

Their power connectors are melting up just like their stock.
Their power connectors are melting up just like their stock.
Wow, that truly is a wonderful result! I’m fine with soft-boiled though.
I would be interested in seeing performance impact in an actual game scenario. It’s hard to tell what the impact would be from a scene with just a single object in it and with FPS in the hundreds or thousands. Other bottlenecks could arise from an actual game scene that may make this negligible or a more significant impact on performance.
I am shocked they sold as many of them as they did. I get that there are mindless fans, but this is quite an expensive and ugly commitment to make.
Like with anything else, getting good involves practice, practice, practice. You’ll encounter problems and you’ll learn to solve them as long as you keep up the curiosity and willingness to learn. If you keep asking the question “is there a better way of doing this?” you can keep improving.
I think k cups get the hate they do because there are plenty of coffee making machines that don’t produce so much waste. The alternatives are practical and plentiful.
I’d like to see new uses for diamonds that take advantage of their material properties. For example, the thermal conductivity of diamonds is very high.
Moderation is key.
It helps Call of Duty 4 in that their levels were a lot more restricted and didn’t have all the physics and AI calculations that Crysis had to do. Even then, Crysis had better graphics and more advanced effects.
The kids who had that kind of breakfast were probably the ones asking to go to the bathroom all the time.
and cut it out with the stock buybacks!
Anything is more affordable than nvidia’s jacked up prices. The key will be whether it provides enough performance for the difference in price to be worth it. I’m not interested in paying about half a thousand dollars for a single part either way.
The perpendicular mambo is no good?
True, and maybe I’m playing a losing game by arguing within that context, but I did want to point out that even under those conditions the “logical fallacy” doesn’t fit.
That’s horrible. I should Google for more information so I can avoid using companies involved with the military.
Pointing out hypocrisy is not whataboutism. Whataboutism is when you bring up a separate topic as a criticism to distract from the original topic. For example, if you make fun of my cooking and I bring up your drawing skills in response, that’s whataboutism. If you suck at cooking and yet bring up me sucking at cooking, that’s just pointing fingers and trying to paint that as a negative for someone else when you possess the same deficiency.
The assumption is that they’ll develop some kind of moat, but there are plenty of other AI models on offer or in development. It would also be useless capturing a market when the companies that would be their customers realize they’re not making money on the AI themselves.
Like how any regular application can be instructed to copy itself i.e. a computer worm? Not exactly shocking for a computer program to do.