I would be interested to know what speeds you can get from gemma4 26b + 31b from this machine. also how rocm compares to triton.
100% this, i've been finding metal is getting very compelling against aws. For example latitude has 4 real cores and 32 GB of ram for $92/month. https://www.latitude.sh/pricing/c2-small-x86?gen=gen-2 hetzner doesn't…
I have been thinking along these lines myself. Most of the time, if we need to calculate things, we'd use a calculator or some code. We wouldn't do it in our head, unless it's rough or small enough. But that's what we…
I would love if tantivy had a single file format, eg. .tantivy extension so you could drag it into a notebook like you can with .sqllite files.
my demo ran out of time before it did anything :(
> The cost of computing decreases over time. No one will pay $100 Billion to train GPT-6. That is absurd. The current top supercomputer in the world (Frontier) cost $600M. Just wanted to ask the question - do you think…
> The real issue is running out of the input window. isn't this what abstractions are for? you summarise the key concepts into a new input window?
I wonder if AMD would adopt this too?
> Gross. Python is a million times better than ruby to read and write why do you think that?
which one is elixir liveview?
I agree 100% and I'd add, static typing helps when you inherit a poorly written codebase. This unfortunately is probably 99% of codebases in the wild. It has happened so many times when i've seen a lack of test…
aussies are doing a similar thing although they install by pulling via tractor and the panels concertina out see https://suncable.energy/ they are doing an underwater cable to supply energy to singapore
server side computing is probably my take - it does handle more than that, eg. nerves but server side computing is the big win.
I'm not too sure - scala really has a crazy number of language features, which makes the scope of it way bigger. I'd say kotlin : Java is closer :)
Care to elaborate? I myself feel this way, but when i break it down I can't give good examples.
2022 m1 macbook pro here - and i have one from work too. never had either crash, haven't plugged this one in for literally days, and right now i have an ide, vscode, ableton, slack, chrome with like 400 tabs in multiple…
why do you say that? genuinely curious.
i'd love to know the operations they were doing and what they used the sorted sets for. I find for this type of thing, if the ids of the users are integers you can often use a bitset and optimise the crap out of it via…
I have solved a similar problem, in a similar way and i've found polars <https://www.pola.rs/> to solve this quite well without needing clickhouse. It has a python library but does most processing in rust, across…
it's compulsory to vote. If people start rocking up and it says they have already voted, it will be caught pretty quickly. Australians are also fairly trustworthy
> Go's M:N scheduler is an incredible piece of technology that is (IMO) unmatched by any other mainstream language. I guess it depends how you define mainstream, but in Rust, Rayon has a work stealing scheduler too. On…
yep.. i even just miss the google reader days. why don't sites use rss/atom anymore? it drives me nuts
This is a really good comment, and I hadn't really thought of it in those terms. So it's insightful to me. It encapsulates a lot of things I hadn't really directly tried to answer before. My previous answer is that good…
cool stuff! I was trying to do something similar on Arm Neon (m1 pro) with the CNT instruction https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0596/2020-12/SIMD... I believe it does 128 bits per instruction, but I'm still…
life eg. cellular growth
I would be interested to know what speeds you can get from gemma4 26b + 31b from this machine. also how rocm compares to triton.
100% this, i've been finding metal is getting very compelling against aws. For example latitude has 4 real cores and 32 GB of ram for $92/month. https://www.latitude.sh/pricing/c2-small-x86?gen=gen-2 hetzner doesn't…
I have been thinking along these lines myself. Most of the time, if we need to calculate things, we'd use a calculator or some code. We wouldn't do it in our head, unless it's rough or small enough. But that's what we…
I would love if tantivy had a single file format, eg. .tantivy extension so you could drag it into a notebook like you can with .sqllite files.
my demo ran out of time before it did anything :(
> The cost of computing decreases over time. No one will pay $100 Billion to train GPT-6. That is absurd. The current top supercomputer in the world (Frontier) cost $600M. Just wanted to ask the question - do you think…
> The real issue is running out of the input window. isn't this what abstractions are for? you summarise the key concepts into a new input window?
I wonder if AMD would adopt this too?
> Gross. Python is a million times better than ruby to read and write why do you think that?
which one is elixir liveview?
I agree 100% and I'd add, static typing helps when you inherit a poorly written codebase. This unfortunately is probably 99% of codebases in the wild. It has happened so many times when i've seen a lack of test…
aussies are doing a similar thing although they install by pulling via tractor and the panels concertina out see https://suncable.energy/ they are doing an underwater cable to supply energy to singapore
server side computing is probably my take - it does handle more than that, eg. nerves but server side computing is the big win.
I'm not too sure - scala really has a crazy number of language features, which makes the scope of it way bigger. I'd say kotlin : Java is closer :)
Care to elaborate? I myself feel this way, but when i break it down I can't give good examples.
2022 m1 macbook pro here - and i have one from work too. never had either crash, haven't plugged this one in for literally days, and right now i have an ide, vscode, ableton, slack, chrome with like 400 tabs in multiple…
why do you say that? genuinely curious.
i'd love to know the operations they were doing and what they used the sorted sets for. I find for this type of thing, if the ids of the users are integers you can often use a bitset and optimise the crap out of it via…
I have solved a similar problem, in a similar way and i've found polars <https://www.pola.rs/> to solve this quite well without needing clickhouse. It has a python library but does most processing in rust, across…
it's compulsory to vote. If people start rocking up and it says they have already voted, it will be caught pretty quickly. Australians are also fairly trustworthy
> Go's M:N scheduler is an incredible piece of technology that is (IMO) unmatched by any other mainstream language. I guess it depends how you define mainstream, but in Rust, Rayon has a work stealing scheduler too. On…
yep.. i even just miss the google reader days. why don't sites use rss/atom anymore? it drives me nuts
This is a really good comment, and I hadn't really thought of it in those terms. So it's insightful to me. It encapsulates a lot of things I hadn't really directly tried to answer before. My previous answer is that good…
cool stuff! I was trying to do something similar on Arm Neon (m1 pro) with the CNT instruction https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0596/2020-12/SIMD... I believe it does 128 bits per instruction, but I'm still…
life eg. cellular growth