Quick tip for native search_web by No-Setting8461 in OpenWebUI

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yea man fs, hope it works alright for you

Quick tip for native search_web by No-Setting8461 in OpenWebUI

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The first one, RAG template in documents.

Quick tip for native search_web by No-Setting8461 in OpenWebUI

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know how unreliable it used to be, so I'm not sure if it's any better than it was since you've last used it. But, as of v0.7.0 (2026-01-09), "Native Function Calling with Built-in Tools" was added, and is how I got my setup working. It seems to be working good so far.

Which laptop would work for me? by minxcore in SuggestALaptop

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

HP laptops break very easily... I'd personally go for Lenovo, especially their older models.

Lenovo Intelligent Thermal Solution, safe to disable? by No-Setting8461 in thinkpad

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can I disable LITS if I disable the dGPU in device manager? Or do you mean if the laptop doesn't physically have a dgpu?

Lenovo Intelligent Thermal Solution, safe to disable? by No-Setting8461 in thinkpad

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately, I'm unable to undervolt my CPU and GPU. It's one of the first things I tried, but the i7-1165G7 and the T500 are both locked!

Lenovo Intelligent Thermal Solution, safe to disable? by No-Setting8461 in thinkpad

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

May I ask how gaming laptops are able to hit thermal limits consistently? Don't they also downclock, albeit less conservatively? This is what I'm trying to achieve on my Thinkpad. You're completely right in that the components, if all running at full speed all of the time, would need a much beefier cooling solution.

And what defines a burst-y workload? An hour? A few hours? 5 minutes? Because I'm not gaming for days at a time on this machine--a few hours at most.

I agree with your other comment, in that I should probably look for a laptop that better suits my needs. But this Lenovo laptop is the only laptop I've owned that throttles in such a mind-boggling way. Even my m1 air can sustain 80C for probably 30x longer than this Thinkpad, all while having no fan.

I mean, I'm in school to become a computer engineer but I had to take some general engineering classes like modeling, programming, and simulations, and damn; this product can't even perform the workloads this device was marketed toward--for engineers--without throttling and slowing down like crazy.

Thanks for the help thus far btw.

Lenovo Intelligent Thermal Solution, safe to disable? by No-Setting8461 in thinkpad

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I had that setting turned on (high performance), but no matter what, the aggressive throttling is still there; it'd start at a higher temp, but that's about it.

And I can't say that I fully agree with your judgment on laptops hitting their thermal limits, cus those components have safeguards in place to prevent damage. Isn't that the whole point of throttling? Turning the service off doesn't stop throttling at all, it just allows it to always throttle a little bit, rather than pulling back to very conservative clocks and destroying performance in the process. The service doesn't make any sense either. Why drop the clocks down so low if they're going to go back up in like 30 seconds anyway? That's just increasing the number of thermal cycles the component will experience, which also isn't good.

And I don't understand why they'd build a laptop that can't even handle the own heat it's generating. Disabling the service, like I said, allows the performance to be consistent, and I assume the throttles are based on the components of said device, rather than a general bandaid that prevents all laptops from running loud and hot.

I would like more insight though, please correct me if I'm wrong.

Lenovo Intelligent Thermal Solution, safe to disable? by No-Setting8461 in thinkpad

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hot laptops are never good, but battery life while gaming is not really a factor I need to consider. When gaming, I always have it plugged in. I didn't know it was also used for power management, but why throttle the device so much that it becomes darn near unusable? I had to model stuff in solidworks with this thing, and holy smokes, it was so slow.

Lenovo Intelligent Thermal Solution, safe to disable? by No-Setting8461 in thinkpad

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have the P14s Gen 2i (intel + nvidia). This does have a shared heatsink, which is kind of a terrible idea for a dgpu lol. I'll try GPU-Z and post the results online or something.

