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[1418.04 --> 1419.16] share with me and walked me through
[1419.16 --> 1420.40] it for half an hour because he works
[1420.40 --> 1423.32] in security down in Charlotte in
[1423.32 --> 1423.88] North Carolina.
[1424.56 --> 1426.12] And he sort of taught me some new
[1426.12 --> 1427.88] stuff about, you know, networking and
[1427.88 --> 1428.88] triage and that kind of stuff.
[1428.94 --> 1429.56] So that was pretty cool.
[1429.62 --> 1431.70] So huge thank you to that listener.
[1432.24 --> 1434.06] Sounds like somebody we should buy a
[1434.06 --> 1436.78] beer for when community events happen
[1436.78 --> 1437.10] again.
[1437.44 --> 1437.88] One day.
[1438.68 --> 1439.08] Yeah.
[1439.80 --> 1442.06] Well, if you'd like to learn
[1442.06 --> 1444.18] networking or anything else, ACG has
[1444.18 --> 1447.16] 20% off annual plans right now.
[1447.28 --> 1448.56] We'll have a link in the show notes
[1448.56 --> 1450.10] or just go to cloudguru.com.
[1450.16 --> 1451.80] And when you sign up, use the promo
[1451.80 --> 1454.00] code springintocloud21.
[1454.24 --> 1455.86] You know that cloud is growing.
[1455.96 --> 1457.48] There's lots of new services and
[1457.48 --> 1459.62] systems more every day, it seems.
[1459.98 --> 1461.50] And that also means the demand for
[1461.50 --> 1463.16] skilled cloud professionals is growing
[1463.16 --> 1463.48] too.
[1463.84 --> 1465.98] 82% of hiring managers say a cloud
[1465.98 --> 1468.30] certification makes a candidate more
[1468.30 --> 1468.80] attractive.
[1468.80 --> 1471.36] So go grow your skills with hands-on
[1471.36 --> 1472.08] labs and learning.
[1472.42 --> 1473.72] Keep up with change and develop the
[1473.72 --> 1475.38] skills you need with a cloud guru.
[1475.62 --> 1478.32] To get that 20% off, sign up for an
[1478.32 --> 1480.22] annual plan and use that promo code
[1480.22 --> 1482.54] springintocloud21.
[1482.54 --> 1485.32] 95% of learners say that a cloud guru's
[1485.32 --> 1487.08] tools and content directly help them
[1487.08 --> 1488.22] advance their careers.
[1488.54 --> 1489.72] Spring into cloud21.
[1489.90 --> 1490.82] Link in the show notes or go to
[1490.82 --> 1492.20] cloudguru.com.
[1494.48 --> 1496.98] Ryan writes in with an IGPU question.
[1497.46 --> 1498.00] Hey there, friends.
[1498.08 --> 1499.12] I'm a big fan of the show.
[1499.72 --> 1501.50] I currently am in the process of building
[1501.50 --> 1503.10] an off-grid house in New Zealand.
[1503.42 --> 1504.88] Oh, that's the dream.
[1504.88 --> 1505.44] I know.
[1506.00 --> 1506.40] Right?
[1506.66 --> 1507.04] Amazing.
[1507.32 --> 1508.10] Can we come visit?
[1509.06 --> 1510.26] Self-hosted on tour.
[1511.08 --> 1513.32] Power consumption is key, so I want a
[1513.32 --> 1514.82] small box to run basically everything
[1514.82 --> 1516.62] I need, which thankfully isn't going to
[1516.62 --> 1517.36] be that much.
[1517.80 --> 1520.24] My question is, is it possible to run a
[1520.24 --> 1522.44] Linux server and pass through an IGPU to
[1522.44 --> 1525.42] a Windows VM for Blue Iris, while still
[1525.42 --> 1527.32] using the IGPU for containerized
[1527.32 --> 1528.60] applications like Plex?
[1529.24 --> 1531.26] I can't seem to see any problem with
[1531.26 --> 1533.08] this in theory, but wonder if you have
[1533.08 --> 1533.72] any ideas.
[1534.16 --> 1534.92] Love your work.
[1535.22 --> 1535.58] Ryan.
[1536.62 --> 1537.88] What do you think about this one?
[1537.98 --> 1539.90] I have also contemplated, is there a
[1539.90 --> 1541.52] way I can have my cake and eat it too
[1541.52 --> 1544.10] when it comes to an IGPU and a low
[1544.10 --> 1544.66] power system?
[1545.08 --> 1546.58] I thought I'd solve this problem.
[1546.64 --> 1547.94] I thought I had the answer.
[1548.46 --> 1551.50] And it was a technology called GVT-G,
[1551.50 --> 1555.20] which is a virtual graphics card kind
[1555.20 --> 1557.84] of slicing thing that basically lets you
[1557.84 --> 1561.58] take an Intel GPU built into your CPU
[1561.58 --> 1564.62] and slice it up into two slices and give
[1564.62 --> 1566.14] one to one VM and one to another.
[1566.34 --> 1569.04] So the obvious use case for that is to
[1569.04 --> 1571.66] give one slice to a Windows VM for Blue
[1571.66 --> 1574.14] Iris and then give the other slice to
[1574.14 --> 1576.84] another Linux VM for Plex and then keep
[1576.84 --> 1578.06] the host as clean as possible.
[1578.72 --> 1578.78] Yeah.
[1579.30 --> 1581.58] However, and I've written a blog post about
[1581.58 --> 1582.36] this this week.
[1583.22 --> 1586.54] Unfortunately, the performance of GVT-G is
[1586.54 --> 1587.78] horrible.
[1589.58 --> 1593.38] I found it to be anywhere from 58 to 82%
[1593.38 --> 1595.56] slower than Quicksync being run natively
[1595.56 --> 1596.54] on the bare metal host.
[1597.16 --> 1598.16] Holy smokes.
[1598.46 --> 1599.92] I did not expect that at all.
[1600.34 --> 1600.46] Yeah.
[1600.52 --> 1602.12] So my test that I did was it was pretty
[1602.12 --> 1604.54] unscientific, but it was a very real
[1604.54 --> 1605.56] world use case for me.