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trollied commented on What Happened to Abit Motherboards   dfarq.homeip.net/what-hap... · Posted by u/zdw
trollied · a month ago
They were amazing. I had a dual socket board. I do wonder what they'd be up to now if they still existed... 4 socket ryzen boards, 2kw? lol
trollied commented on Foreign tech workers are avoiding travel to the US   computerworld.com/article... · Posted by u/CrankyBear
trollied · a month ago
Go ahead and explain why. There are some incredibly intelligent people in other countries.
trollied commented on OrangePi 6 Plus Review   boilingsteam.com/orange-p... · Posted by u/ekianjo
baobun · a month ago
With RAM it will be costing notably more, with 4 cores instead of 12. I'd expect this to run circles around an N150 for single-threaded perf too.

They are not in the same class, which is reflected in the power envelope.

BTW what's up with people pushing N150 and N300 in every single ARM SBC thread? Y'all Intel shareholders or something? I run both but not to the exclusion of everything else. There is nothing I've failed to run successfully on my ARM ones and the only thing I haven't tried is gaming.

trollied · a month ago
No idea - the ryzen based ones are better!
trollied commented on What happened to Transmeta, the last big dotcom IPO   dfarq.homeip.net/what-hap... · Posted by u/onename
noelwelsh · 3 months ago
Didn't Transmeta's technology end up in Apple's PowerPC emulator Rosetta, following the switch to Intel?

IIRC Transmeta's technology came out of HP (?) research into dynamic inlining of compiled code, giving performance comparable to profile-guided optimization without the upfront work. It worked similarly to an inlining JIT compiler, except it was working with already compiled code. Very interesting approach and one I think could be generally useful. Imagine if, say, your machine's bootup process was optimized for the hardware you actually have. I'm going off decades old memories here, so the details might be incorrect.

trollied · 3 months ago
No, you are confusing Transmeta with Transitive. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QuickTransit
trollied commented on Building a 2.5kWh battery from disposable vapes to power my workshop [video]   youtube.com/watch?v=dy-wF... · Posted by u/rsanek
jonesjohnson · 3 months ago
The thought that disposable vapes are still not forbidden in my country (EU) is making me sick.
trollied · 3 months ago
They are illegal now in the UK.
trollied commented on Near mid-air collision at LAX between American Airlines and ITA [video]   youtube.com/watch?v=-j76c... · Posted by u/goblin89
trollied · 3 months ago
Government shutdown. ATC are not being paid.

Sort your country out!

trollied commented on Why can't transformers learn multiplication?   arxiv.org/abs/2510.00184... · Posted by u/PaulHoule
carodgers · 4 months ago
Because they produce output probabilistically, when multiplication is deterministic. Why is this so hard for everyone?
trollied · 4 months ago
Not true though. Internally they can “shell out” to sub-tasks that know how to do specific things. The specific things don’t have to be models.

(I’m specifically talking about commercial hosted ones that have the capability i describe - obviously your run of the mill one downloaded off of the internet cannot do this).

trollied commented on Migrating from AWS to Hetzner   digitalsociety.coop/posts... · Posted by u/pingoo101010
vanviegen · 4 months ago
> based on comments here on HN and otherwhere, the quality and speed of support is really uneven.

Can you name one tech company that's scaled passed the point where the founders are closely involved with support that has consistently good tech support? I think this is just really hard to get right, as many customers are not as knowledgeable as they think they are.

trollied · 4 months ago
It's not hard to get right. It's expensive to get right. And that affects pricing and profitability. You have to have a threshold.

u/trollied

KarmaCake day5155August 26, 2013
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