spatial you can connect the trailer up at an RV park to a septic tank and running water, so when docked up it's quite conveinant, i recently got my hot water heater figured out so i can take hot showers and its been lovely :)
the truck is a standard american ford f150 that runs on gas... its like the most common vehicle in america
I like to have a toilet with plumbing which handles the disposal of human waste fast as possible. Even when I go camping this is vital for my accomodation.
I don't understand why some girls dream of living in vans or motor homes, where fresh water is scarce and becomes a bit tedious to manage. Having to outsource to wash clothing, while keeping a light wardrobe. Chores seem more expensive and tedious that way.
I wouldn't live in a desert either, where everything is dead and dry and there are venomous creatures lurking about. Where some nights are pitch black from no moonlight. I like to see green and hear the birds when I'm out.
I enjoy solitude but I'd get bored practicing such power efficiency, especially these days since my PC generates more heat from running Ai locally with a 65 inch display. (Real smooth might I add).
I'm a big town city man, where there's access to countless options. Where things can be acquired right away. It needn't be fancy, simple and basic will do, except for computers, I've never in my life had enough processing power no matter what I do on them.
I could not live in one! That's a nightmare scenario barely one step away from the related horror that is known as 'camping'. The weekend getaway is the appeal for me. I'm a concrete and steel girl myself. Too much nature and quiet make me antsy, but I have come to appreciate the beauty of nature and really like to visit on occasion. Accomodations tend to be the big hurdle with that, so having my own transportable lodgings might be the perfect solution. As yet I've never had the chance to use a mobile home/rv type thing.
I hear you on the processing power. That and disk space. It's like an inverse law that's as immutable as the laws of thermodynamics: 1. No amount of processing power will be enough. 2. For every 100% increase in storage capacity the requirement for this capacity will increase 125%
I mean, the processing power has gotten better, but there's always a demand for more speed as some tasks, depending on the length, can take hours to complete.
What used to take weeks can now be done in a day in terms of software rendering CG imagery, and still there's are demands for more processing power, not just for 3D.
I built a 27 GPU super computer to mine cryptocurrency. The heat was nasty and it's operating cost was $400 a month. While it was profitable it still wasn't enough. I can repurpose it for Ai or rent out hashpower, even though the GPU's are now 8 years old.
It's peak performance would vary depending on what network it was on. I flashed tge bios for each unit for optimal ETH mining, it did roughly 891 mega hashes per second, which to my understanding is very fast, but it wouldn't be capable of mining 0.01 BTC in a year at the time. Which is fine, I used to trade ETH for BTC, then got smart and decided to keep Etherem.
Difficulty went up so it came to a point where I shut it down. It's not nice being around mining rigs, I loved the shhhhh sound from the cooling fans, but it was an endless heatwave. Worse than a heatwave tbh.
While profitable I say it wasn't enough, I had the capacity to handle 52 GPU units, and it would've been more profitable to buy ETH at it's current price and just hold it.
I mean, the processing power has gotten better, but there's always a demand for more speed as some tasks, depending on the length, can take hours to complete.
What used to take weeks can now be done in a day in terms of software rendering CG imagery, and still there's are demands for more processing power, not just for 3D.
I built a 27 GPU super computer to mine cryptocurrency. The heat was nasty and it's operating cost was $400 a month. While it was profitable it still wasn't enough. I can repurpose it for Ai or rent out hashpower, even though the GPU's are now 8 years old.
It's peak performance would vary depending on what network it was on. I flashed tge bios for each unit for optimal ETH mining, it did roughly 891 mega hashes per second, which to my understanding is very fast, but it wouldn't be capable of mining 0.01 BTC in a year at the time. Which is fine, I used to trade ETH for BTC, then got smart and decided to keep Etherem.
Difficulty went up so it came to a point where I shut it down. It's not nice being around mining rigs, I loved the shhhhh sound from the cooling fans, but it was an endless heatwave. Worse than a heatwave tbh.
While profitable I say it wasn't enough, I had the capacity to handle 52 GPU units, and it would've been more profitable to buy ETH at it's current price and just hold it.
Hindsight is 20:20 and all that though. I don't tolerate being in close confines with many running machines like that. The heat and noise, combined with what is usually old fluoro lights is draining over the years. One of the benefits of working from home is some control over the environment, unless you're invested like that in as many as you can run at one time.
The noise wasn't that bad. It sounded like a bunch of fans. I used PC PSU'S and not the cheaper and loud server psu. The builds never took up much space. It's just the heat.
Dry intense heat. I'd come out of the shower, and there's no condensation on the mirrors. I was able to walk right out without the slightest chill. Also another time i was drying my face and my eyebrows fell off and were gone. Takes about 3 months before they're back to satisfactory.
The Asic miners on the otherhand are screaming loud.
If I do this again, I'll put them in a thermal tent and circulate the air with a fan and direct the heat outdoors.
my house is a 30 foot travel trailer that i pull around with my truck. Here i drew you a layout :)
Ok that’s suspicious angelic of you
