/lmg/ - a general dedicated to the discussion and development of local language models.Teto's Birthday Second EditionPrevious threads: >>108497919 & >>108493794►News>(04/01) Merged llama : rotate activations for better quantization #21038: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/pull/21038>(04/01) Holo3 VLMs optimized for GUI Agents released: https://hcompany.ai/holo3>(03/31) 1-bit Bonsai models quantized from Qwen 3: https://prismml.com/news/bonsai-8b>(03/31) Claude Code's source leaked via npm registry map file: https://github.com/instructkr/claude-code►News Archive: https://rentry.org/lmg-news-archive►Glossary: https://rentry.org/lmg-glossary►Links: https://rentry.org/LocalModelsLinksComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
it's been two months and nothing beats k2.5 for MMLU. it's over.
>>108502786there nothing particularly novel or different in claude-code relative to other agent harnesses. the biggest revelation in the source code leak was the insane amount of telemetry that it sends back to anthropic.
>>108502815how is it insane when that is just literally standard practice for 90% of the software on the market? even if you pay for the software you are still the product.
>>108502815What sort of telemetry was surprising? It's hard to imagine any sort of telemetry would be so, given how data-hungry these companies are.
>>108502815There's flags to turn that off, it would only be surprising if they weren't respected.
we should definitely invest $2000 billion more into this shit
>>108502603lol
>>108502570A month ago I searched something about SVGs. I wasn't looking to get an AI summary, just actual page results to read. I would have ignored the AI summary, but right from the start it descended into madness, then threw in some Japanese text, then abruptly cutting off with something like "unable to complete response."
>>108502570refute its statement
>>108502603Kek
It's not the shitty Google AI summary that's taking your job, it's Claude Code and its agents.
>it's more efficient What are your favorites?Personally I too greatly enjoy trading in my quiet ergonomically optimized home office with top of the line gear for driving 2 hours a day to a loud office without height adjustable desks, crappy chairs, stone age grade monitors where coworkers interupt every 5 seconds when a thought pops into their heads and lean over awkwardly into eacothers desk space instead of screen sharing. It's all very efficient indeed!
>>108501187>have a pretty good chair, height adjustable desk and twin 4k 120hz monitors.Sweet
>>108498500>instead of just accepting we lost some money but can make it back once the lease expires, we will double down and lose even more money by continuing to pay for rent, chairs, stationary, equipment, employee goodwill, etc
If your pay does not go up with proces for gas that your commute depends on to get to work, then your job is a scam.
>>108501386Boomer-ish cubicle offices with shoulder-height cubicle walls are the best ones. Even better if your cubicle is individual and kinda hidden like mine is. I can legit go an entire day of work without anyone even noticing I'm there kek.Only bad part is that I seat near some project management fags that spend the entire day on videocalls, but I just put music on or earplugs.
>>108498470My current employer spouts off the normal buzzwords about working in office but the real reason, and they admit it, is no one like using slack or teams or zoom. It is a very small company though, the entire engineering team is six people including me. I can say having to go in five days a week is pretty tiresome.
Why would you even want to use vim and tmux? It's not 1970s any longer.Every action, even a simple select-copy-paste or cut takes 3 times more key presses than any other text editor.Vim is retarded unless you are working over a terminal interface.
>>108486386hjkl doesn't have to "make sense" if it's practicalfurther, i don't know anyone who cares what symbols are printed on their keyboardthat said, vim motions go far beyond up/down/left/righti probably use [shift + a] more than hjkl
>>108497685And the mental acrobatics the vim fanboys go on to claim otherwise...
>>108485532>Why would you even want to use vim and tmuxI don't. I use Helix and Zellij.
>>108497685ctrl-H and ctrl-J were already the control characters backspace and line feed. Lear Siegler just built on that by adding ctrl-K and ctrl-L as upline and forespace to have all the navigation keys on the same row. At least it's not the WordStar diamond lol.
>>108500548gi goes to the first search box on the page and tab cycles. proof that novimmers can't read?