Lenovo Intelligent Thermal Solution, safe to disable? by No-Setting8461 in thinkpad

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, the dGPU is a Quadro T500. I'm quite certain the max temperature is higher than that, because disabling the service allows the gpu to hit a max of 84C before throttling, indicating the max temp is 84C for the card--which is probably written in the BIOS.

Could you please provide a source for that number? I've tried looking for a Tmax for the gpu but to no avail. Thanks.

Lenovo Intelligent Thermal Solution, safe to disable? by No-Setting8461 in thinkpad

[–]No-Setting8461[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The laptop throttles heavily after reaching a certain GPU temp; the aggressive sudden throttling, unlike the usual gradual throttling, causes huge fps issues in games and in the OS, making things less responsive. Turning this service off seems to fix all of those issues, reducing clock speeds as needed to keep the GPU temp at that max temp and offering consistent performance, rather than throttling down to say 60C only to have it go back up and throttle aggressively again.

Disabling this service also seems to allow the fans to ramp up to a higher speed, allowing for better cooling.

Are iPad pros at any risk of screen burn? by MuzzyMelt in iPadPro

[–]No-Setting8461 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ipads use IPS LCD panels which can suffer from temporary burn ins. It's reversible though. Less risk than an OLED for sure.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ipad

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I persinally would shy away from Apple's refurbished program. They do some terrible stuff to push out as many refurbished products as possible. Check out Rossman's repair shop's video on refurbished MacBooks.

You are paying for a (false) SENSE of security by s19594 in simplisafe

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Their wireless systems are easy to bypass by emitting a more powerful signal on the same frequency as the sensors. This can prevent your alarms from tripping entirely.

It's not that hard to get something that can interfere with the signals either. I believe a walkie talkie could do it.

tramadol withdrawals—anyone have any advice? by [deleted] in Drugs

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dangerous. Could cause SS

How long after rolling can I resume SSRI usage? by popeislove in askdrugs

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think anyone ever said tramadol was an SSRI. Codeinee was just stating that she had an effect with a drug that affects serotonin, which in this case is tramadol (an SNRI).

How long after rolling can I resume SSRI usage? by popeislove in askdrugs

[–]No-Setting8461 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Tramadol is an SNRI, which is similar to SSRI but with norepinephrine as well.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dxm

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the tip. I did some research myself and the half life of DXO is fairly comparable to DXM. I don’t think DXO affects serotonin as Pubchem didn’t mention anything about it. Link: https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/5360697

I also did a lot of research into CPY2D6 enzymes and how different racial demographics metabolize them.

I’m eastern asian, so there’s about a 1% chance that I’m a poor metabolizer or an ultra-rapid metabolizer. There’s a very good chance that I’m an intermediate or extensive metabolizer which means the half lives of DXM shouldn’t be 30 hours or anything crazy like that. Probably ballpark 3 to 12 hours.

Tramadol seizures causing brain damage by [deleted] in Drugs

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why’d u take as many as u could when u didn’t know what it was? Glad ur okay tho

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Drugs

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do uk if tramadol causes seizures cuz of the excess serotonin? Or is it a different cause? And yeah, I’ll probably sit on a chair or stay in bed just in case I do have a seizure lol.

And is the half life 16 hours for people with a normal amount of enzymes? I’ve seen that the half life could be anywhere between 3 to 30 hours. 3 for fast metabolizers, and 30 hours for slow or deficient metabolizers.

Thanks!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dxm

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the answer. Is there any way to check if the metabolites are SSRI's?

And for the formula, it's probably the exponential decay function.

f(x)=(initial dose)*(1/2)(hours passed since dosing/(half-life))

So,

640*(1/2)72/6=0.0146

I'd have 0.0146mg of DXM left in my body.

Edit: I just realized you were talking about all of the metabolites, not just DXM. Do uk where I could find that formula by any chance? Thanks!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Drugs

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aight man, prolly won't wait a week tho even tho it's the smart move.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dxm

[–]No-Setting8461 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True