Comment by Gracana 25 days ago Density is the key here, not persistence. 5 comments Gracana Reply amelius 25 days ago Thanks! This explains it.Now I'm wondering how you deal with the limited number of write cycles of Flash memory. Or maybe that is not an issue in some applications? mrob 25 days ago During inference, most of the memory is read only. amelius 25 days ago Sounds fair. That's not the kind of machine I'd want as a development system though. And usually development systems are beefier than production systems. So curious how they'd solve that. 2 replies →
amelius 25 days ago Thanks! This explains it.Now I'm wondering how you deal with the limited number of write cycles of Flash memory. Or maybe that is not an issue in some applications? mrob 25 days ago During inference, most of the memory is read only. amelius 25 days ago Sounds fair. That's not the kind of machine I'd want as a development system though. And usually development systems are beefier than production systems. So curious how they'd solve that. 2 replies →
mrob 25 days ago During inference, most of the memory is read only. amelius 25 days ago Sounds fair. That's not the kind of machine I'd want as a development system though. And usually development systems are beefier than production systems. So curious how they'd solve that. 2 replies →
amelius 25 days ago Sounds fair. That's not the kind of machine I'd want as a development system though. And usually development systems are beefier than production systems. So curious how they'd solve that. 2 replies →
Thanks! This explains it.
Now I'm wondering how you deal with the limited number of write cycles of Flash memory. Or maybe that is not an issue in some applications?
During inference, most of the memory is read only.
Sounds fair. That's not the kind of machine I'd want as a development system though. And usually development systems are beefier than production systems. So curious how they'd solve that.
2 replies →