Mark Killingback

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Mark Killingback

Mark Killingback

@cubes123

Nobody important...

เข้าร่วม Haziran 2010
343 กำลังติดตาม18 ผู้ติดตาม
Mark Killingback
Mark Killingback@cubes123·
@mhdcode I run stuff like qwen 122b with most of it in system ram (have 128gb) and as much as will fit in my 16gb of vram. Runs acceptably just about
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MHD
MHD@mhdcode·
@cubes123 So the only way is unified ram ?
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MHD@mhdcode·
sorry local AI folks but i’m not dropping $4k on this high end gpu just to run last year’s models. seriously, GPT-OSS-20B??
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Mark Killingback
Mark Killingback@cubes123·
@mhdcode 32gb of system ram is the problem. Can't run the bigger moe models with the bulk of it in system ram
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MHD
MHD@mhdcode·
People suggested the website is outdated, here are the results from a different website
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Eric ⚡️ Building...
Eric ⚡️ Building...@outsource_·
BREAKING:🚨 NVIDIA just quantized Gemma 4 31B on Hugging Face 🔥 NVFP4 compression = 4x smaller weights with frontier-level accuracy. ✅99.7% of baseline on GPQA (75.46% vs 75.71%). 📈256K context window. 🧐Multimodal (text + images + video). vLLM-ready + Blackwell optimized. VRAM requirements: ⚡️Weights only: ~16–21 GB 🚀Everyday use: Runs on 24 GB GPUs 📈Full 256K context = 32 GB VRAM sweet spot (RTX 5090-class consumer GPUs) This is the 31B-class frontier model you can actually run locally on a high-end rig. Try it today👉 huggingface.co/nvidia/Gemma-4…
Eric ⚡️ Building... tweet media
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clem 🤗
clem 🤗@ClementDelangue·
Local AI is free, fast & secure! So today we're introducing hf-mount: attach any storage bucket, model or dataset from @huggingface as a local filesystem. This is a game changer, as it allows you to attach remote storage that is 100x bigger than your local machine's disk. This is also perfect for Agentic storage!! Let's go!
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Ben Graham
Ben Graham@BenGrahamUK·
NCP has gone into administration. They’ve been running car parks since 1931, and somehow ended up £305m in debt. Surely the maintenance for a car park is simple: ticket machines, barriers, lights, and occasional cleaning. How can a business model literally based on people paying to park go bankrupt?
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Wee Mowgz
Wee Mowgz@Mowgzilla·
Just popped round to the local Co-op for some coconut milk for tonight's tea and I'm sorry, but you fucking what, mate?
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iFixit
iFixit@iFixit·
BMW’s latest “innovation” isn’t about performance or safety. It’s a logo-shaped screw designed to keep owners out of their own cars. We dug into the patent, the intent behind it, and why @adafruit is already working on a custom bit to undo BMW’s attempt to block repair. Learn more at the link below. — #iFixit #RightoRepair #FixTheWorld
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Chay Bowes
Chay Bowes@BowesChay·
BMW will make it harder to repair their cars "illegally"- The company has introduced patented screws with a logo-shaped head, which are currently only available to official dealers. These fasteners cannot be removed with standard keys, which could make independent repair and maintenance impossible in unofficial garages. The patent will affect interior components and important assemblies - seats and body connections.
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Prof Katherine Sleeman
Prof Katherine Sleeman@kesleeman·
Many MPs who voted the bill through did so believing that the Lords would improve it. Where did reassurances that ‘the Lords will sort it out’ come from? It would be … awkward … if those complaining loudly about Lords scrutiny today were reassuring MPs about this scrutiny a few months ago.
Kim Leadbeater MBE MP@kimleadbeater

Peers’ delay of assisted dying bill ‘could lead to constitutional crisis’ Powerful piece in ⁦@thetimes⁩⤵️ thetimes.com/uk/politics/ar…

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Mark Killingback
Mark Killingback@cubes123·
@HarrietHarman The public were only supportive of the original version of the bill with the heavy safeguards. You know, the ones that aren't there anymore.
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Harriet Harman
Harriet Harman@HarrietHarman·
Public opinion is in favour of Assisted Dying Bill. It seems too that a majority of peers want Assisted Dying Bill to be thoroughly scrutinised and then get sent back to Commons. It is therefore not “The Lords” which is blocking the Bill, but a minority of peers who are frustrating the will of the majority of peers, public opinion & The Commons by filibustering .
Fleur Elizabeth@fleurmeston

Peers are justified in blocking the assisted suicide bill thetimes.com/comment/the-ti…

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Mark Killingback รีทวีตแล้ว
Calum E. Douglas FRAeS
Calum E. Douglas FRAeS@CalumDouglas1·
A few people such as @_AdAstraPer__ were curious about the source of the interrogation of Dr Walter Georgii, entitled "A Scientists View of the Defeat". Professor Dr. Walter Georgii, was in charge of the German glider aeronautics establishment, and then later in Nov 1943 ran the German Aeronatical Research Council. Since it is not in the public domain, I have uploaded my photographs of it to my website, it contains two parts. The interrogation contains interesting information about what one senior German scientist considered to be the main failings in the Nazi regeme to fully harness science for war. Since these documents took me rather a lot of time and money to find, if you find them useful or interesting, a re-tweet of this post would be a fair payment ! calum-douglas.com/ww2-documents/
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Mark Killingback
Mark Killingback@cubes123·
@timfarron I think it shows that the private members bill process needs serious reform
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Tim Farron
Tim Farron@timfarron·
Important to remember that the Assisted Dying bill was in no one’s manifesto, had inadequate scrutiny in the commons, passed with a much reduced majority at 3rd reading, is attracting increasing opposition from experts and that Lords have the right and duty to scrutinise it well.
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David Frost
David Frost@DavidGHFrost·
I don't agree with Major's silly and deluded speech obviously. But accepting it in his own terms for a moment - the UK in the EU was important to the US because we could influence EU policy. So why would joining the SM & CU with no say in the rules, & no role in setting EU foreign policy, make us the US's chief ally again?
Antonello Guerrera@antoguerrera

