04:38funlad112: So , if you re-engineer the filesystem, which i have a full protocol for and commit new procedures to compile and execute code, the world will change to unrecognizeable.As a last thing i worked on low-end hw procedures for filesystems. Extended battery life, extreme performance , endless storage are the keynames of that whole solution. But i worked on getting vintage gpus to run full os one
04:38funlad112: day not mentioning the other microcontrollers available on everywhere, jvesely had this crazy rather neat idea , that i got stuck at.
04:41funlad112: But there is possibly work on innovation like jvesely's one, for until the next millenium, but your projects are lagging behind and in general are not entirely interesting ones to me anymore, since i have had opencl stack and all gpu execution in any form, i am unsure why the rust is there needed.
04:54funlad112: Things are not as bad to me either, i have stacks of old hw that is so fascinating to work on, and am generally still to some degree a happy man having access to so much equipment in my own lab. So the only admirable effect to have been born in Estonia, the country is not in stoneage like some parts of Africa.
05:12funlad112: So i looked at another Vertasium documentary from youtube about vulnerabilities and offshore status of some SS7 operators, so altogether some effort has to be put to security too. However i noticed that was not the way as to how i got victimized , the operator in the e-mail service just used my accounts mere and easily and robustly like that to commit forgery.
05:12funlad112: but Vertasium documentaries do make sense in the content , and are fun to watch.
05:36funlad112: The closest i got to war simulation was Cambodia, at one stage a boat was crossed on sea jamming our hotel, all equipment was intruded into all possible ways , they used lasers to feed energy to my infection and i was like an ape who could not get anything running reliably, happy to be back working, but as i was released from military service, what does not kill you makes you stronger is an
05:36funlad112: old saying that holds now. But it was a huge battleground experience gotten from there. That is why many legal entity based institutions do not want to deal with such Asian countries, they are offshore but a huge testground btw. for technical things and abuse with the help of technology etc.
07:52dj-death: interesting
07:53dj-death: the intel runners will not start unless some of the arm builds are done
07:53dj-death: that sounds unnecessary
09:16MrCooper: dj-death: yeah, sounds like inaccurate `needs:`
12:23DemiMarie: Is Intel sending anyone to XDC2024?
12:24DemiMarie: sima?
17:08FireBurn: Hey, I've been having some issues on my Prime setup, unless I expllicitly set MESA_VK_DEVICE_SELECT=1002:73df!, forcing the dGPU, even with DRI_PRIME=1 it still partially used the iGPU, and when playing WoW using vkd3d-proton (even if the dGPU is selected in its settings too) it still seems to fill up the iGPU's "VRAM" on amdgpu_top and then freezes, I've always had issues with the iGPU only having 512MB VRAM allocated and no way of changing
17:08FireBurn: it in the bios, it's a faster chip then my old Raven but couldn't even get 1fps in GravityMark
17:10FireBurn: So I guess it's two issues, one iGPU misbeaving with a small "VRAM" and secondly it being used when it should be using the dGPU, but I don't know if that's a vulkan loader bug, some weird wayland interaction, or an issue with vkd3d-proton - or how I could actually figure that out
18:06zmike: mareko: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/merge_requests/31425