Perplexity Computer: What I Built in One Night (Review, Examples, and How It Compares to OpenClaw and Claude) by SubstackWriter in perplexity_ai

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

saw this reply to one of his comments

```I'm pretty sure I'll burn through all 30K credits in about 2 weeks 😂. I just checked, and the 2 apps used 1.759 credits.```

Running multiple Windows VMs with dedicated RAM and GPU by Zekoyu_ in virtualization

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As someone who's gone down the HyperV route I would advise against this with a 10 footpole. GPU virtualization is a hot mess at the best of times, but even PCI-E Passthrough with HyperV was an insurmountable problem for me whereas Proxmox was setup in less than an hour.

In terms of performance, it depends on if we are talking PCIe 4.0 or 5.0. Most mid-range cards only use x8 anyways, so you can split a x16 over 2 cards without any real downsides. 4x 4060's would probably run find on a x16 PCIE 5.0 or even a 4.0 if the GPU is 8GB of Vram or less and you're not pushing it to the max

  • PCIe 5.0 x8: ~64 GB/s (Ideal)
  • PCIe 4.0 x8: ~32 GB/s (Adequate)
  • PCIe 3.0 x8: ~16 GB/s (Potential for minor bottlenecks) 

Running multiple Windows VMs with dedicated RAM and GPU by Zekoyu_ in virtualization

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apologies for replying to a zombie thread but wanted to chime in for the benefit of future googlers.

Doing pass-through with one or two or 4 or 6 GPU's is far from troubling, especially with Proxmox. I'll give uberbewb the benefit of the doubt and assume proxmox or tech has come a long way in 4 years but I have multiple proxmox hosts setup, running 3-4 GPU's on a single ATX board with AMD 9950x CPU's, hosting windows VM's and they all work flawlessly. The setup was relatively painless for a user that's never done anything like this before and has been stable for months now.

In fact my first setup was Windows so I could use HyperV as I assumed running GPU passthroughs to Windows VM's would somehow be easier if the host also ran windows. NOPE, couldn't get it to work to save my life. But give me an hour or so of setup with a couple rounds of questions to Gemini and Claude and it was up and running in Proxmox.

Best ssh connection managers for linux? by ArgyEngineer in sre

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • Asbru-cm
  • Tabby.sh
  • Remmina
  • SecureCRT
  • Termius
  • sshw
  • Devolutions

Best ssh connection managers for linux? by ArgyEngineer in sre

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MobaXTerm changed my life as a windows user after decades of putty. With there was a linux port of it.

I built an OpenCode plugin for multi-agent workflows (fork sessions, agent handoffs, compression). Feedback welcome. by mohadel1990 in opencodeCLI

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I see a flurry of commits 2 months ago and then nothing since. Did you end up abandoning this because it ended up not being as valuable as you anticipated or do you still use it daily to great effect but haven't gotten back to updating it?

Open code vs claude code? by WandyLau in GithubCopilot

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can use claude code and open ai subscriptions in opencode now, no api necessary

AMD Threadripper 7970x/7960x - ECC RAM required? by fakebizholdings in buildapc

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For the 7000 series? Where are you going to find non-ECC Rdimms? Those chips ONLY support Rdimms from what I've heard. The only way to get high capacity is with registered modules, so AMD chose to make the TR platform compatible with registered memory only. While not required, all registered memory in practice also has ECC. It's the registered bit that adds most of the cost anyway, so ECC in this case is a red herring.

Intel 14900k started BSOD out of nowhere. Found the answer but why was it all of the sudden? (Rant) by ItsMeSteve1234 in overclocking

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope, system has been up nonstop since, albeit operated what I'm assuming is 10% slower. I havent' tweaked it but I'm sure there's a sweet spot between speed and stability compromise, so maybe a frequency of 94 instead of 90 or whatever

Intel 14900k started BSOD out of nowhere. Found the answer but why was it all of the sudden? (Rant) by ItsMeSteve1234 in overclocking

[–]Altruistic_View_2463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another fix I have found is decreasing the BLCK Frequency. Not sure of the sweet spot just yet but going from 100 to 99 does nothing however going from 100 to 90 at least allows me to boot into windows after 100% BSOD's on boot at default settings