoIntel’s Gaudi 3 datacenter GPU from late 2024 advertises about 1800 tops in fp8, at 3.1 tops/w. Google’s mid 2025 TPU v7 advertises 4600 tops fp8, at 4.7 tops/w. Which is a difference, but not that dramatic of one. The reason it is so small is that GPUs are basically TPUs already; almost as much die space as is allocated to actual shader units is allocated to matrix accelerators. I have heard anecdotally.
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Intel announced plans to start making GPUs, challenging NVIDIA's dominanceEnglish
10·20 days agoIt’s not even a pivot. They’ve been focusing on AI already. I’m sure they want it to seem like a pivot (and build up hype); the times before apparently just having the hardware and software wasn’t enough. nobody cared when the gaudi cards came out, nobody uses sycl or onednn, etc
AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney supports the $900 million lawsuit against Valve, arguing Steam is "the only major store still holding onto payment ties and 30% junk fee"English
13·23 days agoalthough I like a lot of what Valve does (I have a lot of Steam games, valve games, have a steam deck oled, use steamvr, etc) they are a fairly flawed company. sweeney is so great at shooting himself in the foot though that any opinion he has people will by default believe the opposite of (and probably should)
motors have been getting better but having both the max speed and max strength of a human arm at the same time in that small a space with a reasonable cost and power consumption remains difficult afaik
but it would be so much fun to design new arm parts, little gizmos etc
i would absolutely make my arm play doom, have a built in flashlight, battery bank, reactive rgb lights, modular customization, etc. since I have to be wearing a bulky electronic thing anyways…
there’s a guy on youtube who lost most of his hand who’s machined a very incredible purely mechanical replacement (no electronics)



big in music performance, composition, physical instrument design, etc as well
i would be surprised if there are more than a few musicians above a typical high school level that don’t have at least a surface level understanding of overtones
at least in wind/percussion instruments, i have no idea about vocal people as i’ve never done any of that