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This was submitted 30 months ago. Still interesting. I would be interested if this got 'worse' or 'better' with newer models.


i'm honestly surprised HF doesn't have this feature yet, very useful! will you publish the code on github?

any plans on adding more consumer-grade gpus?


Hey I published the code here: https://github.com/NEBUL-AI/HF-VRAM-Extension

I've added the 4090 and 5090 as well now, make sure to get version 0.5 of the extension


It would have been fair if the author would have mentioned that Microsoft is very open about this. I went to a Microsoft training, where the instructor also made clear that the service is being monitored. Suspicious messages get flagged and are reviewed under a 4-eyes principle. [1]

At least in the EU (I'm told) they are required by law keep logs to ensure that their AI services are not being used to do bad.

I'm glad that their system worked.

[1] https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/legal/cognitive-services/o...


They are indeed very open about this. More here [1]. You can also put in a request for limited monitoring [2].

[1] https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/ai-services/openai/c...

[2] https://customervoice.microsoft.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?...


Very impressive. How many actual users waste days of their lives in Microsoft training to get basic information?

And, no, burying it in the ToS isn't being "very open" either. "Very open" would be putting a big visible banner on every page of the UI.

... and the abuse still wouldn't be acceptable even if Microsoft actually were being forthcoming about it.


is it me or is his google scholar page gone? i'm wondering if it's been removed by google or he removed it himself in an effort to remove 'evidence'

This used to link to his profile: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=j7syrnkAAAAJ&hl=en


It seems to have been removed some time in the last year: https://web.archive.org/web/20230701000000*/https://scholar....


good find, thanks!

in case anyone's curious, these were his numbers as of may 2023

            All   Since 2018
  Citations 44715 22788
  h-index   117   72
  i10-index 725   461
(once more amazed how incredible useful archive.org is)


Source??


This blog post by Raymond Chen contains more details than this short YouTube video:

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20220419-00/?p=10...


When I was a kid I had an laptop that would overheat when playing age of empires. So I had a bicycle pump setup under my desk so I could quickly blow in some air every 3-4 minutes... If I was to late or forgot the whole thing would just die and all game progress was lost. I remember laughing at the whole situation whenever I had to pump in air. At some point I bought one of those laptop stand with built-in fans.

Thanks for reminding me of those good old days :-)


I love this story. As an adult the thought of stopping every few minutes to manually cool your computer is insufferable, I would rather just not play on that laptop. But yeah, as a kid, I could see myself perhaps having done this.


Serious question: How common is having dozens of accounts? I live in NL and have 3 at the same bank. Why would anyone have 50+ accounts?


My wife and I have four kids and for each of them is a personal savings account, a savings account we keep for them to accumulate over time to avoid a taxable lump sump “gift”, and a tax advantaged educational savings account. For ourselves we have brokerage, savings, checking, and each have pretax and post-tax advantaged retirement accounts and health savings accounts. Many tech employees would also have 401k and possibly equity compensation accounts. And then any credit or debt (mortgage) accounts on top of that.

Our family is big, and the number of accounts scales with the number of people, but that’s about 25 without getting into anything moderately interesting.


The US based financial industry is a make work project for bankers as far as I can tell. The US creates all sorts of classification of money causing the need for at least 3 retirement account types, a college savings account per Child per contributor.

I'm only scratching the surface of the number and types of accounts an American can have. It is also useful to have different banks for different services.


Pretty common in the US verses the EU/UK. The basic middle income set would be:

A checking account A savings account (might be at the same institution as the checking, might not)

From your employment you may have.

- A 401k Account - A Health Savings Account (HSA) - A Health Flexible spending account

These will be at whatever institution your employer uses. As these change every time you change jobs you might have multiples of these in play unless you are diligent in rolling over and closing old accounts.

You also might have:

- Individual Retirement Account (possibly two, one Roth, non-Roth) - College Savings Account (if you have kids and want save for collage in a tax friendly way) - Money Market/Broker account for stocks etc.

If you live in a community property state then you probably have a second set of some these so you that you don't mix individual assets with community assets.

Market consolidation has made it easier to go with an single provider for a lot of the above, but it's still busy work keeping on top of everything.


The only reasons I can imagine are fund transfer times, and some isolation security for big amounts. As a fellow dutchie, I just use one bank for personal, and one for my business.


You sign up for them and never close them. I probably have nearly 50 credit card accounts alone and since they're free of monthly/yearly fees, I really don't have much motivation to close them.

On top of that I have two retirement accounts, four bank accounts (not counting various accounts AT those banks), and more. They collect if you don't weed them out.


Someone may have chequing+saving at one bank, a stock brokerage (or retirement savings) account at another institution, and a may have credit card(s) from completely different one(s).

So that could potentially be (at least) three different financially-related accounts.


Not so uncommon in NL. As a Dutchy you should have heard of Bunq which allows you to open unlimited accounts. The idea is to use each as savings pots for specific things such as a holiday, car, groceries, etc.

Other banks allow the same thing via virtual accounts.


Sign up bonuses. Some give an extra few percent on interest when you sign up, so you move all your money in, collect, then close the account out and go to another bank and repeat.


That dude is probably quite wealthy.


It’s not necessarily related to wealth (except that you need some savings), but when ING Direct was a thing my wife and I had an account for every savings goal and used it as our “envelope” system. There was no cost per account and you could open one in seconds, so we had a bunch of low value (dozens of dollars! Dozens!) accounts for saving for our next phone or vacation. That could have been done with a spreadsheet, but it was less work to just make separate accounts.


How can you say that something is outright false if there is not fact/claim you can disprove. You’re responding to someone you don’t know and have no idea what they are working on.

I’m (not OP!) a cloud engineer but also work on a lot of FE (React) code for internal tools. ChatGPT has saved me countless hours (literally tens a month) writing super simple code that I am able to easily write up myself but typing it out just takes time. After month of using it I find myself still quite excited whenever cGPT saved me another hour. We also use Retool, but I find myself writing code ‘myself’ more often since cGPT launched.

No, I wouldn’t just copy paste production code handling PII, but prototyping or developing simple tools is sooooo much faster, for me.


Childhood memories! Our playground had the same version shown in the linked image.

You were considered cool when you dared to jump off the highest possible standing position. The wood chips softened the fall :-)


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