> Satisfying HIPAA rules around patient privacy alone may take many years, or decades, to resolve themselves before we could even contemplate directly using programs like ChatGPT in a medical theater.
This is easily solved by not using someone else's API.
Here's $500 worth of hardware you can get on ebay running Vicuna-13B, locally:
> IV fluids may not be the best treatment for someone with severe pulmonary edema and respiratory distress because it could make their condition worse. This is because when a person has severe pulmonary edema, their lungs are already filled with fluid, which makes it harder for them to breathe. Adding more fluid to their body could increase the pressure in their lungs and make it even harder for them to breathe. This could be life-threatening.
> Instead, the best course of action would be to focus on treating the underlying cause of the pulmonary edema, such as heart failure or a lung infection. This may involve giving medications to help the heart pump more effectively or to reduce inflammation in the lungs. The patient may also need oxygen therapy to help them breathe more easily.
> It's important to remember that every case is unique, and the best course of treatment will depend on the individual patient's condition. The healthcare team will do their best to provide the most appropriate care for the patient based on their specific needs.
I tried to hold out for the Intel launch anticipating sr-iov support, but I ended up refreshing hardware before. Any half-decent motherboard has their iommu groups proper, allowing passing any pci device into a vm with minimal overhead.
It sure sucks to need two cards, but I went/want AMD for Linux and still(sadly) NVIDIA for Windows.
It works really great. A 3 display setup where left is always Linux, right is always windows (when it's running) and middle is switched between inputs with ddcutil (cli tool to reconfigure your display).
I tried looking-glass framebuffer copy over a shared memory bus but it wasn't quite as smooth for me as switching inputs.
I'm on low-end gear, AMD 5600x, AMD 390, NVIDIA 3060, ASUS X570-P board. No tuning whatsoever, I let the Linux scheduler deal with it and it's good enough.
I can't recommend looking-glass enough as your spice client for mouse and keyboard capture, it's great.
Though this can all go fck right off if someone(Intel) does SR-IOV on consumer gear, I will replace my cards in a beat.
One more. Copy files with the correct chmod, don’t chmod copied files in a separate run command because that run command will create a new layer.
This surfaces when adding larger files.
Similarly, don’t wget in a run command, then chmod. Use add with a url where possible, combine with chmod flag. When not easy (file from authentication protected storage), you can optionally use a named stage and copy from that stage into your target image. You can also copy from another image!
While I agree in that Git’s UX is abysmal for the beginner or casual user, no one should have to endure resolving the same conflicts over and over again.
In my opinion, the following configuration should have been the default with Git:
The `enabled` part means: transparently record all resolutions in a database, and re-apply them whenever bumping into the same conflict with the same pair of files in the future.
The `autoUpdate` part means: every time you finish re-applying a recorded resolution, please `git add` the result automatically for me so I don’t have to look for a "conflict" that’s actually no longer there.
This is easily solved by not using someone else's API.
Here's $500 worth of hardware you can get on ebay running Vicuna-13B, locally:
> IV fluids may not be the best treatment for someone with severe pulmonary edema and respiratory distress because it could make their condition worse. This is because when a person has severe pulmonary edema, their lungs are already filled with fluid, which makes it harder for them to breathe. Adding more fluid to their body could increase the pressure in their lungs and make it even harder for them to breathe. This could be life-threatening.
> Instead, the best course of action would be to focus on treating the underlying cause of the pulmonary edema, such as heart failure or a lung infection. This may involve giving medications to help the heart pump more effectively or to reduce inflammation in the lungs. The patient may also need oxygen therapy to help them breathe more easily.
> It's important to remember that every case is unique, and the best course of treatment will depend on the individual patient's condition. The healthcare team will do their best to provide the most appropriate care for the patient based on their specific needs.