sundray

joined 11 months ago
[–] sundray@lemmus.org 30 points 1 week ago

Look, Nintendo is bullshit, bullying innocent creators for stupid, paranoid reasons... but c'mon. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.

[–] sundray@lemmus.org -4 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

On the contrary: I paint all Americans with the same broad brush.

[–] sundray@lemmus.org -5 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

If she can manage that. Americans chose Trump, and if I were France, I'd be doing everything possible to remove them from my country.

[–] sundray@lemmus.org 2 points 2 weeks ago

But it makes sense. America should keep its contagion to itself.

[–] sundray@lemmus.org 30 points 2 weeks ago

Oh I agree. This article would be funny if it weren't so infuriating.

[–] sundray@lemmus.org 2 points 2 weeks ago

I miss Mitch 😢

[–] sundray@lemmus.org 5 points 1 month ago

Phew, lucky they didn't order extra anchovies!

[–] sundray@lemmus.org 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

Found this, can't vouch for its accuracy but it has an .ics version: https://game-releases.com/calendar/

[–] sundray@lemmus.org 33 points 1 month ago (3 children)
 

Non-paywalled Ghostarchive link.

On a recent trip to the law library, I opened LexisNexis and typed “AI” in the search field: 1,777 results popped up in the New York Law Journal. Pro se litigants are up against district attorneys equipped with A.I.– enhanced research and motion drafting tools at their fingertips. We don’t even have Microsoft Word.

 

It will support PS/2 keyboards and VGA. Intended to be a learning platform for RISC-V coding, it's only got 2k of RAM. (I tried finding a 3rd party source for this announcement but I struck out, so I'm linking the actual olimex webpage. Not affiliated with them, just thought this looked neat.)

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/38967838

Back in February of this year you may recall the interesting news that was announced on Phoronix that AMD Quietly Funded A Drop-In CUDA Implementation Built On ROCm: It's Now Open-Source. That open-source ZLUDA code for AMD GPUs has been available since AMD quit funding the developer earlier this year. But now the code has been retracted. It's not from NVIDIA legal challenges but rather AMD reversing course on allowing it to be open-source.

As explained in that article earlier in the year, AMD had quietly funded the ZLUDA developer Andrzej Janik to bring his CUDA-compatible implementation to AMD GPUs and atop the ROCm software stack. ZLUDA start off originally as an open-source CUDA implementation for Intel graphics built atop the Level Zero (hence the ZLUDA name) software stack. While working on ZLUDA, he got it working out rather nicely and various CUDA applications running seamlessly on AMD GPUs as shown and benchmarked in my prior article. But then AMD decided to quit funding the project.

The agreement was reportedly that if/when the contract ended, the ZLUDA code could be open-sourced. That's what happened back in February. But now that code has been retracted from the official public GitHub repository. It's not from legal threats from NVIDIA as one might imagine given its working to support CUDA on non-NVIDIA hardware, but rather from AMD itself.

Janik also noted in his announcement that he had a NVIDIA GameWorks implementation working on AMD GPUs but sadly that code will now never be open-sourced.

Andrzej Janik notes he wants to "rebuild ZLUDA" moving forward and is working on project funding. What wasn't clear from his message whether this means a new ZLUDA focused on the original Intel GPU plans or a new clean sheet design for AMD GPUs. When I asked Janik about it, he's still exploring options.

It will be very interesting to see where ZLUDA goes from here but disappointing that the prior open-source code has been retracted. The GitHub repository is at vosen/ZLUDA while we are eager to see its future direction.

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