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33 votes
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Phoenix passes historic ordinance giving outdoor workers protection from extreme heat
28 votes -
California is preparing to defend itself — and the nation — against Donald Trump 2.0
31 votes -
Florida latest to restrict social media for kids as legal battle looms
22 votes -
San Francisco city leaders look to bring back emergency sirens by end of 2024
8 votes -
America's first right-to-repair bill that bans parts pairing
40 votes -
As news deserts expand, US student journalists step up
12 votes -
Why ban books when you can ban book awards?: Suburban Illinois district cancels youth chosen Caudill Awards
30 votes -
Connecticut, USA wants to penalize insurers for backing fossil-fuel projects
13 votes -
California, USA must triple its rate of carbon emissions reductions to reach 2030 target, report says
16 votes -
US libraries struggle to afford the demand for e-books and seek new state laws in fight with publishers
46 votes -
Documentary ‘The Home Game’, about an Icelandic village's football team, has taken the top honour at the Glasgow Film Festival
6 votes -
350,000 Californians are now on the FAIR Plan, the last resort for fire insurance. Now what?
36 votes -
The problem with California Prop 1
8 votes -
Denmark's second-largest city is trialling a first-of-its-kind deposit scheme to tackle single-use coffee cups
20 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission and eight states sue to block supermarket merger between Kroger and Albertsons
37 votes -
One of the world’s biggest cities may be just months away from running out of water
22 votes -
How the UN is holding back the Sahara desert
8 votes -
California's push for mandatory ethnic studies classes runs into the Israel-Palestine conflict in designing a curriculum
22 votes -
Florida official letter: "Misrepresenting" gender on drivers licenses is fraud, changes now banned
40 votes -
Ohio, Michigan Republicans in released audio: "Endgame" is to ban trans care "for everyone"
56 votes -
A landslide of contaminated soil threatens environmental disaster in Denmark. Who pays to stop it?
19 votes -
New York City plans to wipe out $2 billion in medical debt for 500,000 residents
27 votes -
Billionaire backers of new California city seek voter approval after stealthily snapping up farmland
27 votes -
Ohio pastor charged for housing the homeless
45 votes -
You don't need a license to walk
41 votes -
British Columbia, Canada: Family pets will no longer be considered property during divorce proceedings
15 votes -
West Virginia bill would mandate "curing" trans people under 21
47 votes -
Legislators in Kentucky and other fossil states charge EV drivers more than double in taxes than ICE drivers
41 votes -
ABBA's holographic dancing queens have had a tangible impact, adding over £320 million of money, money, money to London's economy in its first year
17 votes -
Why a 100-year supply? How Arizona got its famous, yet arbitrarily numbered groundwater rule.
14 votes -
Panel settles on Minnesota flag's final design
40 votes -
Cheap options(?) to run local AI models
I have been having fun learning about generative AI. All in the cloud -- I got some models on hugging face to work, tried out Colab Pro, and found another cloud provider that runs SD models...
I have been having fun learning about generative AI. All in the cloud -- I got some models on hugging face to work, tried out Colab Pro, and found another cloud provider that runs SD models (dreamlook.ai if anyone is interested).
It's got me curious about trying to run something locally (mostly stable diffusion/dreambooth, possibly ollama).
I currently have a Thinkpad T490 with 16 gb ram and the base-level graphics card. I haven't actually tried to run anything locally, on the assumption that it would be extremely slow. I saw that you can get an external GPU, though I also saw some reports of headaches trying to get external GPUs up and running.I am curious what a workstation might cost that could do a reasonable job running local models. I am not a huge gamer or have any other high performance needs that are not currently served by the Thinkpad; not sure I can justify a $3000 workstation just to make a few jpgs.
I would be happy to buy something secondhand, like if there was a good source of off-lease workstations.
Alternatively-- if you have a similar computer to the T490 and do run models locally, what sort of performance is reasonable to expect? Would it be enough to buy some more RAM for this laptop?
Thanks for any advice!
13 votes -
California gas tax revenue will drop by $6 billion, threatening roads
27 votes -
Does your flag fail? CGP Grey grades the state flags of the USA.
25 votes -
The red US state brain drain isn’t coming. It’s happening right now.
77 votes -
Top court clears path for Democrats to redraw House map in New York
15 votes -
Amsterdam to cut speed limits 40% to improve road safety
46 votes -
Links forged half a century ago with Gaza City mean that support for Palestine goes well beyond gesture politics in Tromsø, Norway
8 votes -
NYC budget cuts will close some composting programs
8 votes -
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear says trans kids are “children of God” "The way these Super PACS and my opponent went about their campaign was just mean, gross, and cruel."
22 votes -
Not your grandma’s granny flat: How San Diego hacked state housing law to build ADU ‘apartment buildings’
16 votes -
Maryland is making a $27.2 million investment in devices as part of an effort to ensure residents have the technology to access reliable, high-speed internet.
16 votes -
Residents of Luleå, Sweden welcome new campaign encouraging them to say hello to each other during dark winter months
12 votes -
Solar power to the people: California program brings clean energy to Oakland
11 votes -
Texas businesses file amicus brief saying abortion ban costs state nearly $15 billion a year
24 votes -
Health insurers have been breaking US state laws for years
24 votes -
In Canada’s battle with Big Tech, smaller publishers and independent outlets struggle to survive
15 votes -
New York residents say a hazardous waste incinerator’s emissions violate their new constitutional right to a “healthful environment.”
14 votes -
Massachusetts passed a law requiring cars make data accessible to independent shops to allow repairs. Automakers sued.
31 votes