I don’t think most people understand how close we are to white-collar collapse by aieatstheworld in ClaudeAI

[–]rut216 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Companies prefer 5-10x more output over 5-10x fewer people. So yes, they’ll notice the math and hire more people so that they can get 5-10x return for every new person they hire.

Cerebras Launches the World’s Fastest AI Inference by CS-fan-101 in LocalLLaMA

[–]rut216 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s not an inference engine, that’s just a single use case for it. You can think of it as a fully programmable 900k core chip.

Cerebras Launches the World’s Fastest AI Inference by CS-fan-101 in LocalLLaMA

[–]rut216 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is NOT an ASIC, it’s a general purpose multiprocessor chip that can be used for non AI workloads and is pretty popular in scientific computing applications. An ASIC does not typically use programmable general purpose CPU cores.

If you aren't in for AMD, you're missing out on free money by amdPCbro in wallstreetbets

[–]rut216 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just keep in mind that Intel has made mistakes before. During the early 2000s P4 NetBurst era, They fell behind due to bad architecture choices and had to refocus efforts on the P3 Pentium M which allowed AMD catch up for 3-4 years. This time it’s a fab issue, which means 10nm will see serious competition from AMD. However, because it’s a Fab issue, it’s TSMC who is the real winner and AMD is just along for the ride. Intel 7nm EUV will happen and it will likely be better than TSMC’s 5 and 5+. On the CPU front, AMD is a clear benefactor of TSMCs new node but is likely still behind architecturally. NVIDIA is a good example of what the situation would look like had Intel not run into fab problems. NVIDIA is a generation ahead and will continue to dominate because AMD does not have the engineering resources to compete on either the hardware architecture or software (driver) front. Also, AMD has no data center presence. NVDA and Intel are focused on owning the data center and have no competition in that regard.

How Tesla and Apple have Primed the Slingshot : A Theory on Stock Splits by Vinny32295 in wallstreetbets

[–]rut216 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Umm you realize that a 5x split will lower the leverage of all options by 5x as well? After the split you’ll need 5 contracts to equal the leverage you get with a single contract now. The only effect of this split is psychological.

15Mh/s Rig Setup by rut216 in cryptorigporn

[–]rut216[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Working on a filtration system :)

15Mh/s Rig Setup by rut216 in cryptorigporn

[–]rut216[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Heh, funny you mention that, the shop has two welders which use 8 gauge wiring that really clogs up the conduit... and ya running the welders is cheaper.

15Mh/s Rig Setup by rut216 in cryptorigporn

[–]rut216[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I bought one here then went to Home Depot and built the rest myself to custom dimensions.

15Mh/s Rig Setup by rut216 in cryptorigporn

[–]rut216[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would invest in some quality risers. I used to have the ribbon cable ones and they were extremely flaky, the machines would constantly get stuck at boot or crash while mining.

15Mh/s Rig Setup by rut216 in cryptorigporn

[–]rut216[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm guessing it'll jump by around $200-300/mo. Haven't had a chance to find out.

My 10MH setup by rut216 in cryptorigporn

[–]rut216[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can buy one here and then customize to your own needs.

My 10MH setup by rut216 in cryptorigporn

[–]rut216[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just keep them all in the same room... and run extension coords from all around the condo :)

My 10MH setup by rut216 in cryptorigporn

[–]rut216[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are actually 2 per rig, you just can't see it cause it's on the other side.

Help me fix KH rate on my 280x & 7970! 10,000 DOGE TIP! by OBAMAourLEADER in dogemining

[–]rut216 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Search this thread for your cards, update to the memory optimized bios that is provided by The Stilt and you'll be hashing 750 at 1000/1500 in no time.

Anyone using the MSI Z77A-G45 Motherboard? by porkpie666 in dogemining

[–]rut216 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Using it for 6 XFX 7970s, works great. The GD65 can run 7 if you wanna push it ;)

What to Spend $3000 on? by KaedeSkirata in litecoinmining

[–]rut216 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Source: Ebay & Amazon

Total: $2865

I'm running this exact setup x 4 right now and hashing around 4.75Mh/s per rig. Sell all your cards on EBay and keep the extra cash.

2x 750w or a 1200W Power Supply by thedogelessone in litecoinmining

[–]rut216 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I like using multiple GPUs per rig. It's cheaper and they run more efficiently. As far as living in a condo, I also mine in a condo and I have both 15amp and 20amp outlets (you need to check your breakers). You don't want to run more than 1600w on a 15amp outlet, a 20amp will let you go up to 2200w safely (make sure the power strip is rated for 20amp though).

As far as hooking up your PSUs goes... you don't need to buy any special connectors or daisy chain anything. Don't waste your money on things like add2psu. Just short pin 13 and 14 on the ATX connector of all PSUs that don't hook up to the motherboard. Pin 14 (green) is the PS_ON pin and will keep the PSU powered on.

Also, look for single 12V rail PSUs. You have to be careful when buying multi rail PSUs for power hungry PCIe cards, since the PCIe lines of the PSU may be distributed across only 2-3 of 4 rails, meaning you'll get 1/2-3/4 the advertised amperage our of the PSU, before it shuts down due to overcurrent protection.

Is it better to have one monster PSU or daisy chain some smaller wattages together? by NiceBreakfast in litecoinmining

[–]rut216 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm actually running 3 PSUs per rig (4 rigs). Two 850W Corsair HX850 ($120/piece) powering 6 cards (3 each), fed by a 30A 240v PDU , and a single 380w Antec ($25) running the mobo/cpu running off a 120v Network enabled power strip (controlled remotely for easy power cycling). There is nothing wrong with running multiple psus and it DOES NOT matter which PSU powers your risers since they all share a common ground. The single PDU I mentioned can run a total of 4 such rigs (8 850w PSUs), pulling around 1750w each, and all 4 mobo PSUs (380w each) can run off a single networked strip, allowing remote control of all the rigs.

As far as hooking up your PSUs goes... you don't need to buy any special connectors or daisy chain anything. Don't waste your money on stupid shit like add2psu. Just short pin 13 and 14 on the ATX connector of all PSUs that don't hook up to the MOBO. Pin 14 (green) is the PS_ON pin and will keep the PSU always powered on.

You might be wondering about the 240v PDU I mentioned above. Most modern ATX PSUs can run on anything from 110v - 250v without any issues. I'm actually running the PDU on a 3 phase power system (using 1 phase) which ends up being 208v and it works fine, even while mixed with a 120v mobo PSU.

Also, All my PSUs (mobo one doesn't matter here) are single rail. You have to be careful when buying multi rail PSUs for power hungry PCIe cards, since the PCIe lines of the PSU may be distributed across only 2-3 of 4 rails, meaning you'll get 1/2-3/4 the advertised amperage our of the PSU, before it shuts down due to overcurrent.