<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Netvouz / henrik / tag / memory</title>
<link>http://netvouz.com/henrik/tag/memory?feed=rss</link>
<description>henrik&#39;s bookmarks tagged &quot;memory&quot; on Netvouz</description>
<item><title>A much easier way to install Ubuntu on a USB device (Stick or HD)!</title>
<link>http://www.ubuntugeek.com/a-much-easier-way-to-install-ubuntu-on-a-usb-device-stick-or-hd.html</link>
<description></description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/henrik?category=4703859271734189146">Computers &gt; Linux &gt; Ubuntu</category>
<author>henrik</author>
<pubDate>Thu, 15 Jan 2009 18:07:04 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>HeapRoots</title>
<link>http://www.alphaworks.ibm.com/tech/heaproots</link>
<description>An IBM tool to detect Java memory leaks and out of memory problems</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/henrik?category=7949939775671745850">Development &gt; Java</category>
<author>henrik</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2004 22:42:55 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>How to format a USB memory key</title>
<link>http://www.bay-wolf.com/usbmemstick.htm</link>
<description>If you do not have a floppy disk drive, you may want to create a bootable USB memory key which will allow you to boot into a pure DOS environment. This can be very useful if you want to flash your BIOS. Here is a step by step procedure on how to perform this operation. Uses the HP USB Disk Format Tool.</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/henrik?category=2118626210181357325">Computers</category>
<author>henrik</author>
<pubDate>Mon, 22 Sep 2008 11:30:44 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>JavaWorld - Do you know your data size?</title>
<link>http://www.javaworld.com/javaworld/javatips/jw-javatip130.html?#</link>
<description>A class to examine how much memory objects consume</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/henrik?category=7949939775671745850">Development &gt; Java</category>
<author>henrik</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 13 Mar 2005 06:50:39 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>LLM Inference Sizing and Performance Guidance</title>
<link>https://blogs.vmware.com/cloud-foundation/2024/09/25/llm-inference-sizing-and-performance-guidance/</link>
<description>When planning to deploy a chatbot or simple Retrieval-Augmentation-Generation (RAG) pipeline, you may have questions about sizing (capacity) and performance based on your existing GPU resources or potential future GPU acquisitions. For instance: What is the maximum number of concurrent requests that can be supported for a specific Large Language Model (LLM) on a specific GPU? What is the maximum sequence length (or prompt size) that a user can send to the chat app without experiencing a noticeably slow response time? What is the estimated response time (latency) for generating output tokens, and how does it vary with different input sizes and LLM sizes? Conversely, if you have specific capacity or latency requ</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/henrik?category=431280119896991003">Computers &gt; Hårdvara &gt; AI</category>
<author>henrik</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 26 Mar 2025 13:49:05 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>MRTG</title>
<link>http://people.ee.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/mrtg/</link>
<description>Tool for monitoring network, CPU, memory etc. statistics</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/henrik?category=8764807587790085922">Computers &gt; Linux</category>
<author>henrik</author>
<pubDate>Mon, 04 Feb 2002 23:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>SysUsage</title>
<link>http://sysusage.darold.net/news.html</link>
<description>System monitoring solution for Linux, based on sar and rrdtool.</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/henrik?category=8764807587790085922">Computers &gt; Linux</category>
<author>henrik</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 02 Feb 2011 21:51:19 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Understand memory leaks in JavaScript applications</title>
<link>http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/web/library/wa-jsmemory/index.html?ca=drs-&amp;utm_source=dlvr.it&amp;utm_medium=twitter&amp;buffer_share=7fc18</link>
<description>Summary:  Garbage collection can be freeing. It lets us focus on application logic rather than memory management. However, garbage collection is not magic. Understanding how it works, and how it can be tricked into maintaining memory long after it should have been released, results in faster and more reliable applications. In this article, learn about a systematic approach for locating memory leaks in JavaScript applications, several common leaking patterns, and appropriate methods to address those leaks.</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/henrik?category=855116154602654741">Development &gt; JavaScript, AJAX &amp; Dojo</category>
<author>henrik</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 07 Nov 2012 21:24:52 GMT</pubDate>
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