So much this. People don't realize that when 1 trillion (10 trillion, 100 trillion, whatever comes next) is at stake, there are no limits what these people will do to get them.
I will be very surprised if there are not at least several groups or companies scraping these "smart" and snarky comments to find weird edge cases that they can train on, turn into demo and then sell as improvement. Hell, they would've done it if 10 billion was at stake, I can't really imagine (and I have vivid imagination, to my horror) what Californian psychopaths can do for 10 trillion.
Unlikely. Unless some new technology comes around that completely invalidates existing GPUs and Nvidia cannot pivot to it quickly enough, there's just no way. They're too big, too rich, too powerful. They basically own the dedicated GPU market, with AMD holding maybe a piddly 10% at best.
To be fair, their previous behavior and attitude towards the open source license suggests that minio would possibly engage in at least a little bumptious legal posturing against whoever chose to fork it.
I had a simple proxmox/k8s cluster going, and fitting RAM for nodes was the last on my list. It was cheapo ol' DDR4.
Where I live price for my little cluster project gone up from around ~400 usd in july (for 5 node setup) to almost 2000 usd right now. I just refreshed page and it's up by 20% day-to-day. Welp. I guess they are going to stay with 8gb sticks for a while.
Isn't it the whole point of current AI environment? "We can't, we shouldn't, yet we did and look at our stock".
I won't bet anything at it but the whole thing, the whole AI economy looks like a big YOLO, so taking another step further into this insanity is, well, just another step. Who knows, maybe next day Beff Jezos will IPO newly established company and somehow pull 1T IPO in 10 days of company existence. Wouldn't it be a sight?
I don't know about GMP, but I recently built a PC with 9950X3D. As part of initial testing, I ran Prime95 for 48 hours. Everything ran stable, but I noticed that part of the tests, I think it was FFT or something like that, caused incredibly sharp increase in temp. We are talking 60C average in the rest of the test vs immediate (less than a 5 seconds) 95+ degrees when that FFT thingie started. It was very weird.
That's when I discovered actually ancient term "power virus". Anyway, after talking to different people I dismissed this weird behavior and moved on.
Reading this makes me worry I actually burned mobo in that testing.
Different use patterns will result in different temperatures. Very tight math loops (no memory/IO wait) will lead to higher temperatures than something that that relies on L2/3 cache or main memory, even though they’ll both report “100% CPU use” and probably use similar amounts of power. And, different operations will produce heat in different areas of the die; depending on physical layout, some operations might generate heat in a tiny cluster, whereas some others might generate heat in larger spread out areas. Even though both of those cases might use the same amount of power and generate the same amount of heat, the temperatures will be drastically different due to the heat concentration.
Iirc the FFT step uses AVX, and on Zen 5 that’ll be AVX-512. It should keep 100% of the required data in L1 caches, so you’re keeping the AVX units busy literally 100% of the time if things are working right. The rest of the core will be cold/inactive, so if you’re dumping an entire core’s worth of power into a teeny tiny ALU, which is gonna result in high temps. Most (all?) processors downclock under heavy AVX load, sometimes by as much a 1GHz (compared to max boost), because a) the crazy high temperatures results in more instability at higher frequencies, and b) if the clocks were kept high, temperatures would get even higher.
Does nginx still lock prometheus metrics and active probing behind $$$$$ (literal hundreds of thousands)? Forgot third most important thing. I think is was re-resolving upstreams.
Anyway, good luck staying competitive lol. Almost everyone I knew either jumped to something more saner or in process of migrating away.
I will be very surprised if there are not at least several groups or companies scraping these "smart" and snarky comments to find weird edge cases that they can train on, turn into demo and then sell as improvement. Hell, they would've done it if 10 billion was at stake, I can't really imagine (and I have vivid imagination, to my horror) what Californian psychopaths can do for 10 trillion.
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