i always thought Ryzen AI Halo, together with DGS Spark, has mismatched compute capacity with memory size. Given 128GB VRAM, people would want to run large models, but the GPU compute is constraint in these types of use case. If the box runs models that don't need high compute, then there is no need of 128GB VRAM.
On the high end side, it is too slow. On the low end size, it waste money on VRAM.
just because a bunch of rockets went up without blowing up, does not mean they are profitable. it cost money to shot rocket, and it is very expensive, reusable or not. most launches are internal launch without external paying customers.
only works if the users are evenly distributed around the globe (which is likely more of less the case). if the user concentrates in on century, the token rate will be terrible.
i am guessing, without any proof, that, when one breaker fails the server lose it all, or loose two GPUs, depending on whether one connected to the cpu side failed.
for all past years, I have been told wayland is the future. but the decade long dragged out rolling out did not made much sense to me. neither did I investigate why. until today, I found out how difficult to force a 1920x1200 resolution over remote desktop. it is plain feature degradation.
people ask why do you need it. I have a 3440x1440 physical monitor on the server, I need to remove login with a 1920x1200 laptop. I want full screen at laptop's native resolution. Windows can do this decade ago.
On the high end side, it is too slow. On the low end size, it waste money on VRAM.