this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2024
677 points (99.0% liked)
PC Gaming
8672 readers
1475 users here now
For PC gaming news and discussion. PCGamingWiki
Rules:
- Be Respectful.
- No Spam or Porn.
- No Advertising.
- No Memes.
- No Tech Support.
- No questions about buying/building computers.
- No game suggestions, friend requests, surveys, or begging.
- No Let's Plays, streams, highlight reels/montages, random videos or shorts.
- No off-topic posts/comments, within reason.
- Use the original source, no clickbait titles, no duplicates. (Submissions should be from the original source if possible, unless from paywalled or non-english sources. If the title is clickbait or lacks context you may lightly edit the title.)
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I use it heavily at work nowadays. It would be nice to run it locally.
You don't need AI enhanced hardware for that, just normal ass hardware and you run AI software on it.
But you can run more complex networks faster. Which is what I want.
Maybe I'm just not understanding what AI-enabled hardware is even supposed to mean
It's hardware specifically designed for running AI tasks. Like neural networks.
https://github.com/huggingface/candle
You can look into this, however it’s not what this discussion is about
Exactly what we are talking about.
Stick to the discussion of paying a premium for hardware not the software
Not sure what you mean? The hardware runs the software tasks more efficiently.
The discussion is whether people should/would pay extra for hardware designed around ai vs just getting better hardware
I'm curious what you use it for at work.
I'm a programmer so when learning a new framework or library I use it as an interactive docs that allows follow up questions.
I also use it to generate things like regex and SQL queries.
It's also really good at refactoring code and other repetitive tasks like that
it does seem like a good translator for the less human readable stuff like regex and such. I've dabbled with it a bit but I'm a technical artist and haven't found much use for it in the things I do.
Not the guy you were asking but it's great for writing powershell scripts