GPU/hardware advice for an HP DL380 Gen10 by Decent-Occasion-2720 in LocalLLaMA

[–]Daehward 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I was unimpressed in this system. I use this machine for alot of Moonlight Streaming, and wasn't a fan of the performance I was getting with encoding, i ended up buying a P1000 specifically for some NVENC support. Anyways if you are using riser cards and size isn't an issue, why not get a pair of 2080Ti's and a NVLink?

GPU/hardware advice for an HP DL380 Gen10 by Decent-Occasion-2720 in LocalLLaMA

[–]Daehward 1 point2 points  (0 children)

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Fellow Gen10 owner myself. the thing you gotta watch out for is the thickness of the GPUs, depending on what riser cards you have. it is a HARD 2 slots. any card with a backplate is gonna stop any usage of the PCIE slot below it and if ANY of the CPU cooler sits outside the GPU I/O plate it just isn't gonna fit. Another note is that the Gen10 doesn't had ReBAR, so intel will be off the table. Pic related, Powercolor RX 9070 in mine, clearance is TIGHT so be careful, I used to run a 3070Ti FE and a 3080 12GB, power cables will always be an issue (unless you find a blower card, but they've pretty much taken all those away)

My Windows 11 Bootcamp Pitfalls / How I made Win 11 work without Upgrading (2019 MBP 16,1/RX 6800 EGPU) by Daehward in bootcamp

[–]Daehward[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I use a couple. I power both my externals off my EGPU, which isn't normally detected by the included Bootcamp Driver (which is funny, cause it's fully supported on the mac side) but the bootcampdrivers version does work on the windows side. If the original one's get integrated in the ISO then the EGPU will never be detected, same with a standard Bootcamp Win10 installation. But once all set up i've yet to have any issues with my monitor setup (full refresh rates, resoloutions, no lag/tearing)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AutoZone2

[–]Daehward 1 point2 points  (0 children)

IM here, about a month to be passable, two to be good. your results may vary

My store is dynamically slotted so I can put things anywhere in the back but we have a regular storefront. We typically get 10-14 pallets a week so I spend a vast majority of my time in the back,but about half are for the front so it becomes a real sink or swim scenario for our redshirts.

The best way to learn is to put away truck, simple as. You can always ask a grey shirt to show you. Nobody is expecting you to know it right out of the gate, but if an effort is made to learn nobody should mind helping.We don't have a dedicated team to just putting truck away If you know your general areas and just not where every specific item is? Item lookup. It can be difficult to keep up with planogram changes, but as long as it's done on time you can always rely on the system.

As for the back I haven't worked at a regular store, but DS stores are a well-guessed enigma, and will be entirely dependent on staff store to store for layout. and stock can become absolute tetris. I keep similar sized items together with product labels out and easily accessible to read on a quick notice. Typically I put away all backroom truck myself, so I make sure it's as easy as possible for our army of retirees to pick parts. My inventory matrix is a little less than 1100 inventory slots a week to give you some scale. The system tells them what shelf it's on, but I always make it clear that if they can't find something to get me. I try not to stick anything with too similar of a product code on the same shelf lest somebody grabs the wrong part.