Wish I could accelerate these models with an Intel Arc card, unfortunately Ollama seems to only support Nvidia
Wish I could accelerate these models with an Intel Arc card, unfortunately Ollama seems to only support Nvidia
I personally have absolutely no services with an open port to the internet, everything accessed remotely goes through Tailscale. I just don’t trust that I could do it myself safely
Fiber to the home is pretty neat. I could actually more than double the speed to 3Gb/s symmetrical for about $14 more per month, but frankly even the current speed is way more than I need. Will probably step it down a bit when my promotional discount ends.
Supports downloading a server transcoded file? That’s amazing!
Would like to see an Fdroid version
Forgot to mention earlier, Steam is an example of a real world situation where I do actually hit around 1.5 Gb/s down
Certainly true in regards to real life use, but it’s a good way to check that there isn’t some issue on my end that’s limiting the speed I am paying for
Unfortunately doesn’t quite reach the speeds speedtest.net can hit, but still cool to have a tool like this
If it’s still in the return window I personally would yeah
Except that it will taunt you on your dashboard.
Nothing like that is ever acceptable to show up on the dashboard of a service I am self hosting. Will not update Immich anymore unless they remove this garbage.
It looks like NAND and therefore SSD pricing is trending up currently due to some supply limitations. If you want to get some large drives it might be best to try to do it soon, or be prepared for a wait/inflated pricing.
Syncthing works very well for Logseq, I use it on 4 different devices and changes only take a couple seconds to be synchronized. The app even automatically refreshes the data when a change is made so you don’t have to worry about only having one instance open at a time.
Using the F40 preview with KDE and a regular update from Discover rolled xz back to the known good version 5.4.6
Interesting, I had zero problems with the RPMFusion Nvidia driver on Fedora on two machines that did have TPM and secure boot. In fact, it was surprisingly easy.
Enjoy spreading misinformation online? There are valid criticisms against LEO constellations but Kessler syndrome is not one of them
Definitely a clever way to get a lot of publicity for a seemingly fairly major anticheat oversight. I believe that the intent wasn’t malicious, they could have done a lot more harm if they wanted to.
It’s also running on Chromium
The question was “why,” you may as well be protesting the addition of a new codec
Whenever I break something and can’t figure it out, I just make sure anything important is backed up and do a clean reinstall. Someone else might have a better answer though
Interesting, I see that is pretty new. Some of the documentation must be out of date because it definitely said Nvidia only somewhere when I tested it about a month ago. Thanks for giving me hope!