It’s necessary for my very important hobby of generating anime nudes.

    • vortic@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I don’t really disagree, but I think that was the original intent of the meme; to show Crowder as a complete chode by having him assert really stupid, deeply unpopular ideas.

      The meme’s use has become too soft on Crowder lately, though, I think.

    • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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      6 months ago

      I notice lately that many memes origins are worse than I thought from the context they are used in. Racist, homophobic, and lying people are not something I usually accept as entertainment, but they sneak their way unnoticed into my (non-news) feed through memes. I guess most people won’t know the origins of the meme and use it according to the meaning they formed on their own. Other memes like the distracted boyfriend meme are meaningless stock photos, so I understand why many people use memes without thinking about the origins.

      Anyway, thanks for pointing out who the person in the picture actually is.

  • Diplomjodler@feddit.de
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    6 months ago

    Oh please. There are better templates than this stupid Nazi cunt. I really don’t want to see this fuckface.

  • Rusty Shackleford@programming.dev
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    6 months ago

    Earlier in my career, I compiled tensorflow with CUDA/cuDNN (NVIDIA) in one container and then in another machine and container compiled with ROCm (AMD) for cancerous tissue detection in computer vision tasks. GPU acceleration in training the model was significantly more performant with NVIDIA libraries.

    It’s not like you can’t train deep neural networks without NVIDIA, but their deep learning libraries combined with tensor cores in Turing-era GPUs and later make things much faster.

  • genie@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    If anything AMD (for ML) is the hardware “I use [x] btw” (as in I go through unnecessary pain for purism or to one up my own superiority complex)

      • wurstgulasch3000@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I mean the barrier of entry is kind of high if you’re used to more traditional package managers.

        Source: I tried using nix on my Debian machine

        • JovialSodium@lemmy.sdf.org
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          6 months ago

          There’s definitely a steep initial learning curve as you observed and dialing in your configuration is time consuming in my experience but once you’ve got things the way you like, it’s pretty smooth sailing from there.

          Edit: removed compared to arch references. Not relevant to the comment.

          • Pyro@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            As someone who tried NixOS recently for the first time, it feels like an uphill battle.

            Some immediate concerns I have as a newbie are below. Bear in mind that I’m a single user on a single system.

            Organisation is daunting as fuck
            Even a relatively simple desktop config seems rather large to me. I expect the complexity of my config to balloon if I were to use this as my primary OS. There seems to be no consensus on how things should be separated.
            I’ve heard home-manager is good, but I don’t really get the point of it. What does it achieve for me that editing configuration.nix doesn’t? I’ve yet to find a benefit. It’s just another place to dump endless configs and another command to remember to run.

            Installing software feels like the roll of a dice
            I installed NixOS to try Hyprland, and their docs say to just use programs.hyprland.enable = true, which I’ve come to learn is a module. But that’s not the only way to install things! You also have system packages and user packages! I just want to install some software, I don’t want to have to look up whether it’s a module or a package every time I want something new. I’m never sure what I should add to which section. No other distro that I know of has this problem! Having 3 different places to add software seems excessive. What am I using? Windows? And now there’s Flakes too. I’m sure they’re great, but right now I just see them as yet another way to install software on Nix. Great.

            There’s more, but I’ll leave it there for now. I’m sure there are reasonable answers to all that I’ve said, but I’m just frustrated. I really want to like Nix, but it’s not making it easy.

            tl;dr: Two things. 1) Lack of consensus on how configs are organised is confusing. 2) Having 3 different ways of installing software (modules/packages/flakes) does not feel better than apt install or pacman -Syu etc.

            • Shareni@programming.dev
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              6 months ago

              Organisation is daunting as fuck

              Read up on modules. It’s obvious you haven’t even googled it.

              I’ve heard home-manager is good, but I don’t really get the point of it. What does it achieve for me that editing configuration.nix doesn’t?

              1. You’re not supposed to use configuration.nix for userland packages. Separation of concerns, and so you don’t need to rebuild all the time.

              2. Declarative package management and configuration

              3. You only need to remember one command to install and update all your packages

              Installing software feels like the roll of a dice

              There are many ways to install a package, and that allows you to chose the one you want to use. Nobody’s forcing you to use the module instead of just the package…

              And now there’s Flakes too. I’m sure they’re great, but right now I just see them as yet another way to install software on Nix. Great.

              You don’t use flakes to install packages. You use them to control the package definitions, pin specific versions, add packages from outside of nixpkgs in a declarative manner, and so on.

              I really want to like Nix, but it’s not making it easy.

              You really want to like Nix, but don’t want to learn basic concepts and instead expect it to behave like every other distro.

              If installing packages is too much for you, give up on nixos and use something else. That’s literally the easiest and most issue free part of using it. You can install hyperland through nix on Debian or whatever distro you want.

              does not feel better than apt install or pacman -Syu etc.

              Yeah, why would anyone want a list of packages they currently have installed. Can’t think of any benefits, nope…

    • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      I’m tired of people taking sides like companies give a shit about us. I wouldn’t be surprised to see five comments saying something like “you shouldn’t buy Nvidia AMD is open source” or “you should sell your card and get an amd card.”

      I’d say whatever you have is fine, it’s better for the environment if you keep it for longer anyway. There are soo many people who parrot things without giving much though to an individuals situation or the complexity of a company’s behavior. Every companies job is to maximize profit while minimizing loss.

      Basically if everyone blindly chose AMD over Nvidia the roles would flip and AMD would start doing the things Nvidia is doing to maintain dominance, increase profit, reduce cost and Nvidia would start trying to gain more market share from AMD by opening up, becoming more consumer friendly, competitively priced

      For individuals, selling your old card and buying a new AMD card for the same price will net you with a slower card in general or if you go used there is a good chance it doesn’t work properly and the buyer ghosts you. I should know, I tried to get a used AMD card and it died every time I ran a GPU intensive game.

      I also went the other way upgrading my mother’s Nvidia card with a new AMD card that was three times as expensive as her Nvidia card ($50) would be on eBay and it runs a bit slower than her Nvidia card did. She was happy about the upgrade though because I used that Nvidia card in her movie server resulting in better live video transcoding than a cheap AMD card would.

  • Phegan@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Steven Crowder is a despicable human and does not deserve a meme template.

  • lorty@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    Brother of “I need nVidia for raytracing” while only playing last decade games.

    • Mossy Feathers (They/Them)@pawb.social
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      6 months ago

      Not gonna lie, raytracing is cooler on older games than it is newer ones. Newer games use a lot of smoke and mirrors to simulate raytracing, which means raytracing isn’t as obvious of an upgrade, or can even be a downgrade depending on the scene. Older games, however, don’t have as much smoke and mirrors so raytracing can offer more of an improvement.

      Also, stylized games with raytracing are 10/10. Idk why, but applying rtx to highly stylized games always looks way cooler than on games with realistic graphics.

    • HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org
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      6 months ago

      What distro are you using? Been looking for an excuse to strain my 6900XT.

      I started looking at getting it running on Void and it seemed like (at the time) there were a lot of specific version dependencies that made it awkward.

      I suspect the right answer is to spin up a container, but I resent Docker’s licensing BS too much for that. Surely by now there’d be a purpose built live image- write it to a flash drive, reboot, and boom, anime vampire princes hot girls

      • ichbinjasokreativ@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I use stable diffusion on rocm in an ubuntu distrobox container. Super easy to set up and there’s a good guide in the opensuse forum for it.

  • Aniki 🌱🌿@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    I’m holding out building a new gaming rig until AMD sorts out better ray-tracing and cuda support. I’m playing on a Deck now so I have plenty of time to work through my old backlog.

    • t0fr@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      I was straight up thinking of going to AMD just to have fewer GPU problems on Linux myself

      • Rikj000@discuss.tchncs.de
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        6 months ago

        In my experience,
        AMD is a bliss on Linux,
        while Nvidia is a headache.

        Also, AMD has ROCM,
        it’s their equivalent of Nvidia’s CUDA.

        • Enk1@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Never had an issue with Nvidia on Linux. Yes, you have to use proprietary drivers, but outside of that I’ve been running Linux with Nvidia cards for 20 years.

          • Rikj000@discuss.tchncs.de
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            6 months ago

            Even not the “issue” that basically every time you update something, you have to wait a long time to download proprietary nvidia drivers?

            That’s what annoyed me the most back in the day with the Nvidia drivers,
            so many hours wasted on updating the drivers.

            With AMD, this is not the case.

            And haven’t even talked about my issues with Optimus (Intel on-board graphics + Nvidia GPU) yet, which was a true nightmare, took me weeks of research to finally make it work correctly.

            • Enk1@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              You don’t need to update NVIDIA drivers every time there’s a release. I don’t even do that on my Windows machine. Most driver updates are just tweaks for the latest game, not bug fixes or performance improvements.

              And hell, you’re using Linux. Vim updates more often than the graphics driver, what do you expect?

              • Rikj000@discuss.tchncs.de
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                6 months ago

                It automatically happened,
                I believe with every install of an updated Flatpak, which is rather often.

                Been a while though, since lately I’ve been happily using AMD for quite some time.

                But I do recall Nvidia driver updates slowing down my update process by a lot,
                while I have none of that with AMD.

                • Enk1@lemmy.world
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                  6 months ago

                  Ah, I always update the driver through the package manager and it never auto-updates.

            • Enk1@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              Been running Wayland for 2 years and only issue I had with it was Synergy not working.

  • Holzkohlen@feddit.de
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    6 months ago

    3D rendering with optix. I don’t do AI nonsense other than chatgpt for the occasional shell script or python function.