The point I’m trying to make is to your first response to CondensedPossum being that you’re still ruining a corporate LLM with bias.
Because if you did not then it doesn’t matter if you run it locally
Have you trained that LLM?
Even if they could go 407 km/h all the time they would have to change tires more often than filling the gas tank
This hits hard… I was just quoted 5000-8000€ repair for a sudden engine failure
In that case there’s no downside then
Manjaro and Ubuntu surprised me how bad they are
“The more you buy the more you save” - NVIDIA
Seems like they both went to the same school
It appears I can in my phone app but not on PC unless I select copy link and paste it in new tab… Not sure why
Sam is great. Not fan of the newer games but I do play the older ones from time to time still
Most of the time I can’t tell a difference but with orchestra / classical music I can.
Also most of the time I listen to music when I’m in a factory with 75db-80db noise floor so it hardly matters how good headphones and source I’m listening to.
It’s just at home where I can fully enjoy my flacs with HD 650… Not that I bother listening to them too often anyways.
I’ll take good mp3 256kbps master over bad flac master any day though.
Thanks!
1.) will definitely give it a try 3.) I have set the amdgpu feature mask otherwise I wouldn’t even have access to the power limit, voltages, etc… but VRAM overclocking just does not work. Everything else seems to work fine.
I’m 100% sure it’s not a cable issue for many different valid reasons one of the main ones being that the cable is able to drive higher res monitor at higher refresh rate without issue.
Also if I just swap cables from my main monitor with the 2nd the same issue still happens with the 2nd monitor but only in Linux, never Windows.
Please bear in mind that custom tuning isn’t a guarantee between different driver versions; the voltage floor can shift with power management firmware changes delivered driver packages (this doesn’t overwrite the board VBIOS, it’s loaded in at OS runtime (pmfw is also included in linux-firmware)). I’d recommend testing with vulkan memory test with each Adrenalin update, and every now and then on Fedora too.
I’m aware. For now it seems to behave consistently. I observed higher avg clocks on Linux vs Windows with the same OC but then again it may be due to difference in monitoring SW or just polling rate.
To be fair when it’s time to upgrade the Linux support will be probably even worse since I would be upgrading to even newer stuff than what I have now.
I would hold on the conclusion for now. Steve from HW Unboxed tested both Zen 4 and Zen 5 with the “supposed” fix and both had improved performance so the rough difference between Zen 4 and Zen 5 remained almost the same as the issue was affecting both. We will need to see more tests though to draw a reasonable conclusion. We don’t yet know if this also affects older Zen 3 at all or not.
The monitors being flipped happened as well. I fixed that by flipping the DP cable order on the graphics card.
It’s slower because it runs at lower clocks