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Llama (Large Language Model Meta AI, formerly stylized as LLaMA) is a family of autoregressive large language models (LLMs) released by Meta AI starting in February 2023. [2] [3] The latest version is Llama 3.3, released in December 2024. [4] Llama models are trained at different parameter sizes, ranging between 1B and 405B. [5]
llama.cpp is an open source software library that performs inference on various large language models such as Llama. [3] It is co-developed alongside the GGML project, a general-purpose tensor library.
Windows 95, 98, ME have a 4 GB limit for all file sizes. Windows XP has a 16 TB limit for all file sizes. Windows 7 has a 16 TB limit for all file sizes. Windows 8, 10, and Server 2012 have a 256 TB limit for all file sizes. Linux. 32-bit kernel 2.4.x systems have a 2 TB limit for all file systems.
1 - The optional 20 MB "PC 1-20" Hard drive can be connected to the expansion port. 1x PCEXP1 - PC/XT 88-key MS-DOS 3.1 Power, VGA, component video, RSR-232 serial, Centronic parallel 326 × 330 × 85 mm PC 5 1984 3.950,- without screen (1988) Intel 8088 4.77 MHz Intel 8087 256 KB 384 KB 640 KB Hercules GB-101 MDPA MDA 1901 ALPS DFC222A 360 KB no 2
Yann André LeCun [1] (/ l ə ˈ k ʌ n / lə-KUN, French:; [2] originally spelled Le Cun; [2] born 8 July 1960) is a French-American computer scientist working primarily in the fields of machine learning, computer vision, mobile robotics and computational neuroscience.
ROCm is free, libre and open-source software (except the GPU firmware blobs [4]), and it is distributed under various licenses. ROCm initially stood for Radeon Open Compute platfor m ; however, due to Open Compute being a registered trademark, ROCm is no longer an acronym — it is simply AMD's open-source stack designed for GPU compute.
Windows 3.1 is a major release of Microsoft Windows.It was released to manufacturing on April 6, 1992, as a successor to Windows 3.0.Like its predecessors, the Windows 3.1 series run as a shell on top of MS-DOS; it was the last Windows 16-bit operating environment as all future versions of Windows had moved to 32-bit.
Versions of XFree86 up to and including some release candidates for 4.4.0 were under the MIT License, a permissive, non-copyleft free software license. In February 2004, XFree86 4.4 was released with a change to the XFree86 license, by adding a credit clause, [ 23 ] similar to that in the original BSD license , [ 24 ] but broader in scope.