2. Sir John Major urged the UK to rejoin at least the EU Single Market and Customs Union: "We have much to offer any partners. Our national assets would make the European Union stronger and better equipped to face the uncertain future than our leaders in conscience. Our collective future demands a Europe that conducts itself as an economic superpower alongside America and China. The alternative is to be ever subordinate to the political and economic winds of America and China." "As I look to the future, the long term future, I have no appetite for that. I know the shortcomings of the European Union. I lived with them for many painful years, but in a dangerous and uncertain world with two unpredictable superpowers, I believe the UK's future is safer and more economically secure inside a powerful block of European nations and us." "But we cannot suddenly knock on the door and say to the European Union, we'd like to rejoin you. Too much diplomatic and political blood was spilled for that to be an easy option for us. There are many barriers to return to full membership in Europe that will be difficult to overcome, perhaps for many years. That said, there are areas where we can make a start and look forward." "The plain truth is that the European Union is too important for the United Kingdom not to be part of its decision-making process. Needed ambitions in this sphere are limited, but a necessary beginning, the changing public mood in this country will help." "Over half of the British electorate now believe it was a mistake to leave the European Union, and less than 1/3 now supports having done so. Among the young, support for Brexit falls as low as 13%. The trend is inexorable. Notice why it is so disappointing, so disappointing that both government and opposition are so wretchedly timid in their policy ambitions, those labor and the Tories are terrified that a residual Brexit vote, they don't seek to change the minds of those. I'm talking of the advantages being a loss, and might be able to read any they simply hide it in a hole and do nothing for our economic and political interests." "That's not an abstract matter. That's your living standards. It's the way we live. Our economic and political interests could not be clearer, but short term party political calculation is given priority over the national interests." "Brexit is a flop. It will not leap up from its deathbed. It is losing our country 100 billion pounds of trade every year. [...] The loss is made far greater by some decisions the present government has taken, and that is one reason why we are facing a painful and difficult budget later this month. Serious economists forecast that there will be a cumulative loss to the economy of 311 billion by 2035 together with 3 million fewer jobs and a fall in trade levels with the European Union as of now. This is a matter of fact not conjecture." "Many small and medium sized firms have simply been defeated by prospects in bureaucracy and simply find it no longer profitable to trade with Europe. It is baffling [...] New trade deals, supposedly to cover lost European Trade, have not done so. Most are simply rollovers of past trade deals." "Much though I wish otherwise, I do not foresee an early return to full membership of the European Union. We have lost, probably forever, the unique and advantageous deals that were regained in the negotiations in the 1980s and 1990s. A full return to Europe is almost certainly unobtainable in any likely Parliament until a younger generation of pro-European politicians comes to power, and the Brexiteer voice again retreats to the fringes". "In the post-Brexit years, it has become glaringly obvious that it is in our self-interest to build a better relationship with the European Union as an institution and bilaterally, a better relationship with individual member states of Europe. The government have made some modest steps that are welcome, that is dramatic but welcome, but all of them will play a small part in rebuilding trust, more collaboration is under discussion, such as youth mobility schemes and integration into the electricity market. Hopefully they can be agreed." "I hope ambitions can be relevant to examine rejoining the Customs Union and, thereafter, the Single Market. Neither will be easy or painless. [...] But if a fair deal can be struck, it will be welcomed by trade, by commerce, by a majority in parliament, and by pragmatists everywhere, and it can be achieved. We may even be helped to achieve an improved relationship by the evident wish of our European neighbours to build an expanded military presence across Europe, but within NATO, British military capability is important to Europe if we try again on behalf of Europe. The prize is worth the effort, and for those within the European Union who are tough negotiators, they must know, they must know that their long-term interests and ours are coming into alignment as the world reshapes." "A deal can be done and it must be done in our interests."

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Parody Enzo Türk🇹🇷
Parody Enzo Türk🇹🇷@Enzo_Turk·
@neurathink0 Spygate: McLaren stealing all technical data of Ferrari with the help of an insider. Nothing comes close to this
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Paul Lewis
Paul Lewis@paullewismoney·
Govt confirms new electric car battery gigafactory will be built in a town in Sunderland called Déja Vu in an area known as Nice Round Figures bit.ly/4jP0UfC
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acceler8future
acceler8future@acceler8future·
Not sure what you mean. Trump will happily drop this tariff on UK film industry. We just need to give him the things that he wants in return. May not be popular with the electorate this year but it's our only choice. EU deal is a mirage - they can't make Brexit a success for 10+ yrs. @grok what percentage of UK GDP comes from the film industry?
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Robert Peston
Robert Peston@Peston·
Goodness only knows how the UK does a trade deal with the US after this from President Trump. The UK has a significant film industry built on tax breaks. Good bye Mr Bond
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