ARTIX HAS KEKED OUT.
>>108502703then why pick neither with systemd?
>>108502692Freedom from what? That's what these useless niggers never answer, freedom from a working init and standardization? Laughable
What's the date?
>>108502721
>>108502692a frog post died for your shitty thread
https://x.com/FFmpeg/status/2039115531744334180
>FFmpeg will be running 10x slower - but we're doing it for your safety.Cniles really think this, even though Rust is probably 10 times faster than C as well as 10 times smaller in code size because no one has to reinvent HashMap every project for every type
>>108498390>Long live Ct. someone who learnt how to make a fizzbuzz from cs50 and thinks himself a hacker for using pointers and affirms xir lack of skill by projecting about muh rust trannies (exists only in xir mind)
>>108502179a corporation paid rust devs to port ffmpeg to rust and it was 20% slower
>>108502225They didn't pay to make it fast
>>108497049>I just remember imagining them absolutely SEETHING about the amount of hand rolled assemblyFTFY
Recently I had a reference visit at one of our customers that deals with industrial automation, think programming PLCs and what not there I had opportunity to ask about their job and one team, two guys to be exact, were developing logic for some smelting machine, I asked them how do they test it to make sure their solutions are working/are optimal. It turns out they do NOTHING in terms of developing logic itself, they just implement whatever requirements their customer sends them. They literally have a fucking PDF of some graphical sequence algorithm, like those you learn on day 0 of CS and they just translate that already step-based logic to step-based blocks in PLCs and it takes them a fucking month, PDF with 40-50 pages where each page is just a big rectangle with some step definitions and it takes two of them a month to implement it an that's not even including tests, which by the way are the most retarded manual busy work imaginable since they have to manually go through the procedure and test if everything works as stated, they don't even test for illegal input states or what-if-something-goes-wrong scenariosIs life really that easy in PLC land?
>>108502773>Is life really that easy in PLC land?yes thats why they get paid tradie wages, depends where you're from that can either be a good or bad thing
Users of all levels are welcome to ask questions about GNU/Linux and share experiences.*** Please be civil, notice the "Friendly" in every Friendly GNU/Linux Thread ***Before asking for help, please check our list of resources.If you would like to try out GNU/Linux you can do one of the following:0) Install a GNU/Linux distribution of your choice in a Virtual Machine.1) Install a GNU/Linux distribution of your choice on bare metal and run your previous OS in a Virtual Machine.2) Use a live image and to boot directly into the GNU/Linux distribution without installing anything.3) Go balls deep and replace everything with GNU/Linux.Resources: Please spend at least a minute to check a web search engine with your question.Many free software projects have active mailing lists.Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>108502709Why not just use calamari?
>>108502725It isn't automatic.
>>10850263199% of the time live updating isn't an issue. 100% if you understand what you're updating.>>108502669>If servers don't trust "live patching/updating"This is a stupidly broad generalization. Most servers are part of high availability clusters where it doesn't matter if one goes down for a minute or not. There are all kinds of live patching systems for servers that need minimum down time, where they calculate which programs will be effected by online update through dependencies. Even down to upgrading the kernel without doing a full boot to CMOS.
>>108502709Another comment on this. There's a handful of times I tried to save my entire package manifest of 410 explicitly installed packages netting 1342 total packages just kept repeatedly breaking the installer on the first pass of my packer build, so i had to put them all into an install script, anyway. I think I might have been getting timed out of ssh, but I have a ton of configs to port over and symlink, so I need to write an install script anyway.
>>108502765>I'm autistic enough to meticulously control my system, packages and updates on it therefore everyone should!>these cherry picked examples and scenarios prove me right about servers not requiring a fresh start after updating!Most people don't have severe autism, you know. If pretty much every person on the planet is fine with rebooting after an update then it's clearly not as big of a deal as you imagined it to be. Even if you don't use Windows or macOS you probably still use Android, iOS or at least UBPorts and all of those need a reboot after a system update.
Why can't we accept that IPv6 is a dumpster fire and leave it in the trash where it belongs
I want IPv5 to come back
>>108502471But this is a preferred way. This is what globohomo wants. There is a stupid myth that they want ipv6 so that they know your IP or some stupid nonsense like that.What they really want: to isolate you, make it impossible for you to connect p2p with who you want without letting THEM know about it.This is why all mobile networks put you behind NAT, starlink puts you behind NAT, all new internet providers tend to put you behind NAT as well, by default. You have to pay extra to have your own IP.Do you people know how hard it is to actually connect 2 devices which are behind symmetric NAT? You think you can do that?
cgnat is evil
>>108502605It was never here to begin with.
>>108502684With IPv6 they achieve this while simultaneously exposing all your internal devices.Always remember to disable ipv6 at your main router.
i installed gentoo like you guys told meemerged xfce and some stuff like browser, steam etcwhat else can i do for compile times or overall usability/performance
>>108502545>>108502548No I mean to not waste time doing the same things again, you already know what you need to do, especially if you'd want to install it on many machines. Maybe a shell script would be more appropriate for this.
>>108502525definitely NOT hours, maybe like half an hour to an hour for gcc and similarly for mesa, didn't check exactly but rust was taking really long so like i said in the op, i swapped it for rust-bin because thst took longer actually you can pretty much use most stuff as binaries so>Not sure if it's worth it tbh_it was maybe like 207 things to compile from which at least more than half take few minutes at worst, it's only the real fat dependencies that are tiresome
>>108502566also forgot to mention, I used the computer while it was compiling these normally so it probably took some more time but i didn't have any slowdowns when browsing or watching videos on youtube or jellyfin
>>108502512Someone did this last week with Claude and it was relatively successful. >>108453962
>>108502309wtf? free him
I hate the shitty threads you people make. I want to share what has opened my eyes, for other novices like me, who are trying to leave Winslop 11.This thread is supposed to put you on the right track to making your own decision, after reading this thread the fog of Linux won't be there anymore, you will know what you want and you will find the distro that is suitable for you.> 1. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1b/Linux_Distribution_Timeline.svgThis old image includes 95% of all Linux distros in existence, study this.Studying this image alone, is going to help you see through idiotic arguments like "mint is better" or "go with arch" or "go with pop_os" -- most of them have a parent OS.> 2. Distro arguments are pointless. #1 choice that you must make is what family Linux do you want and pick.If you studied image above, you will see there distinct few families of Linux, the relevant ones are: Debian, Fedora, Arch. Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>108502201>Opensuse is not Fedora or RHEL basedThey are more like an alternative distro to these but without leaching IBM's efforts>Opensuse uses the same package format (RPM) and have a different package manager (zypper)>Opensuse is backed by a company (SUSE S.A) and supported by the community>Opensuse have a paid, subscription-based support enterprise linux distro (SUSE linux) specialized for server use, like RHELalso,>Opensuse has more than just tumbleweed and leap, there's immutable MicroOS, Leap Micro and Kalpa, and there's a downstream of tumbleweed (Slowroll) to enchance stability while keeping it rolling releaseOpensuse is comparable to fedora, so is SUSE linux and RHEL, but not the same
>>108502660quite interesting, ill check out Opensusehonestly for me front runners right now are ubuntu, fedora, ill check out the suse
>>108498791OP is a faggot, my first linux distro was arch i was a complete noob but i went into boldly and autistic. It works great it feels great and if you can't troubleshoot then go back to shitdows tranny. YWNBAW
>>108498839>you reinstall yours every month so that its perfect, i do serious work i cant have computer not boot up because theres a sudden incompatibilitythis faggot must be trolling o algo
>>108502720>my first linux distro was arch i was a complete noob but i went into boldlysame here
/aicg/ - A general dedicated to the discussion and development of AI chatbots.white and nerdy edition>NewsGLM-5.1 by Z.ai is out: https://nitter.net/Zai_org/status/2037490078126084514#mXiaomi MiMo V2 Pro released: https://mimo.xiaomi.com/mimo-v2-proAnthropic SUING USA: https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/09/tech/anthropic-sues-pentagonGoogle to rollout HARD CAPS for API keys: https://nitter.net/OfficialLoganK/status/2028842571934670988#mGoogle Gemini 3.0 Pro Preview Deprecation soon: https://ai.google.dev/gemini-api/docs/deprecationsGoogle releases Gemini 3.1 Pro: https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/models-and-research/gemini-models/gemini-3-1-pro/Additional info: https://aicg.neocities.org/info.html>FrontendsComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>108502563the resources to make voices is trivial so yeah just do your own
>>108502449>>108502575the april 1st joke was marking deepseek as opusthe proxy will still shut down
>>108502673is it wrong to celebrate closed proxies going down?
>>108502741what's wrong with closed proxies
it's not going down and i just realized i'm just a dumbcutie
>barely uses linux>try to daily drive linux>installs debian>installation went well>try to download something>"type in password">*types the right password*>WRONG>try over an over again until i got locked out of the sudoer list>reinstall linux>try again>fail anywaytf should i do? im not good at grub bs and also dont want to install linux again like at all
>>108501793Kinda dumb but if you're not from the US, your keyboard layout might differ from the one during install. Have you considered that? Try out the password as the username and see what it prints out.
>>108501793>try to download something>"type in password"makes no sense.
>>108501793https://wiki.debian.org/DebianInstallFollow the >Post-Install Tips
>>108501793>gets filtered by her own passwordthe absolute state of /g/
>>108501793>can't remember one fucking password>this is linux's fault somehowbuy some post-it notes to stick to your monitor. write your password there. reinstall linux or ask an AI for help.
Previous /sdg/ thread : >>108493483>Beginner UIEasyDiffusion: https://easydiffusion.github.ioSwarmUI: https://github.com/mcmonkeyprojects/SwarmUI>Advanced UIComfyUI: https://github.com/comfyanonymous/ComfyUIForge Classic: https://github.com/Haoming02/sd-webui-forge-classicStability Matrix: https://github.com/LykosAI/StabilityMatrix>Z-Imagehttps://comfyanonymous.github.io/ComfyUI_examples/z_imagehttps://huggingface.co/Tongyi-MAI/Z-Imagehttps://huggingface.co/Tongyi-MAI/Z-Image-TurboComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>108502481>adetailer-hires-sync: Automatically enables ADetailer in Forge>Manually toggling the checkbox each time is friction.>This extension hooks into the hires fix button and manages the ADetailer checkbox automatically:checking a box is too much for some people
>>108502532lol I wasnt sure if there was more to it or not. its rare for me to find anything to give to the forge folks though so I included it
gm
>>108502778gm
It's over for optical media on PC, isn't it?Buffalo promises to keep creating them for the American market, but it's only a matter of time.https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/storage/japanese-firm-stops-production-of-blu-ray-disc-drives-buffalo-says-there-will-be-no-successors-to-its-current-trio-of-portable-usb-attached-driveshttps://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/storage/another-major-japanese-electronics-firm-exits-the-blu-ray-market-elecom-publishes-notice-of-termination-of-nine-external-drives
>>108500429I bought bulk, single disc price became like 4€.>and it relies on working bd drive still being around for the next decades or twoIt's for my own personal use, I got plenty of drives as backup.
>>108500429>working bd drive still being around for the next decades or twoEasily available in 50 years. Aside from the mechanical components, are parts are standard.
>>108500273Dumping original releases (audio, movies, video games).
>>108500472Caps may go bad in a decade. Anything made of rubber, like belts. Then lubrication may not be as good after that much time. Not sure about lazor itself. Do they go bad over time or because of heavy use?
>>108502635>Do they go bad over time or because of heavy use?I would imagine so? Especially if it's blue, anything blue is higher power therefore more strain.