Can't wait!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
GPU prices are gonna get cheaper, annnnyyyy day now folks, any day now
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Stop. My penis can only get so erect.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
"I made an AI powered banana that can experience fear of being eaten and cuss at you while you do."
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
That's what I'm saying since 2020, people don't have patience any more.
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Onlyflans
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I'll buy a dozen and build my own AI farm tyvm.
it would be amazing to have several models running and have them interact together for some real immersive DnD rp.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I dumped my old af GPU for more than I paid for it because people have no chill.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
There may be a dip in prices for a bit, but since covid, more companies have realized they can get away with manufacturing fewer units and selling them for a higher price.
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This is fineπ₯πΆβπ₯replied to [email protected] last edited by
to be able to search through all my documents with nothing but a sentence or idea of what I'm looking for
Like this?
DocFetcher - Fast Document Search
Homepage of DocFetcher, a desktop search application for fast document retrieval
(docfetcher.sourceforge.io)
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
gaming can work on one GPU and display on another, thunderbolt egpus do it all the time.
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I believe it is likely that there will be a burst at some point, just as with the dot-com burst.
But I think many people wrongly think that it will be the end of or a major setback for AI.
I see no reason why in twenty years AI won't be as prevalent as "dot-com's" are now.
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Computer hardware isn't like a cars engine, it doesn't get knackered after a 100,000 miles.
If the hardware has been working for the last ten years, there's every chance it will go another ten years. Hardware is at much more risk of becoming outdated than it is of becoming worn out.
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It'll be no worse than the dot-com burst.
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That's the best case scenario.
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Some current directions in AI, such as LLMs, seem to be dead-ends in the sense that those approaches cannot be incrementally improved much further to, for example, eliminate hallucinations or simply be capable of using logic along with those probability engines in such a way as to, at minimum, exclude the logically impossible from the results.
The dot-com stuff on the other hand was the very first bubble from the very first wave into a whole new technological direction that had just been unlocked and gave access to an entire technological branch of new ways of doing things - it the result of the very first wave of investment around the technology domain of worldwide digital communications and all the other tech branches that became possible due to it.
Basically the Internet was like openning a door to a various new areas of Tech (curiously that wasn't even all that amazingly complex as Tech goes, kinda like a basic wheel isn't exactly complicated but look at all that became possible with its invention), whilst the current AI wave (which is mainly the latest wave of work in the branch of Neural Networks, which is over 3 decades old) is more like a handful of massivelly complicated solutions which are the product of decades of work in a specific direction, some of which work in such a way that they can't be significantly further improved and hence can't be made to get past certain problems it has (the most obvious example being LLM hallucinations).
So whilst I do think that in 20 years there will be some prevalence of AI tech companies in some domains were the AI solutions of this wave of development on it do work well enough (say, entity detection on images), I don't think that will be anywhere comparable to what happened in the 20 years following the start of a new Tech Age which triggered by the Internet.
Mind you, 2 decades is a lot of time in Tech terms, so maybe somebody will come up with a whole different approach to AI in the meanwhile that breaks through the inherent limitations of the current one, just don't count on it.
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I will sell my Polaris for a ridiculous amount of money. I will sell my Polaris for a ridiculous amount of money. I will sell my Polaris for a ridiculous amount of money.
Manifesting
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
The problem is that the enterprise level cards can't really perform at the consumer market level nor are they designed for it. Many don't even have video outputs.
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Hard disagree.
The dot-com burst would be worst case scenario and I think that's a long chance.
I understand that some people hate AI or that they feel threatened by it, but I can only imagine that those who say it has no real value are either being facetious or have extremely limited cognitive capacity or imagination.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
You don't want a used GPU that's been running overclocked for years on end bro.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Why the hell would you want to buy a used gpu thatβs been burnt through its lifespan by an AI or crypto bro?
Thatβs a bad, horrible idea.