I see the raise of popularity of Linux laptops so the hardware compatibility is ready out of the box. However I wonder how would I build PC right know that has budget - high end specification. For now I’m thinking

  • Case: does not matter
  • Fans: does not matter
  • PSU: does not matter
  • RAM: does not matter I guess?
  • Disks: does not matter I guess?
  • CPU: AMD / Intel - does not matter but I would prefer AMD
  • GPU: AMD / Intel / Nvidia - for gaming and Wayland - AMD, for AI, ML, CUDA and other first supported technologies - Nvidia.

And now the most confusing part for me - motherboard… Is there even some coreboot or libreboot motherboard for PC that supports “high end” hardware?

Let’s just say also a purpose of this Linux PC. Choose any of these

  1. Blender 3D Animation rendering
  2. Gaming
  3. Local LLM running

If you have some good resources on this also let me know.

  • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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    10 hours ago

    You can absolutely use an AMD card for LLMs. You can even use the CPU if you don’t mind it being slower.

    If this person is a AI researcher doing lots of LLM work it might be different but somehow I think they are just a casual user that asks questions

    • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      Both blender and every llm library I’m aware of work better and have broader support with nvidia hardware.

      That’s two out of three of the ops use cases.

      Gaming, the third use case, is perfectly fine using an nvidia card.

      There’s nothing wrong with amd video cards, but for this user, in this case, they’re not the choice I would recommend.

      Especially if they’re just a normal person who asks questions because it’s much, much more likely that someone who uses blender or llms will be able to answer their questions and address any issues related to hardware because people using blender and llm are broadly using nvidia cards.

      • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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        46 minutes ago

        The problem is that Nvidia cards also such under Linux. Sure it may work in some configurations but with a Intel or AMD GPU it works without fiddling around. As long as you have a new enough kernel it is a good experience.