MJ12 Detachment Agent

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: May 17th, 2024

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  • The one where the USSR invaded the Baltic nations and Poland. Not mention mass killing, deportation of local population and attempts at exterminating local culture to replace it with russians.

    You online commie roleplayers are so boring! You spam the same dull copytext/images.

    But the cherry on top is how it so clear how you have no fucking clue what you’re talking about.

    There is a high likelihood you’ve never even been to say Estonia or Poland. You’ve probably never even spoken to a Danish or Latvian person in your life (let alone being friends with them)!

    You just found some regressive gibberish online and are parroting it in some fucked up online roleplay thing.





  • I’ve lived in 5 countries across 3 continents, so I do have some perspective on this.

    The first point is finding out local immigration laws, even if you don’t need a tourist visa, you will need legal authorization to stay in a country on a more permanent basis.

    Which brings me to my second point, you need local employment to get authorization for permanent stay (or proof of above average independent income).

    Another option is to go study in a country. This is expensive and you will need to win scholarships if you don’t have a lot of money. Countries always try to make money on foreign students.

    Another option is to teach English, but this is likely harder than it used to be (15 years ago or so). Although it is worth exploring this opportunity, unlikely to work for EU though.

    Do you have any relatives in other countries? Close friends?

    I will speculate it’s going to be difficult to move to Netherlands if you don’t have family or a skillset that is in high demand.

    I would explore developing countries where you can likely get a good job (by local standards, so $1,000 to $2,500) if you have a degree and some solid work experience.








  • You misunderstand, I don’t have any allegiance to Intel/AMD or ARM or Apple.

    I am interested in factual reality though. This is not about Qualcomm versus AMD or whatever. It’s common sense. If you have a use case (e.g. x265 encode or god forbid an AV1 encode) that takes many hours, you laptop is going to suffer due to cooling issue. This is even true for an ARM laptop versus an ARM desktop.

    I think the results you mention back up what I said?

    So you’re saying that throttling after 5 min is not an issue with MT (or even ST) workloads?

    I would be happy to be proven wrong (I am not kidding), but I would need solid proof from a 3rd party.

    No offence, but random claims online is not how it works.

    Mind you, I am not saying you or your friend are lying. There are likely other factors at play.


  • I thought you said your friend used applications not benchmarks. You know something like x265 encoding, AI video upscaling, mining XMR (CPU based crypto) or complex single-thread dependent strategy games; I say this as someone involved in computers for hobbies and leisure, not in a professional manner.

    No offence, but what you are saying does not sound convincing in the least.

    A high level X Elite GB6 ST/MT score is around 2,800 ST and 14,300 MT.

    A high level 5950X GB6 ST/MT score is around 2,400 ST and 14,300 MT.

    And this is a short GB benchmark (i.e. not sustained for hours on end).

    You’re saying if I give you a complex (lots of water, storms, seas) 2+ hour BD source to encode into x265, your friend’s X Elite laptops won’t start to throttle in ~5 min and it will complete it in the same time as your 5950X? You’ll have to provide proof.

    But he’s been using it for a while now and says everything works just fine. Replacing a big box workstation with a thin and light notebook and have it perform better is pretty wild.

    Some specifics would be interesting. What applications were being used on the big box workstation?

    But I do have a result screenshotted of 27.9 in Speedometer 3.0

    Not aware of Speedometer 3.0, this does seem like a very solid result, but what does it show? Do you have any context on it? This is the first time I’ve encountered this particular benchmarks, would be interesting to hear about what it means.


  • I am not saying x86 apps don’t work (well some don’t work at all), but emulated apps usually have a bunch of strange bugs or issues like the provider refusing to honour commercial support when using the application on WoA. Here is one example:

    Adobe Acrobat and Reader work on Windows on ARM (Windows 10/11) primarily via 32-bit (x86) emulation, with native ARM64 support actively in development. While usable, it may exhibit slower performance, lack PDF thumbnail previews, and have limitations with Outlook integration

    I have other examples of applications that I use. For whatever reason, this piece often gets ignored when discussions about WoA come up.

    And I am ignoring thing like line-of-business apps, regional commercial applications (local enterprise accounting software is not going support WoA) and consumer applications (less common than enterprise).

    Not to mention issues like lower re-sale value, higher cost of repair and generally a pricier and much less developed support ecosystem. This is a big deal if you live in a developing country (or you have below median income in a place like the US).

    you often see them on discount for $600 as opposed to the $1200+

    The discount reflects the low level of demand.

    The fact of the matter is that the current crop of X Elite devices are worse in every way relative to comparable x86 devices. This might change with Nvidia backed WoA devices, but I have a feeling they’ll be more focused on selling ML enterprise GPU than being fully committed to fighting it out in the relatively low margin consumer sector.

    Valve’s compatibility layer for ARM making games work

    I thought this was for Linux not WoA?