Also interesting to note that the combined mass of all planets in the solar system is only about 1.4 Jupiter masses (or 0.0014 Solar masses). The Sun did not leave us much to work with if we’re hoping to build a second star!
Earth's mass is something times 10^24. Jupiter's mass is 2 x 10^27. The smallest stars are 8 x 10^28.
On an exponential scale, Jupiter is closer to being a star than it is to being Earth. So... maybe you could say that Jupiter is almost a star. With such loose definitions talking about astronomical scales, there's a lot of room for interpretation and exaggeration.
I think the point is--in the spirit of appreciating Jupiter--Jupiter resembles the largest possible planets.
"Taubyte's single binary philosophy advocates for a future where the full potential of cloud computing is unlocked through its accessibility and efficiency"
I'm getting a "floating point exception" when running ./talk-llama on arch and debian. Already checked sdl2lib and ffmpeg (because of this issue: https://github.com/ggerganov/whisper.cpp/issues/1325) but nothing seems to fix it. Anyone else?
I'm not sure what changed, but basically I purged ffmpeg and libsdl2-dev and the `make` in the root of the repo. Then I installed libsdl2 and ffmpeg and `make talk-llama`.
It's quite slow on 4 core i7-8550U and 16 GB of RAM.
[1]: https://www.astronomy.com/science/ask-astro-could-jupiter-ev...
reply