

A website with zero information, and barely anything on their huggingface page. What’s exciting about this?
Ahh, you should link to the model
A website with zero information, and barely anything on their huggingface page. What’s exciting about this?
Ahh, you should link to the model
Totally agree that it’s a sound strategy to keep their latest and greatest on home soil. At the same time they are starting to implement tooling for important parts of clients designs like
Core chiplets for Ryzen
iPhone SOCs
I wouldn’t say 5nm and 3nm are low end
That is how it works, infinite budget and student resources
Even intel is using TSMC for their latest 200 series chips. Technology is one thing, doing it at scale is another. Samsung is close but still behind.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/samsung-says-it-will-beat-tsmc-to-4nm-production-in-the-us
Linux is really good at sandboxing and containerizing things. Not to mention the display manager/server changes from system to system and is optional.
If your uni asks you to install a certificate or any software on your devices, they would have access to your device. When you connect to a network they own, you can assume they’re inspecting the traffic that crosses those services. A VPN like WireGuard or OpenVPN can help to mask it.
Article links to a knowledge base, not any “tool”.
Link to tool
Which mouse? HID is all but guaranteed to work on linux
They’re a new company so we’ll still have to see if they’re as reliable as some older machines. Providing parts and usb c adapters helps with longevity I guess
Forbes isn’t great but their overall philosophy means it should last at least 10 years if you take care of it. I have an acer c720 with Debian that still kinda works
How is this any different than skeletons and using up ansible, salt or chef? Also hear a lot about Nix but don’t see the OS of NixOS
Looks pretty interesting, thanks for sharing it