[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 weeks ago

I considered it, but the specs were too low. Ended up choosing a Google Pixel instead.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 1 month ago

Not to cause any "offence", but I think that "manoeuvre" would cause misspellings for you if you need to write something in American English, say a paper or a formal document. Best double check your spell checker locale, and make sure your words aren't incorrectly "labelled" as you "centre" your text.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 13 points 1 month ago

Chinese phonology doesn't allow for the pronunciation of "app", for example. I see a lot of Chinese people spelling it as "APP", and pronouncing it accordingly. It's kinda funny to me, since the Mandarin word "yingyong" is only two syllables. "APP" just seems more cumbersome by all account, yet it has become inexplicably popular.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 54 points 1 month ago

That's very good. Once I wanted to compile Firefox myself for some reason I no longer remember, but their Mercurial-based system was a hassle to work with. Most of us are already familiar with git. So, I know I'm going to be more inclined to make code contributions now that it uses git.

Just wish they could've chosen another git-based option like Codeberg, or even an internally-hosted server. I'm rather wary of GitHub/Microsoft swallowing up so many open source projects.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 13 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

The paper was published by IEEE and with professors as co-authors. Only the second author is a student. And I wouldn't dismiss it out of hand like that because of a magazine article. Students come up with breakthroughs all the time. The paper itself says it disproves Yao's conjecture. I personally plan to implement and benchmark this because the results seem so good. It could be another fibonacci heap situation, but maybe not. Hash tables are so widely used, that it might even be worthwhile to make special hardware to use this on servers, if our current computer architecture is only thing that holds back the performance.

Edit: author sequence

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 15 points 5 months ago

There seems to be some confusion here on what PTX is -- it does not bypass the CUDA platform at all. Nor does this diminish NVIDIA's monopoly here. CUDA is a programming environment for NVIDIA GPUs, but many say CUDA to mean the C/C++ extension in CUDA (CUDA can be thought of as a C/C++ dialect here.) PTX is NVIDIA specific, and sits at a similar level as LLVM's IR. If anything, DeepSeek is more dependent on NVIDIA than everyone else, since PTX is tightly dependent on their specific GPUs. Things like ZLUDA (effort to run CUDA code on AMD GPUs) won't work. This is not a feel good story here.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 10 points 5 months ago

You can look up Eric Hartford on Huggingface for more info.

Basically, somebody removes such restrictions from models, and publishes uncensored ones under the name "Dolphin". Presumably, an uncensored Deepseek would be called something like "Deepseek R1-dolphin". The full Deepseek R1 is quite large, and I'm not sure when this will happen yet. But there are other great Dolphin models.

Some models like Meta's Llama are way too censored to be useful for many completely normal use cases, and the guy is doing God's work in my opinion.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 6 months ago

I do not assume that the US will continue to be a reliable trade partner going forward. Your logic works in a world with rational actors, where trade between Europe and the US is desirable. However, with Trump as President, the US is clearly ceasing to be a rational actor. It is desirable for the EU to cut back its dependence on the US. It would be bad for the incoming administration to be in a position to coerce Europe through economic means.

Also, by failing to control its monopolistic enterprises, many US tech companies are trampling over the rights and privacy of EU citizens. It is desirable for us to cultivate homegrown options, rather than continuing to let American megacorps walk all over us. Reducing trade volume is a rational choice, despite the short term economic pains.

There are political arguments for tariffs. I don't think your economic arguments are likely to persuade too many. In a more rational world, I'd agree with you. And I do very much regret that it has come to this point where I'm in favor of protectionism from the US.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 19 points 6 months ago

And I thank you, Norah. As an Asian woman, any Linux space can feel pretty unwelcoming sometimes. Most of the time it's the sexism, but this insistence on saying "ricing" is just another reminder that many in this space enjoy a bit of racism on the side, too.

I don't usually say anything; I'm personally too afraid of being dragged into an endless "debate". Perhaps a bit cowardly on my part. So, I appreciate you pointing it out first.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 14 points 6 months ago

It's still racist when you make it an acronym. We know the term originally came from a racist term for Asian vehicles.

[-] Capsicones@lemmy.blahaj.zone 27 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Machine learning pays my bills, and I never had a choice on my graphics card brand. To be sure, I wanted an AMD for the open source drivers, but CUDA remains essential to me. RocM support from AMD is a joke, and isn't anywhere close to an alternative. Reseachers release code that only runs on CUDA for a good reason. To say that I don't get to complain is going too far

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Capsicones

joined 2 years ago