Rausgehen, 38°C
@feddit.org
@30p87@feddit.de wäre auch nicht viel jünger, wenn es nicht tot wäre
First of all NVidia are morons. Morons who don't accept their own mistakes and have pushed it on to all other custom design manufacturers since the 50 (or even already 40?) series.
AMD is also stupid, but not as braindead as NVidia. That's why there are only a baby's handful of AMD GPUs with 12VHBRN, while most have 2-3x 8-Pin (75W+300..450W = 375..525W).
Get one of the latter and a 180° Bridge/WireView. Then you can route your cables just as cleanly.
Alles mit Machine Learning außer LLMs ist aber kein riesiger hype mit Billionen an virtuellem Investment dahinter. Und das ist ja schließlich das einzige was zählt, wir leben ja immerhin im Kapitalismus.
If you've manually verified the tests, then you prove that the tests are a proof, the LLM still did not proof anything on it's own. And if you didn't verify (read every single line of) the tests, they are not proof of the code working, because the LLM can and will just rewrite the tests to pass, not the code.
Anyone infected is at their own fault. Literally every single ressource and official statement is "read the diff of what you execute", which would prevent 100% of the attacks.
I'd rather not get cut off from my regular updates for some idiots who can't read or think rules don't apply to them. And yes, people who don't understand the PKGBUILD format shouldn't use the AUR on their own.
That's like saying "i just want to bungee jump off this bridge" when the bridge is 10m above active traffic.
This piece of infrastructure is not designed to work this way. It's made for linux nerds. Not unknowing users. And I don't see why the AUR should punish the former because the latter are ignorant. So either be able to understand and actively read the things you're running or just don't.
I've played an entire day (>12 hours) without a reboot after updating the kernel, systemd and drivers. It's certainly possible, just not recommended.
On windows, it's not possible at all, no matter if you know what you do or you don't.
thanks for using Leebra!
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