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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/)FM
Posts
2
Comments
798
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • If you don't need a lot of GPU horsepower besides the AI stuff then you could just use the integrated graphics and have a dedicated GPU for the AI stuff.

    Having multiple GPUs in your system isn't really that special. Plug HDMI into GPU1 to make GPU1 drive your display/play games. Plug HDMI into GPU2 to have GPU2 do stuff. If you're doing AI work then you don't need anything connected to the GPU, the program just needs to know it's there and to use it.

    The only thing to look out for when using the iGPU and a dGPU is that the bios doesn't turn off the iGPU if it detects the dGPU. If you have 2 dGPUs then it shouldn't matter outside of maybe the bios wanting to use the first one.

  • Don't just look at temperatures though, look at clock speed too. 95c+ is normal for modern high end CPUs (AMD 7000 series actively try to run at that temp under full load). What you want to make sure is that it's not throttling.

    If this is a server and you don't want your thermal paste to be toast in a year then I'd suggest lowering the maximum temperature in the bios if it lets you.

  • And make sure it's an actually good PSU too.

    I know in gaming, possibly in other loads Nvidia 40 series, and especially 30 series love transient spikes which can easily exceed 2x the nominal power consumption. Make sure your PSU can handle those spikes both in terms of brevity, and current.

  • I’m sorry, but how the fuck is that my problem? Also, isn’t that the whole fucking point of the full cover insurance I am required to pay while I’m making payments on the car?

    Insurance always wins. If you have full coverage they have to pay when you get hit by them. They don't want to pay.

  • There's kind of a reason why they're so cheap. They're fiddly to deal with, and take a lot of coercion if you want to make it do anything other that what it was designed for (be a headless rendering farm for videos and maybe AI). That said I did find this which might do what you want it to do. https://www.reddit.com/r/linux_gaming/comments/slzc2u/shocked_and_impressed_by_the_state_of_hybrid/

    I want to say back in the Haswell days there was a weird push for having hybrid GPU setups on desktops, and the iGPU would actually help the dGPU in some cases. Maybe you could find something from around then to coax that GPU into working?

    That said do you need a Quadro or god forbid the Tesla for what you're doing? A regular ass GTX 1080 would probably better for what you're doing. Founders edition GPUs are a conventional blower and are only the height of the pcie slot (plus power cables).

  • Yes people will not use a service because a billionaire owns it. But nobody is using a service simply because a billionaire owns it. People might choose bluesky over mastadon because the owner created twitter originally. But nobody is choosing it because Jack Dorsey has a fuck ton of money.

    Elon's rabid fanbase not withstanding. That's more the exception though, not the rule.

  • Choice is sometimes a bad thing.

    Choice paralysis + the the fact that this random shitty instance that hosts maybe 300 people could go down at any moment + the admin could boot you for no seemingly no reason + the various issues with federation make it extremely unappealing for the average Joe. And if you want actual content and adoption you have to make concessions for them or else you'll forever be irrelevant.