Thank god I didn’t fall for the AMD meme

Thank god I didn’t fall for the AMD meme

Attached: B0358A23-5DDD-4294-808E-C3EA5B2DD48E.png (750x1334, 173K)

Other urls found in this thread:

pcgamesn.com/amd/destiny-2-ryzen-patch
twitter.com/AnonBabble

Thank God I didn't fall for the Linux meme

> can't do random numbers
> 60c+ is idle temperature and considered normal
> all the advertising in the world won't lift them out of meme status
> muh AMD management engine is totally not a backdoor like intel's
AMDrones literally BTFO.

> be you
> dribbling fucking retard
> doesn't quite comprehend that he probably connects to AMD powered servers that rely on a broken random number generator for cryptographic purposes
genius level here.

Looks like systemd needs to release a stable version.

Does init have this problem ?

>newer distributions - with the exception of Debian 10 - will simply fail to boot
>with the exception of Debian
How the ever living fuck did Debian fix it before other distros?

debian wins again baby
dumb gentoo cucks

Because Debian is a professional operating system not hobbies crap like the others.

debian is based as fuck, everything else is pure cancer, especially memebuntu.

they fixed it by being so out of date that it didn't affect them in the first place

Gentoo boots fine because it doesn't use systemd so it doesn't rely on RDRAND to boot anyway unless you select the corresponding option in kernel config. RDRAND issues was fixed with the AGESA released nearly a month ago; this is literally a nonissue. RDRAND also has poor throughput as it's already many times slower than traditional PRNGs. A better solution is generate a single RDSEED every once in a while instead, as it is a true random number and you can use it to seed PRNGs to increase throughput, e.g. OpenSSL signs.

>Out of date
Read: Stable

Oh look, another failed Incel shill thread.

Attached: 1545818044079.png (1078x1304, 284K)

Already fixed in the new AGESA.
pcgamesn.com/amd/destiny-2-ryzen-patch
(Yes, this broke Destiny 2 as well because it relies on RDRAND).

1. This was already fixed.
2. It was confirmed to be Linux's shitcode problem, not hardware's.
3. Nice try anyway.

Attached: Copelet lake.jpg (780x405, 136K)

My 3700X works fine with Neon.

Where do you even take these numbers?? I idle at 40C with the stock cooler, barely going 65C at full load.

As I hardcore Intel guy, I sincerely apologize for these drooling retards butthurt shitposts.

Attached: file.png (1137x853, 155K)

Attached: Intbecile 080.png (400x400, 1.22M)

Dude, I use both, all this Intel vs AMD shit is playground level bullshit, pay no attention to it

> reddit spacing

That's not reddit spacing

This is

Massive respect for AMD development team for focusing on REAL OS's like Windows and not on silly free toys for kids who want to be hardcore.

I smile

>using the backdoored rdrand instructions
holy shit, what the fuck were they thinking

Currently I'm a only only user but even I have to agree AMD is doing better in almost every CPU market now.

it's more that systemd is complete shit, but is that even news

This post defends amd while blaming not amd.

we use openrc, this was never a problem for us to begin with

May I interest you in a 2,5 hr video of Momma Su, her engineering VPs and some of the most hardcore datacenter guys in the industry BTFOing the whole Xeon range for the next 2+ years on almost exclusively Linux-based workloads and benchmarks?

Even the Azure guy onstage didn't say a word about Windows when he shilled his new EBYN 2 instances.

It's like everything else tech, some performs better in certain scenarios but in others gets roasted, I like my AMD stuff because honestly its cheaper and not a poor relation anymore but my Intel gear performs great for what i'm doing with it so I'm happy. Bottom line (as I see it at least) is theres now healthy competition and no huge dominance either way so they both have to stay on their toes and not just milk us like cash cows, that has to be better for everyone

>Linux
literally 5 people affected

>there has been no stable systemd releases
nice to see honest talk

>booting your computer requires the CPU to create random data
What the absolute fuck is going on with Linux??

Attached: pepeexcited.jpg (250x250, 8K)

>amd slap another layer of protection
>systemd updates it
>nobody rolls the fix
>blames amd for it

Why does it need to produce random data?

Is this Zen2 problem have anything to do with speculative execution?

Works on my machine.

Sent From Windows 10.