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I once worked with an OS where compilations went faster if you rested your finger on the space bar (or really: any key).
The priority logic said that the highest priority should be given to interactive users, to ensure e.g. echoing keyboard input on the screen as quick as possible. If a user process had been cpu bound for more than couple seconds (compilation of even moderately sized programs might take half a minute in those days), its priority was lowered to give preference to those actively typing a their keyboard. Once you hit a key, your process was raised to interactive priority, and let your lengthy compilation ahead of all other cpu bound processes. At least this worked until all the users had learned the trick, so that all lengthy compilations were competing for resources at interactive priority.
This was fixed in the OS once all the students at my University had learned the trick, but I do not exactly know what they did. The trick stopped working when a new OS version was installed.
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F 11. How appropriate!
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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Wordle 813 4/6
β¬π¨π©β¬π©
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Wordle 813 4/6
β¬β¬β¬β¬π©
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Wordle 813 6/6
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Just managed.
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Wordle 813 2/6*
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I was lucky today!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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β¬β¬β¬β¬π©
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In a closed society where everybody's guilty, the only crime is getting caught. In a world of thieves, the only final sin is stupidity. - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Wordle 813 3/6
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Ok, I have had my coffee, so you can all come out now!
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Wordle 813 3/6
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#Worldle #596 1/6 (100%)
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
easy
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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I pushed all bin and obj folder into GitHub repository. as show in the screenshot.
how to remove these two folders? need some help from here.
diligent hands rule....
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git rm -r bin obj
to just remove them from the current state and move on. Or if you want to change history...
git reset --mixed HEAD~1
//...create your commit again
git push --force-with-lease origin <branch_name>
to back up a commit, create the commit again (without those folders), then do a force update to overwrite the changes (force with lease is a force update, but that fails if commits from OTHER people already made it into the branch, effectively making it a "safe" force update in that you'll only nuke your own commits).
Also, after this just add bin and obj to a .gitignore file and you won't have to worry about it again
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thank you
diligent hands rule....
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You should also read up on the use of the '.gitignore' file (period at the beginning must be there.)
You will find examples that will probably work as is for you without changing anything.
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bad thing is that I committed it before I put up the right .gitignore file.
diligent hands rule....
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Hi community, I have been working on benchmarking publicly available LLMs these past couple of weeks. More precisely, I am interested on the finetuning piece since a lot of businesses are starting to entertain the idea of self-hosting LLMs trained on their proprietary data rather than relying on third party APIs.
GitHub repo: https://github.com/georgian-io/LLM-Finetuning-Hub
To this point, I am tracking the following 4 pillars of evaluation that businesses are typically look into: - Performance - Time to train an LLM - Cost to train an LLM - Inference (throughput / latency / cost per token)
For each LLM, my aim is to benchmark them for popular tasks, i.e., classification and summarization. Moreover, I would like to compare them against each other.
So far, I have benchmarked Flan-T5-Large, Falcon-7B and RedPajama and have found them to be very efficient in low-data situations, i.e., when there are very few annotated samples. Llama2-7B/13B and Writerβs Palmyra are in the pipeline.
But thereβs so many LLMs out there! In case this work interests you, would be great to join forces.
GitHub repo attached β feedback is always welcome
Happy hacking!
modified 9-Sep-23 15:14pm.
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what is your use case for LLM?
diligent hands rule....
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We have anumber of LLM's in our parish, maybe I could ask one of them.
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more details needed. why not compare most used ones ?
Β«The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindledΒ» Plutarch
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But do any of you know what a trebuchet is?
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Quote: trebuchet (n.)
"medieval stone-throwing engine of war," c. 1300 (in Anglo-Latin from early 13c.), from Old French trebuchet (12c.) "stone-throwing siege engine," from trabuchier "to overturn, fall to the ground, overthrow" (11c.), from tra- (from Latin trans-, here expressing "displacement") + Old French buc "trunk, bulk," from Frankish *buk- "trunk of the body," from Proto-Germanic *bheu-, variant of *beu-, used in forming words loosely associated with swelling (such as German bauch "belly;" see bull (n.2))
Β«The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindledΒ» Plutarch
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Are you just throwing that out to anyone?
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A really cool font.
Had to throw that out there!
I don't think before I open my mouth, I like to be as surprised a everyone else.
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.1.0 JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: SimpleWizardUpdate
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You either hit the target or missed by a mile.
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