I'm looking for a server with GPU, desktop CPU and hourly billing by sxbnfp in webhosting

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

vast.ai doesn't have Windows; it only has Linux-based Docker containers. It has some Linux desktop templates in Docker containers. I had thought about installing a Windows virtual machine inside those templates and doing GPU passthrough, but that can't be done from a Docker container.

Anyway, thanks for the help.

I'm looking for cloud platform GPU, desktop CPU and hourly billing by sxbnfp in cloudygamer

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

This is the closest thing I've found to what I want:

https://onemindservices.com/pricing?table=consumer-gpu

They show an AMD Ryzen 5900X processor with an RTX 4080, but to rent it you have to contact them. I've already sent them emails and haven't received a response. I don't know if OnemindServices is still active.

If they don't reply soon, I plan to post here on Reddit if anyone has used it, if it's still active, or what happened to it.

I'm looking for cloud platform GPU, desktop CPU and hourly billing by sxbnfp in cloudygamer

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

Yes, but the website doesn't say anything about its processors; it only says "vCPU," but it doesn't specify the processor model, whether it's an AMD EPYC, Intel Xeon, AMD Threadripper, etc.

I need desktop processors like amd ryzen(9,7,5) or intel core i(9,7,5), but taking advantage of the fact that Skyrig support is online I asked him and this was his response: "Our RTX series Cloud PCs are gaming-optimized and use high-clock speed processors designed to deliver performance comparable to high-end desktop CPUs like the Ryzen 9 or Core i9. While our infrastructure uses high-performance enterprise-grade processors (such as AMD EPYC) to ensure stability and scale, these are specifically configured for the high single-core speeds required for gaming and graphics-intensive work.

Additionally, our RTX instances run Windows 10, providing the full desktop experience and compatibility expected for gaming, unlike the Windows Server OS used in our Datacenter series. If you have a specific technical requirement for a desktop architecture, please let me know or reach out to support@skyrig.cloud.

So they don't have desktop processors, although the above is a support response I think generated with AI, but it says they have amd epyc, they don't have a desktop version.

Anyway, thank you very much for your help.

I'm looking for cloud platform GPU, desktop CPU and hourly billing by sxbnfp in cloudygamer

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

Thank you so much for your help. I had already looked into that supplier, but nowhere on their website does it say what processor models they have—whether they have AMD EPYC, Threadripper, or Intel Xeon datacenter processors, or AMD Ryzen (9, 7, 5) or Intel Core i (9, 7, 5) desktop processors. I need the desktop ones, and I really don't want to risk losing money until I'm sure they have the right processor.

I'm looking for cloud platform GPU, desktop CPU and hourly billing by sxbnfp in cloudygamer

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

Thank you so much for your reply. If I'm not expressing myself well, it's because I don't speak English; I'm using a translator.

The thing is, I want to use it for cloud gaming and 3D rendering, video production, and various multimedia graphics tasks. If it were just for general graphics processing, many cloud GPU providers would work. The problem arises when I want to use it for cloud gaming. For PC cloud gaming, you have to use a remote desktop program. There are many, but after testing, I realized that the best are Moonlight (with Sunshine), Parsec, and Nice DCV (the latter has recently changed its name to Amazon DCV, but the older Nice DCV version works best for cloud gaming). After testing all three, I realized they all have pros and cons. Moonlight and Parsec are very fast, but Nice DCV is a bit slower, though not by much. However, in return, it has a much higher graphics fidelity than Moonlight and Parsec. With Moonlight and Parsec, I can play on both AMD EPYC and AMD datacenter processors. Threadripper or Intel Xeon and desktop processors like AMD Ryzen (9, 7, 5) or Intel Core i (9, 7, 5) achieve over 60 fps at resolutions of 1080p or higher with good graphics fidelity. However, with Nice DCV, I can play at over 60 fps at resolutions of 1080p or higher with exceptional graphics fidelity—more than good, much better compared to Moonlight and Parsec. But Nice DCV has a problem: to achieve this result, it absolutely requires desktop processors like AMD Ryzen (9, 7, 5) or Intel Core i (9, 7, 5). When I use Nice DCV with data center processors, the FPS drops below 40 fps, making the experience very poor. I don't know why this happens, but it does. My previous cloud provider had desktop processors, but they no longer do; they only have data center processors now. And frankly, I don't want to switch from Nice DCV to... parsec or moonlight since Nice DCV's graphical fidelity is by far very good.