Made me remember again how disappointed I was (food-wise) that time I went backpacking in the Philippines after backpacking in Thailand. