I did a fair x86_64 vs ARM comparison benchmarking a real world activity such as compressing a 4K blu-ray movie mux with x265. The Apple M4 Pro uses about 35% less energy than the Ryzen AI MAX 390 for this task. I expected 50% less but 35% is still impressive IMHO. You would still have to burn through a battery charge cycle to compress a single 4K movie with x265 but it's still nice to see that laptops aren't limited to thin client activities anymore. On a side note I'm not sure why people are talking about x86 so much, that obsolete slop was abandoned decades ago. We're on x86_64 now, how is this not common knowledge?
>>107846337Hardware is for fags.
>>107845811I'm happy to see arm doing well, but why the fuck do people keep using this benchmark? there aren't a lot of people out there compressing bluray discs. do a browser benchmark. everyone uses a web browser.
>>107846415Browser benchmarks use hardware acceleration so it doesn't really measure CPU performance.
>>107846490you can disable that. i'm open to other tests, but encoding a bluray is 'real world' but not 'common task'.
>>107846586Blender maybe but AMD kinda "cheats" with full 512-bit vector length AVX in that.
New Graphics Edition Previous Thread: >>107724782
>>107845426your cs.16 icon was normal back then, time flies>>107845664userscripts would help you
>>107845719wait holy shit you're right, why is my cs 1.6 icon like this on normal kde?
>>107845707
>>107845426That's TDE right?
>>107846585that would be correct
Discussion of Free and Open Source Diffusion ModelsPrev: >>107840865https://rentry.org/ldg-lazy-getting-started-guide>UIComfyUI: https://github.com/comfyanonymous/ComfyUISwarmUI: https://github.com/mcmonkeyprojects/SwarmUIre/Forge/Classic/Neo: https://rentry.org/ldg-lazy-getting-started-guide#reforgeclassicneoSD.Next: https://github.com/vladmandic/sdnextWan2GP: https://github.com/deepbeepmeep/Wan2GP>Checkpoints, LoRAs, Upscalers, & Workflowshttps://civitai.comComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107846746We aren't smugger than you "make your own" fags
>>107846749>>107846749>>107846749
I remember dumping large chunk of kohya code base to Gemini API and asking questions about it when I was learning.Maybe try that? sdxl_train_network.py and all other sd-scripts modules it imports. It's also calling another major script under the hood but I don't remember which one. Skim through the script.
>>107846806Forgot to tag:>>107846751
>>107846607no i'm here
>Lisp is a family of programming languages with a long history and a distinctive parenthesized prefix notation. There are many dialects of Lisp, including Common Lisp, Scheme, Clojure and Elisp.>Emacs is an extensible, customizable, self-documenting free/libre text editor and computing environment, with a Lisp interpreter at its core.>Emacs Resourceshttps://gnu.org/s/emacshttps://github.com/emacs-tw/awesome-emacshttps://github.com/systemcrafters/crafted-emacs>Learning EmacsC-h t (Interactive Tutorial)https://emacs-config-generator.fly.devhttps://systemcrafters.net/emacs-from-scratchhttp://xahlee.info/emacshttps://emacs.tvComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
What's the point of Olivetti? I've just been using visual line mode, and I can't tell the difference.
>>107843727olivetti center aligns the buffer so you don't have to read from edge to edge. I even use it for code sometimes.
>>107843860Shit, I meant visual-fill-column. That's what I'm using, and it looks the same as Olivetti.
>>107843727>>107843933both are bloat. just M-q like everyone else
https://github.com/nohzafk/consult-snapfilethis thing feels insanely fast even compared to consult-fd. seems like this kind of external "server" setup is a pretty good cope for emacs' nature, pain in the ass when bootstrapping thoughever
>breaks every site>have to whitelist any site you want to see anywaywhats the point
>>107839446not even bank websites fucking>Remember Me on this computerand you have to do it every fucking time
>>107839949Why can't you use both?I use uMatrix as a general blocker, uBlock if I want to block a specific script.
>>107845242
>>107839970Not on Firefox. You're thinking of uBlock Origin Lite, the Chromium fork. I'm talking about uBlock Origin, the original project that still works on Firefox.>>107840323uMatrix is better at doing uMatrix things, yes. But I can get most of uMatrix's functionality through uBo. See the pic. The only thing it doesn't handle is cookies, which I handle through Firefox's "auto delete cookies on close" setting and a whitelist of sites I don't want it to happen on, like I explained. It's more of a sledgehammer than uMatrix was, but I found myself not using uMatrix's fine grained approach too much anyway.>>107845242uMatrix is abandonware that hasn't been touched since 2021. I'd prefer to not run something like that in my browser. Browsers are the most important thing to keep up to date. I say this as a guy who used uMatrix from its inception all the way until this month.
>>107839513That's very far from my experience.
hardworking Hina Edition>Not sure what private trackers are all about?A private tracker is an invite-only torrent website. Each member shares common goals: collecting, preserving and discussing media.>Have a question?- FAQ https://archive.is/UVQkn- WIKI https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Private_trackers- NEWFAG PYRAMID https://inviteroute.github.io/graph or https://inviteroute.github.io/sheet/- STUDY https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2F379FE0CB50DF502F0075119FD3E060- SPREADSHEET https://hdvinnie.github.io/Private-Trackers-Spreadsheet/- TEN CURRY COMMANDMENTS https://pastebin.com/raw/dBbdE73M- TEN NEON COMMANDMENTS https://pastebin.com/raw/Ud2pGYaE- RED SPAMMER'S BIBLE https://rentry.org/69zbxh4h- #ptg is on irc.sageru.org but it's pretty deadComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107845667maintaining and rotating backups would be more work than I'm willing to put in, ultimately it's all just torrents and backups of my bluray library so nothing I couldn't reacquire fairly easily anywayalso >>107845949that said if I ever actually fill this thing and/or have more money to waste I'll probably just buy a tape drive lol
>>107845080cus it's v0, I'll never ever have good enough equipment to tell the difference in background static lol
this place should merge with /hsg/ to bring back /dht/
>>107844853Not on RED but pretty sure this is a large enough library to let me give advice.Use Lidarr, it will associate MBIDs with tracks, tag and rename them automatically. Copy on Write/reflinks would probably be helpful for saving space, you can set your torrent client to delete stuff after it's done seeding too. Music/Artist/Album (year) works for me.Navidrome is pretty good albeit simple -probably why it's so good. For desktop I haven't found a great, Tempus (foss) or Symfonium (paid) on Android, I don't use anything else but navidrome has a client list page. https://www.navidrome.org/apps/I used to use Finamp for Jellyfin music on Android, I switched to Navidrome because I wanted star & favorite ratings, but Finamp was far and away the best music player.
>>107844853>And if you do, what is your strategy for curating and listening?download -> copy to local pc -> retag/sort everything with musicbrainz picardif any other modifications are needed, i just do it in my music player of choice (musicbee)all the files get synced back to my server (only for safekeeping)for mobile listening, i sync all the files to my DAP. (old droid phone w/ 512gb sd card)it requires duplicates but i couldn't find another way that made sense>I went and grabbed genuinely just a handful of bands I care about, and I mean, I guess I was a little shocked being reminded just how much space it'll eat uptry listening to more new music >feels just as polished as Netflix does for themroon seems okay, but im not paying that amount of money lolComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
i will try to speak a bit more technically here so that maybe you'll understand what really causes problems in linux. most linux distributions are just package curators, they simply take the packages, compile them in an integrated way with the rest of the system (libraries, file structure, etc.), test them, and deploy them to production individually. however, many of the problems we see discussed in linux aren't related to linux fragmentation, but to the lack of responsibility and *real* technical support from the linux distributions themselves. companies like apple and microsoft (before windows 11) also use third-party libraries, but these companies are responsible for curating and integrating these packages with the system.and all the problems we see in linux are related to this lack of support. note that is not in solving problems individually, these we can find online, but in an integrated way, people don't know what wpa_supplicant is. therefore, i end up arguing that there should be companies that pay developers to establish an architecture and technical support for these operating systems, but i don't deny my lack of knowledge to define whether something so community-based can exist.however, for it to exist, the "upstream first" culture has to die. we need to be more pragmatic; open-source projects should be forked, and important system functionality packages should indeed be forked for individual maintenance of each operating system. we need to stop being afraid to fork a project, provide maintenance, patches, and solve real problems.
no shit
If people stick to mainstream distros like Debian Ubuntu and Fedora they usually won't have problems like the wifi issue you cited unless they are using exotic hardwire.Modifiying the code requires a great degree of technical skill to fork a specific projec curating it for a distro. I think its better for software to be compiled or configured with certain flags as opposed to modifying its source code.
>>107841800tldr anon hasn't used any well-maintained distros yet
>>107841800@grok tldr this post
Upstream first is just a cost/effort saving measure. As is using upsteam projects and curating instead of developing in-house. As is delegating support to those upstream projects instead of providing it firsthand.In case you haven't realized, most of these projects have little funding and no profit models because they are not businesses.
Other than the Google Pixel with it's 6 year old processor, what's the best modern tablet for a custom rom like Lineage OS?
>>107845908I'm too into tablets or are sure whether you would need more portability or not, but have you considered a microsoft surface? I got one for my mom and installed mint on it and she's pretty happy with it.
oneplus pad 3?
pixel tablet with grapheneOS
just get a real computer
Vibecoded OShttps://github.com/kaansenol5/VibeOS
Already more advanced than serenityOS kekAI won
>>107845873>Such people will disappear the moment AI-bubble bursts and makes it impossible for big tech to afford high-end LLMs for the general public for free.that's why learning programming right now is the best time.>>107845883I bet it's a security nightmare
>>107845721L M A Oalready looks better than linux, probably more functional.
>>107845721Probably better than Tahoe.
>>107845721>"documented in the session logs">logs don't show the proomptsunreproducible builds
Which of the two is better customization-wise? Other than security, does LineageOS offer any cool customization that GrapheneOS doesn't have that makes it worth it installing over GrapheneOS?
>>107846422>customization Lineage >SecurityGraphene >that makes it worth it installing over GrapheneOS?you can install it on more devices than graphene
it's over
>>107845912that just means things that exploit hardware flaws usually cannot be patched, or stuff that was only introduced in newer versions anyway (there's nothing to patch in a version that doesn't have the bug)see https://support.apple.com/en-us/100100
>>107846284that's just your head canon.don't break your back moving the goalposts
>>107846433that's just your cope
>>107845261the attacks are are a falseflag, the real spyware is in their newest update
oh so the iphone killing attack helicopter virus can only be fixed by....buying a new latest model iphoneok apple
/g/, where did (You) learn Assembly?
>>107843465If you enjoy disassembling and analysing huge assembly programs, I guess this is the site for you:https://www.bbcelite.com/
>>107818149highschool / university when I wanted to cheat in mmos like dekaron, if elite pvpers doesn't delete information you may find some of my old cheatengine aob scan + patch scripts on there
>>107840707Also other materials and technologies can provide high performance. RSFQ logic can also be added.
>>107818149doing it right now with small c programs. learning the architectural aspect and the calling conventions are the real hurdle for me.
>>107844031I am NOT clicking that
people are starting to forget that Windows actually was good a long time ago, it has been 13 long years
>>107824463this.vista was windows 7 but with a shitload of bugs. i still remember firefox ALWAYS crashing and having to clikc "dont send" the stupid report numerous times a day. It had too many issues.by the time 7 came out. it was just an improved and non buggy vista
>windows 11 is good, just remove/replace everythingthe mental gymnastics of this nigger
>>107821060people liked XP because ME was so shitpeople liked 7 because vista was so shitpeople liked 10 because 8 was so shitthey were both well regarded as a result
>>107820416Mostly down to everyone griping about Vista prior to it.
>>107820326>starting to forgetpeople on this board aren't even old enough to post here, they can't forget what they've never used
why are boomers allowed to regulate computers
>>107843804>their policies like cutting winter fuel payments to the elderly, raising income tax by 2% and offsetting it by cutting national insurance (functionally, income tax but not paid by landlords and retirees) by 2%, forcing them to u-turn.what the fuck am i reading, are they trying not to get elected again?
>>107842918It's literally not
>>107831652SAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAR
>>107831857A lot of those respondents won't be thinking about the prior conditions or second order consequences of those age verification checks. If you asked 'do you support age verification checks for ... if that involves companies and the government collecting data on everyone who accesses that content?' then a much lower percentage would support that.
>>107846339You just described the problem with democracy
John Romero Edition/gedg/ Wiki: https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki//gedg/_-_Game_and_Engine_Dev_GeneralIRC: irc.rizon.net #/g/gedgProgress Day: https://rentry.org/gedg-jams/gedg/ Compendium: https://rentry.org/gedg/agdg/: >>>/vg/agdgGraphics Debugger: https://renderdoc.org/Requesting Help-Problem Description: Clearly explain your issue, providing context and relevant background information.-Relevant Code or Content: If applicable, include relevant code, configuration, or content related to your question. Use code tags.Previous: https://desuarchive.org/g/thread/107727030/#107727030
>>107845973You said there were 4 peopleYou didn't say there were 4 architectures
>>107845996>let me take the least charitable, single-digit iq interpretation of a barely ambiguous statement and get mad on the internetanything actually valuable to add to the thread?
>>107846035My interpretation was literally what you said
>>107842115that is not ECS
>>107846413I wish I had a dollar for every person in this thread who talked about ECS and didn't actually know what it was