It's teaching me that a guillotine is needed.
I miss it still.
NO.
SATA(N) IS BANISHED FROM THIS HOUSE
Edit: wait actually this is dumb. Isn't every single modern drive IDE, as in they have their controller onboard? The 40 pin connector is PATA
Something happens Americanly in America
Americans: "What are we, a bunch of üntermench asians???"
A question for big car drivers
How the fuck do you drive?
I have a slightly longer and wider than usual SEDAN and I struggle in the city. I can't imagine steering a massive hunk of shit
What in the motherfuck are those numbers
What the fuck is wrong with your units
Inference costs are very, very low. You can run Mistral Small 24B finetunes that are better than GPT-4o and actually quite usable on your own local machine.
As for training costs, Meta's LLAMA team displace their emissions with environmental programs, which is more green than 99.9% of any company making any product you use
TLDR; don't use ClosedAI use Mistral or other foss projects
EDIT: I recommend cognitivecomputations Dolphin 3.0 Mistral Small R1 fine tune in particular. I've only used it for mathematical workloads in truth, but it has been exceedingly good at my tasks thus far. The training set and the model are both FOSS and uncensored. You'll need a custom system prompt to activate the Chain of Thought reasoning, and you'll need a comparatively low temperature to keep the model from creating logic loops for itself (0.1 - 0.4 range should be OK)
?????? Astronomically low? Even a crash at 10 to 20 Km/h can turn you into a meat projectile, dumbass
Yes, actually that's the case
SCMP is one of the most libshit news in China
Also, chill it cracker, it's news about a reactor, we don't need your state dept. programming here
Exhibit number #62049 of lemmings having the most insane fucking takes to ever grace the information superdumpster
While this is probably some bullshit from the horse drawn carriage era, what I'd like to say is that statistically speaking riding shotgun is the most dangerous seat in car crashes, so the saying still works