2018 machine learning home build

It’s been a while since I last built a computer. Years, in point of fact. Laptops plus AWS now have replaced my old uses, and I’ve a great deal less time for gaming. However, my 2013-era server died and took with it my RSS feeds, main web server and SSH bastion. I debated simplifying with Raspberry Pis, but we decided that we’d use the occasion to repurpose my wife’s old compute server and build her a new machine.

Before this, she had used her NUC (i5, 16GB, 1TB M.2 SSD) plus renting time on AWS GPUs as needed. However, recent nVidia license changes have driven spot prices way up, so it starts to make sense to own versus rent.

Needs and wants

  • Built for machine learning and data science. Extended time at full load, so server motherboards, ECC memory, high-efficiency power supplies and attention to cooling.
  • More memory – SVM in particular. Old box was 16G, so 128GB at least. 
  • M.2 SSD slot on the motherboard – I can stick the old 1TB SSD in and be up in minutes.
  • Fast I/O – SSD, SATA, 10GBit ethernet, PCIe 3.0 x16 slot(s)
  • CUDA GPU acceleration and Intel CPU – too many optimized libraries to bother trying AMD.
  • Minimal power consumption at idle
  • Small physical size
  • As quiet as possible – SSDs, etc.

What we chose and why

  1. SuperMicro X10SDV-6C+-TLN4F motherboard. 6 cores/12 threads, MiniITX form factor, 35W thermal design power, up to 128GB of memory in 4 channels /RDIMMS. This is the last-gen Xeon D-1521, but the lower power and smaller size are compelling. $726 shipped.
  2. Dan A4/SFX case, based on a recommend from Jeff Atwood. Super clever use of space and quite attractive. $260 shipped.
  3. SilverStone Technology SST-NJ450-SXL power supply. 450W, but so efficient that no fans or vents are needed! $190 shipped.
  4. nVidia RTX 2080Ti ‘graphics card.’ A beast with over 4,500 cores, plus another thousand-odd stream/vector/special purpose chips, 11GB of memory, and a whopping 250W power target. No ‘buy’ link, because my brother used his employee quota for me! (They don’t get a discount, just the ability to buy at list price. That’s actually helpful, as bitcoin and derivatives have driven up prices over list.)
  5. 64GB of memory, registered ECC DDR4, in two 32GB sticks, $610 shipped. Leaves two open slots to max it out at 128, and we get 2 of the 4 memory channels to use.

Pros and Cons

So we’ll have card and CPU cooler noise, we’ll see. I don’t have the ability to do 10Gbit networking yet, though I can probably trunk a couple at 1Gbit for the heck of it. I will need to try some games just to enjoy having the state of the art, though I’m bracing myself for driver torment on Linux. Here’s hoping!

Discussion

These are all high grade choices, you can spend a lot less for a similar machine if you don’t mind space, power and noise. The 2080 is overkill, a 1060 would have sufficed but the employee plan only had limited card selection. After a few years at it (she’s got master rank on Kaggle), we were sure enough of her uses to buy the high-end GPU. Similar with cores (6) and memory (start with 64) – that’ll do well for her current contests and workloads; there are a lot of Supermicro boards from 2 to 24 cores, so you can flex there depending on need and budget. A desktop gamer system would probably have worked too, but I now get to try management consoles and the like plus I expect better reliability from this. I’ll post updates, of course.

This is the case – cute, eh?

DAN-Cases-006_1280x1280

Critical mass

Social change follows a critical mass pattern where something is adopted slowly then quite rapidly. Case in point today: residential solar power. Today my adjacent neighbors are all installed. I’m really jealous of this:

13.5kWh. So gorgeous. Now to convince my better half.

Tesla powerwalls combined with solar panels is a really elegant solution. About $8,000 per battery today though.

Ural electric sidecar

This looks just amazing – Ural took the guts of the Zero DS-R and made a sidecar out of it:

URAL_Electric_3

That looks so damned cool!

