I don't know all the details, but isn't it set up to be some type of not for profit corporation to prevent that? Though I guess OpenAI is also not profit, but I was hoping it'd be more like Signal to stave off enshittification
There are some advantages to a centralized platform, I hope them being a "public benefit corporation" (haven't had time to study what that means nor much desire cause it's probably a U.S. thing), but as long as it doesn't get enshittifed that's still a net win.
Although obviously this won't be a popular opinion on a decentralized platform like Lemmy.
I'll use this along with Signal (which is non profit), in hopes that it's impossible for them to sell out/sell our data/sell ads.
I run exllama on a 24GB GPU right now, just seeing what's feasible for larger models -- so an intel CPU with lots of RAM would in theory outperform an AMD iGPU with the same amount of ram allocated as VRAM? (I'm looking at APU/iGPUs solely because you can configure the amount of VRAM allocated to them.
Maybe try turning steam input on or off? That's the first toggle I'd reach for with controller issues (like when Elden Ring came out).
Another alternative is you can get one of those phone controllers, and stream from your desktop PC using moonlight (client) and sunshine (server).
If your home internet has okay latency it works for a lot of controller-centric games just fine.
Hah. What prompted this post was I actually just discovered ventoy and was looking for more images to put on there.
It seems like it can even do a Windows one for when I need to do odd 3rd party firmware update that of course doesn't support Linux.
Yeah as long as the URL has some unguessable hash I'd be okay with this, I'll look into this.
Whoa, unexpected Alan Johnson.
I think Girlfriend Reviews will agree with me here, but the Resident Evil series is probably the best backseat gamer experience. I'd recommend the new one, Village.
A lot of the IPs are virtual, e.g. services on metallb, and my home is littered with wi-fi smart-home devices, each requiring their own ipv4.
Before all this I had my own router which allowed me to change the subnet, but after "upgrading" my router, it hard-codes the subnet it dishes out to be a /24. So on my LAN, with my current router, I can only feasibly support a /24 subnet on ipv4.
The real kicker is if I could disable the DHCP server, I could run my own, but my ISP's router software does not have that setting.
Well, first lesson I just learned is that github.com apparently doesn't have an ipv6 address, so you'll need something like nat64:
kelvie
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So the proper Cantonese way (typically a Cantonese last name, there are a bunch of us cantos in Viet Nam as well), is that it's basically "mmm". If at the beginning of a word you don't have to close your lips.