• finley@lemm.ee
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    5 days ago

    Imagine how much better it would run on a similar era version of redhat, gentoo, or beos.

    They just proved that the hardware was perfectly capable, in the absolute garbage middle layer-the operating system is what matters about propelling the potential of the hardware forward into a usable form.

    Many people may not remember, but there were a few Lins distributions around at the time. Certainly, they would have been able to make better use of the hardware had enough developers worked on it.

    • ᗪᗩᗰᑎ@sh.itjust.works
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      5 days ago

      but the hardware is not capable. it’s running a miniscule custom 260k LLM and the “claim to fame” is that it wasn’t slow. great? we already know tiny models are fast, they’re just not as accurate and perform worse than larger models, all they did was make an even smaller than normal model. this is akin to getting Doom to run on anything with a CPU, while cool and impressive, it doesn’t do much for anyone other than being an exercise in doing something because you can.

      • finley@lemm.ee
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        5 days ago

        With your first sentence, I can say you’re wrong. My 1997 era DX4-75 MHz ran redhat wonderfully. And SUSE, and Gentoo.

        As the rest? You don’t know what an AI/LLM would’ve looked like on a processor from the era. No one even thought of it then. That doesn’t mean it can’t run it. It just means you can’t imagine that.

        Fortunately, I do not lack imagination for what could be possible.