voluntaryexilecat

joined 1 year ago

still no word on how to convert/train other finetuned models into their format :(

APU board? They are going EOL soon, but these devices are built like a tank. Full Linux x86_64 support, coreboot bios. https://www.pcengines.ch/apu.htm A few sellers in the EU still have them.

[–] voluntaryexilecat@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

In case you get stuck again and need more games:

  • DevilutionX (free, open source, needs gamedata) lets you play Diablo1 on Android, very good time killer (you might need to fetch the gamedata somewhere)
  • Out There: Omega (paid but one time purchase) is a relaxed starship roguelite
  • Battle For Wesnoth (free, open source) fantasy style tactical game
  • Jagged Alliance 2 Stracciatella (free, open source, needs gamedata) - Jagged Alliance 2 on Android, tactical RPG, great timekiller like classic UFO or the old Fallout games.

Notable mentions: WorldOfGoo, Human Resource Machine

I use a mixture of systemd-nspawn and different user logins. This is sufficient for experimentation, for actual use I try to package (makepkg) those tools to have them organized by my package manager.

Also LVM thinpools with snapshots are a great tool. You can mount a dedicated LV to each single user home to keep everything separated.

SSDs are not really good for long lasting backups. They hold data by electric charge, if you unplug your SSD and store it, then it might loose its data after just a couple of years. HDD "spinning rust" still has its merits when it comes to long term data storage, they hold their magnetic data longer without fresh power.

[–] voluntaryexilecat@lemmy.dbzer0.com 13 points 1 year ago (1 children)

After many years of using multiple devices and even servers with Archlinux installed it never broke because of an update (spoiler: I use systemd-boot instead of grub). If a system is to be used by a less experienced user, just install linux-lts Kernel instead.

Unstable does not mean it crashes/breaks often, it just means it does not guarantee to not bump to the newest upstream version and that it does not do backports. This can be a problem when using unmaintaned software that does not like using a recent python/php.

This is also great because if you find a bug in a software you can report it to upstream directly. Debian maintainers only backport severe bugs, not every one of them. It can take over a year for new features to arrive - especially painful with applications like gimp, krita, blender, etc. You can use debian-unstable of course, which is close to upstream as well.

I first tried it a few days ago, I'm still a bit lost. Inpainting, which is the major part of my workflow, feels not as swift as in automatic1111 and I'm still searching for the only-masked-area inpainting in ComfyUI.

But I can confirm it is much faster and uses less VRAM. And I somehow love the ability to save the entire workflow into a json. I'm missing my prompt-autocomplete plugin the most.

Yes, I tested it and although it works in its current state it takes 2-3 hours per picture on Pi and 20 minutes per picture on my Desktop CPU.

 

It is slow, even on Desktop CPUs, but it does work with veeery little RAM.

[–] voluntaryexilecat@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

But...isn't unsupervised backfeeding the same as simply overtraining the same dataset? We already know overtraining causes broken models.

Besides, the next AI models will be fed with the interactions from humans with AI, not just it's own content. ChatGPT already works like this, it learns with every interaction, every chat.

And the generative image models will be fed with AI-assisted images where humans will have fixed flaws like anatomy (the famous hands) or other glitches.

So as interesting as this is, as long as humans interact with AI the hybrid output used for training will contain enough new "input" to keep the models on track. There are already refined image generators trained with their own but human-assisted output that are better than their predecessor.

[–] voluntaryexilecat@lemmy.dbzer0.com 18 points 1 year ago (1 children)

GoogleTalk once federated with XMPP/jabber, good times until their userbase was big enough to deferedate again, crippling the jabber network. It will happen again if we let it.

Metas plan is to draw users into their network and use the fediverse as an initial catalyst ("look! so much content already there!"). Once their userbase is large enough, they will deferate again claiming protocol difficulties or something equally vague, but they will just want to start rolling out advertising which would not be displayed to users from other instances. Most users will not keep two accounts and jusy stay with the big corp and leave the original fediverse again.

[–] voluntaryexilecat@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Well, NASA trusts Linux enough to send it to Mars. They build rockets, so it should be good enough for flying busses. Unless you don't trust your software engineers, but then having them build a custom microkernel OS instead sounds not much better.

 

Apparently requirements are 8GB VRAM (16 on AMD GPUs) and 16GB system RAM.

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