

lightweight models will dominate in the future, datacenter grade heavy LLMs will die off. There’s no real way to profit off of the heavier models even now.
Old account: @[email protected]


lightweight models will dominate in the future, datacenter grade heavy LLMs will die off. There’s no real way to profit off of the heavier models even now.


Manufacturers have a certain amount of chips they can manufacture, let’s say they can manufacture 10 million chips per year. Normally they adjust for demand, like manufacture 7 million chips for consumers and 3 million for enterprise customers. Company A contacts them and says “We need 6 million chips for this year, here’s the money”, But the factories still can manufacture only 10 million chips in total, so they adjust their factories to manufacture more enterprise focused chips, decreasing the amount of chips manufactured used by consumers.


I’m pretty sure they have federation disabled entirely.


ID verification
Unless you run your mobo with a password (no one really does), the attack vector always exists by disabling secure boot physically; and even the BIOS password could be reset through ways so I don’t really see the point in secure boot.