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19 days agoMaybe get a stronger case. 🤷♂️😄


Maybe get a stronger case. 🤷♂️😄


Ok that makes sense - thanks for the example. If done with a package could it function the same way (do everything) as if it were part of the OS? Are there any efficiency gains if AI is part of the OS? If not, it sounds like I’d always just want a package and never any AI built into the OS.


I don’t know enough to know the benefit of doing it within the OS vs just a package.


I see people commenting like it’s always a bad idea to implement AI. I think it can be a very useful tool and running locally seems beneficial. Is there no right way to do this?
When I can’t play a new game I want to play, I’ll upgrade. This varies. My last computer i7 920 with a GTX 470 lasted me for a long time – around 9 years. I have a Ryzen 2700x with a 3060TI that I built in 2018 and added the newer GPU in 2021. I’ll probably upgrade next year so around 7-8 years. Before that I had a Pentium 4, Pentium 2, Pentium 1 so those are roughly 4 years between but progress was more impactful back then.
Averaging things out – I’d say 6-7 years between major builds.