URAL_Electric_10

From the pictures, I could carry a passenger, maybe even two, and it’d certainly work for a most of our grocery and household shopping. Alas, it’s only a prototype for now, but the combination of modern powertrain and retro style (right out of the Indiana Jones movies, eh?) really tickles my fancy. One more picture:

URAL_Electric_8

Ural Motorcycles finalized the first development phase of an all-electric sidecar motorcycle. The electric prototype was built on the existing one-wheel drive cT chassis, utilizing Zero Motorcycles’ proprietary powertrain package (motor, batteries, controller and other components). California-based company ICG developed the overall design and was responsible for fabricating the initial prototype. Zero Motorcycles also provided the necessary engineering support during development and testing of the prototype that made this project possible.

via The Ural all-electric prototype | electricmotorcycles.news | It’s time.

Economic Distress Did Drive Trump’s Win

Economic Distress Did Drive Trump’s Win
By Thomas Ferguson, Benjamin Page, Jacob E. Rothschild, Arturo Chang, and Jie Chen

OCT 31, 2018 | INSTITUTIONS, POLICY & POLITICS

Contrary to the dominant media narrative, social issues like racism and sexism on their own can’t explain Trump’s success.
Donald Trump’s election in 2016 as president of the United States can be taken as a striking example of the rise of right-wing populism around the world.

Scholars and others have debated what the roots of that populism are among mass publics. For example, did voters in the United States respond chiefly to social anxieties—racism, xenophobia, sexism? Or mainly to economic distress—lost jobs, stagnant wages, home foreclosures, health care crises, student loan debt, and the like?

Most analysts have concluded that social anxieties overwhelmingly predominated. They argue that the story is simple: Trump was elected by “deplorables,” fueled by racial resentment, sexism, and fear or dislike of immigrants from abroad. Economics, they say, made little or no difference. This story has been repeated so often in many parts of the mass media that it has hardened into a kind of “common sense” narrative.

Our new paper shows that this view is mistaken. The picture is considerably more complicated. Social anxieties certainly did play an important part in Trump’s victories—particularly in the 2016 Republican primaries, where many voters were indeed motivated by resentments related to race, ethnicity, immigration, and gender. Social issues were important in the general election as well. But upon careful examination of several types of data, the real picture looks considerably more complicated.

Economic factors mattered at both stages.

Interesting. Also covered here by NC.

via Economic Distress Did Drive Trump’s Win

More 9F GMT pictures and details

As noted in Coming soon to a WIS near you and Grand Seiko 9F GMTs are out!, I can’t wait to see these. As Seiko does press events, pictures and details are emerging, here’s what I’ve found so far with links to source materials.

From this WUS thread by user yonsson, click for full size versions:

Some gorgeous pictures in there! And the lime looks excellent. Interesting to see it next to the (unaffordable, yet grail) Blancpain Bathyscaphe 38mm.

From the Japanese-language oomiya blog (I recommend using the translate feature in Chrome):

Just gorgeous. On reflection, it’s hella expensive, I mean $3,500 for a quartz watch? For half that, you can get a superbly-made Citizen with solar power and perpetual calendar, with the same intrinsic 5 seconds per year accuracy.

And the lugs are, as confirmed by yonsson, a terrible 19mm. Some 20mm straps will fit, but a bad design decision.

A great pity that the green dial version forgoes the lume: (another yonsson picture)

2448F774-5C03-4FC1-937B-5EE7A8170D24

 

The Empty Core of the Trump Mystique | The New Republic

Another pertinent factor is envy, a basic human emotion that rising social inequality can only exacerbate. To put it in cruder terms: “The world sucks for me, so I am going to make it suck for you too. I have lost my job, my status as a white male, and may even lose my gun. So you, my smug, privileged friend, are going to lose your civil liberties, your faith in social progress, your endangered species, your affirmative action, your reproductive freedom, your international alliances, your ‘wonderful’ exchange student from Syria.”

A stellar and thought-provoking essay.

via The Empty Core of the Trump Mystique | The New Republic