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Post by sound on Jun 17, 2022 20:02:58 GMT
I set swap memory in Windows to 140 GB. I use --imem 100. I use the intention "A.txt", it is short. Then I put the affs in that file. I simply let it load (which is a hassle, makes the PC slow and takes 20 minutes) -- but then, it is done, I can just edit the affs in the text file, without restarting IR. Running it does not impact system performance.
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Post by sound on Jun 17, 2022 20:06:11 GMT
Actually, I get 1.3 - 1.5 EHz.
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Post by reden on Jun 17, 2022 20:07:09 GMT
If you have an SSD the loading could be faster.
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Post by sound on Jun 17, 2022 20:07:48 GMT
Yes, I use an SSD. The loading is still slow. 20 mins might be an exaggeration but definitely 15 mins at least
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Post by reden on Jun 17, 2022 20:10:38 GMT
Months ago AnthroHeart paid for an M1 Mac Mini in the cloud, with 16 GB RAM. I put 40 GB --imem in it and it got to like 400-500 PHz. Don't recall the intention, but it likely was INTENTIONS.TXT. Its Repeater benchmark was double the VPS I used back then. The M1 has soldered memory, which is right in the chip die, and really fast SSD, so it loads faster.
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Post by reden on Jun 17, 2022 20:13:00 GMT
Yes, I use an SSD. The loading is still slow. 20 mins might be an exaggeration but definitely 15 mins at least I shudder to think how long it would be on an HDD. My PC has a 7200 RPM one.
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Post by AnthroHeart on Jun 17, 2022 20:16:52 GMT
Wouldn't writing that much to an SSD affect it in a negative way? I heard they have limited writes.
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Post by reden on Jun 17, 2022 20:18:26 GMT
Wouldn't writing that much to an SSD affect it in a negative way? I heard they have limited writes. Yes technically. But they have a value called TBW, TBs to Write, which is their lifespan. If for example an SSD's TBW is of 100, then it can write 100 TBs (100,000 GBs) before dying. Once that value is reached, it will surely die soon afterwards. You can check its status with CrystalDiskInfo.
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Post by sound on Jun 17, 2022 20:18:27 GMT
That is something I have considered too, but apparently, it is a myth these days with modern SSDs, they are way more likely to tear apart before that happens.
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Post by sound on Jun 17, 2022 20:21:08 GMT
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