- Joined
- Jan 3, 2024
It does not tbh at least not in a spec standardized wayECC RAM+MB+BIOS+CPU support, even DDR4/3/2/1, provides full end to end integrity.
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It does not tbh at least not in a spec standardized wayECC RAM+MB+BIOS+CPU support, even DDR4/3/2/1, provides full end to end integrity.
And good luck finding ddr5 ECC at a sane priceMost memory errors happen in transmission now anyways, so at a minimum you'd want DDR5 before ECC since DDR5 actually ECCs the info as its moving between the CPU and the memory (ddr4 does not)
Wow, it really has gone insane.And good luck finding ddr5 ECC at a sane price
Thank you Sam Altman.That's just nuts.
This site is pretty interesting. I tested it with a test message to email thingy, and my cell provider doesnt currently have their DMARC policy set up, although email to cellular message is decently uncommon i would assume.Give it a test using https://www.learndmarc.com/
That will cause them issues with mailbox providers like Outlook as they now require a DMARC policy (even if it's p=none) for high volume senders.This site is pretty interesting. I tested it with a test message to email thingy, and my cell provider doesnt currently have their DMARC policy set up, although email to cellular message is decently uncommon i would assume.
docker-compose.ymldocker-compose.mylcouldn't you have just used portainer?I converted my old gaming PC into a home server running Ubuntu Server 24.04. Enabled Ubuntu Pro, and now I've got several things running through Docker Compose.
couldn't you have just used portainer?
docker-compose stuff through SSH. I dunno, the former three kinda just feel like overkill for what I'm doing at my general skill level.It's a great value if you can snag it for $400 from Microcenter.I'm considering buying a Mac Studio with the M4 Max and 128gb of ram for local llm shit. Help me.
For the price, its the best cheap option for local llm stuff out there. Way cheaper than the PC side.
Metal is good. Paying Apple too much money for it is not, plus your friends will see it and wonder if you like to take it up the ass by random people on Grindr.I'm considering buying a Mac Studio with the M4 Max and 128gb of ram for local llm shit. Help me.
Are you on crack?It's a great value if you can snag it for $400 from Microcenter.
The loadout of the strix halo pc from framework came out to like $2500 ish before taxes. The mac studio is like $4100 before taxes. Looking into it, the amd soc is good, even better in some aspects to the mac studio. but there's a lot of tinkering you have to do. The Mac Studio just works.Metal is good. Paying Apple too much money for it is not, plus your friends will see it and wonder if you like to take it up the ass by random people on Grindr.
For half the price, try a Ryzen Strix Halo platform. ROCm support is getting better but still isn’t 100% on par with CUDA, LLMs should be fine though. Take a look at Framework Desktop before you decide, chances are it’ll do everything you want at half the price of a Mac Studio.
No I totally agree. It's great if you're willing to accept the trade-offs it's great. ComfyUI works great, but realistically there are a lot of gaps in pytorch for ROCm. It'll get better for sure, but if you're wanting something that 'just works' today, then the Mac Studio works, but for the money, a DGX Spark may serve you better since it's going to be 100% compatible since CUDA. The downside is that the memory bandwidth is lacking, so you're trading speed for reliability at the same price point.I've tried getting ROCm working with my 6750 xt. Had a bunch of issues getting just whisper working. I know it can just work, but its possible for shit to just up and break. I'd like to have my family use it too. so i'll pay a bit extra to have rock solid stability and it to just work.
I used to hate on unified memory. This is one of the moments where I have to eat my words. The ability to give the CPU and GPU a shared memory pool with insane memory bandwidth really shines when it comes to inference and light training/fine-tuning even if you can't upgrade it later.Compared to getting 128gb of vram on pc with dedicated gpus, the mac studio is still a fucking steal.
That's not true. AM5 Asrock patched out ECC reporting (and possibly) ECC on some boards iirc. There's also the commercial only ECC ITX ARM board (honeycomb-lx2) if you're a masochist but it sips power (and has an x8 slot!) compared to the x86 ones.Most AM5 CPUs do real ECC so it's just the MB. Presumably you can troll through the CPUs at AMD's website and see which cheaper ones also support ECC.
For instance the Ryzen 5 7600,7400 and 7400f says it supports ECC. Obviously you'll need to decide on a GPU for the non-iGPU models or something like an ASRock Server board with IPMI and on-board VGA if you'll just be using it as a server. Rumor is all the ASRock AM5 boards (Server and Consumer) all do ECC.
Seagate drives are getting pricy, but there's no purchase limit on them at the moment. I'm debating whether to pull the trigger now or risk the price changes later.Looks like the AI plague affecting DRAM and SSDs has hit HDDs also. Aside of price increases, availability is also an issue. I've been looking at WD 12TB NAS drives for which Amazon UK is now citing three to seven months for dispatch and is limiting customers to ordering just one. Amazon UK limiting orders to one drive only seems to be a general thing with NAS/Enterprise drives which would seem to make purchasing for their typical use (a RAID array) rather challenging!
Just glad I don't need to make an early purchase (or any purchase for that matter).
They just released 32tb IronWolf and seem to have been working pretty hard to get rid of their Desktop Expansion stock. Similarly B&H, Best Buy, etc are out of stock on a number of models. I'm (probably irrationally) thinking that they're going to be shipping some new stock soon and that it'll be best to wait for their 32tb,30tb Desktop Expansions to come out from non-spec 32tb Ironwolf stock and shuck those.Seagate drives are getting pricy, but there's no purchase limit on them at the moment. I'm debating whether to pull the trigger now or risk the price changes later.
Apparently $850... So, for only $5100 I can reduce my drive array to only 6 drives.32tb IronWolf