Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | cmxch's commentslogin

And they’ll probably just tow the recalled trucks outside the environment.

Into another environment?

No, no, no. it’s been towed beyond the environment, it’s not in the environment

Just buy a Textron golf cart and you have 90% of the Chinese EV experience.

Are you saying all cars that are manufactured in China are rubbish? Because that is just plain wrong.

It's the same propaganda that was used against Japan and Korean cars. Asia = bad, America = good.


https://ezgo.txtsv.com/

is there even a screen?


The US still has enough power to stop it though, thankfully.

We aren’t captured by environmental activists that force the poor to shoulder the compliance burden while the rich get to defer and delay.


Why is it thankful the US has the power to force everyone to keep wasting money on US-controlled energy sources? What's the difference between this situation and a Mafia protection racket?

Many people don’t realize the IPCC walked back (refined as they put it) some of its most dire scenarios… others may choose to ignore the walkback. Akin to the rocket and feather phenomenon that affects pricing.

It was based on co2 emissions doubling by 2050.

Though energy output has doubled, as a share coal has dropped in China and the US.

Wouldn’t you expect estimates based on difficult to predict human behavior to change based on new data?


Many people were saying that things were not as dire as they claimed. I’m glad they revised but you had silly people gluing themselves to thoroughfares (cars stuck in traffic waste more energy) and vandalizing what some people consider precious art and or national patrimony in the name of climate change thinking that those most dire predictions were indeed correct and we were all headed to hell in a hand basket.

Ruined cars piled up in streets waste even more energy - temporarily.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/oct/31/why-were-the-f...


So we are no longer worried about catastrophic or runaway climate change based on these revisions?

> So we are no longer worried about catastrophic or runaway climate change based on these revisions?

Don't listen to mc32, they're intentionally confusing the issue. This is the paper they're presumably referencing from last month[1].

The IPCC reports are based on a number of carbon emissions scenarios based on how the world acts: how do countries coordinate, what are the mixes of new electricity generation that come online, how are old fossil fuel plants shut down, what cars are sold, etc. In their reports they simulate multiple scenarios to show what could happen depending on the choices made, since you can't really simulate policy decisions (like presidents paying companies billions to shut down wind projects), wars (ahem), and economic changes.

There were five main scenarios in the IPCC sixth report, from very low to very high GHG emissions.

What was "walked back" is not about climate simulation or feedback loops, but they've retired the very high emissions scenario they developed in the mid 2010s of a world that went all in on heavy economic growth all powered by fossil fuels and little effort toward electrification or decarbonization.

Basically based on renewable energy prices in the years since, electrification, etc, it's just not plausible that the world will grow in that way, so it's no longer worth trying to do simulations based on it.

Note that this was literally called the "very high emissions scenario" in the report, and that's there's still a "high" emissions scenario that will be included in the seventh IPCC report as an upper bound of plausible emissions. A couple of economic models already estimated that we'll likely emit less carbon than the new upper bound high emissions scenario, the same as it was for the very high scenario in the sixth report. Like then, though, it's still worth simulating because it is at least still plausible, and you never know how things will develop sociopolitically (this paper proposes six scenarios from very low to high and a new "high to low" scenario, see section 2.3) .

[1] https://gmd.copernicus.org/articles/19/2627/2026/


That’s tough to say. Weather systems are difficult to model. We have minimal understanding of the causes or inputs that control the very long climate cycles. Like we know that some day thousands of years from now we’ll have another unstoppable glacial period. We’ll also have a period free of polar ice. Those are cyclical and independent of CO2. We cannot stop either. We live in a very precious time.

I also think we should limit or be judicious as much as we can about what we pump into the atmosphere (or oceans or ground)


So the climate scientists of every government are lying? The calculations about how much heat is trapped by different CO2 amounts, bunk?

It’s 32gb for people who can’t go for scalped 5090s but have a 3090 budget.

I have a pair of them with a 9480 and the only thing I have to do is keep the cache happy.


Eh. Trading CUDA for 8 more gigs seems like bad deal, unless you know absolutely for certain what you want to run will run on it.

Until NVidia prices get better, I’ll build out with the Intel stack and keep the cache (and prompt processing speeds) happy.

As for software, anything that has a SYCL or Vulkan backend, and/or can be Intel optimized (especially to the same degree as llama.cpp) can run well.


Wait, it didn’t already or am I confusing it with the VESA support on Linux?


SDL has never supported DOS.

You might be thinking of Allegro?

https://github.com/superjamie/allegro-4.2.3.1-xc


So by the time Mythos is widely and generally available, it’ll be generations behind.

No thanks, but I’d rather not have mysterymeat patches from effectively impossible to replicate models.


Interesting to see them do this when the original study in Singapore did not (initially) enact the ban.

Did they just follow on from New Zealand?


Looks like Google is taking a page from Microsoft regarding embrace, extend, extinguish.

At this point, they’re at the Extinguish stage.


I see that Meta (if that’s still the case) is going for the gold here.


> Intel

For some workloads, the Arc Pro B70 actually does reasonably well when cached.

With some reasonable bring-up, it also seems to be more usable versus the 32gb R9700.


I have both of those cards. Llama.cpp with SYCL has thus far refused to work for me, and Vulkan is pretty slow. Hoping that some fixes come down the pipe for SYCL, because I have plenty of power for local models (on paper).


Hmm.

I had to rebuild llama.cpp from source with the SYCL and CPU specific backends.

Started with a barebones Ubuntu Server 24 LTS install, used the HWE kernel, pulled in the Intel dependencies for hardware support/oneapi/libze, then built llama.cpp with the Intel compiler (icx?) for the SYCL and NATIVE backends (CPU specific support).

In short, built it based mostly on the Intel instructions.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: