natebluehooves

joined 2 years ago
[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 46 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

“They” include a shocking number of good people that are about to experience fascism against their will. Please don’t dance on the grave of victims.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I’ve had one apart and to be fair they are not carelessly made. They’re jacketed in soft silicone under the braid and have thicker than average stranded conductors. You can totally use whatever cables you want, but theirs are built a little better than you’d think and they just feel nice.

Maybe this is a tactile/autism thing for me?

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 2 points 2 months ago

Not the person you responded to, but my m1 max macbook pro is used to dry run changes to my kubernetes cluster by running 4 virtual machines and networking them. My previous pc could pull it off fine, but my macbook can run a virtual cluster for hours on battery.

Because of the unified memory, you can use all of your ram as video ram for the purposes of running a massive LLM if you want local AI. there’s a plugin I run for VScode that emulates github copilot but runs entirely on device and offline.

Apple’s ARM implementation is really nice for getting a lot of specific work done. Mine spends most workdays docked and being used as my primary workstation.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 1 points 3 months ago

We had a samsung 4k curved tv that has ads on the input menu, and the ad space is filled with a samsung ad if the set has never connected to the internet.

It also harasses you with a pop up about connecting occasionally on startup.

It’s bearable but absurd. We returned it on principle

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 6 points 3 months ago (2 children)

DLSS is off the table, but you CAN raytrace. That being said I do not see the value of RT myself. It has the greatest performance impact of any graphical setting and often looks only marginally better than baked in lighting.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 2 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Edit: never mind. Reading your other comments it occurs to me you really are that obtuse.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 7 points 6 months ago (1 children)

As someone else in another thread pointed out, the helldivers IP is owned by sony. They may have no choice.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 5 points 7 months ago

Yeah, audio and video workloads really need the ram. The base model is fine for content consumption though.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

The problem is the electrical resistance of the socket. Most of the performance on apple silicon is achieved through extremely high bandwidth, low latency memory. Unfortunately that necessitates a socketless design at the moment, and you can see that happening on the snapdragon X too.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 3 points 8 months ago (2 children)

But the implementation is often a bit more stable or user friendly. Those features often do not light the world on fire because the user experience is not there yet, and google moves on too fast to finish the feature.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 2 points 8 months ago

A lot of it comes down to software. I had a cpu performance scaling bug that meant my oneplus 7 pro would occasionally take ~5 seconds after unlock to stop being clocked at 100mhz. It made the unlock experience really laggy and crappy. It felt cheap and lazy.

[–] natebluehooves@pawb.social 4 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Exactly. As an iphone user (and linux sysadmin, compartmentalization is not that hard), i agree with your criticisms of apple most of the time. They just make the better phone IMHO, and I say that as a nexus 4, nexus 6p, pixel XL, oneplus 7 pro, and oneplus 9 pro user. Yes i used custom roms, no I do not have the patience to treat my phone as a linux project anymore.

I regularly have android users go out of their way to try and fight me over this, and they always claim I must not have used android. It’s annoying to field over and over.

view more: next ›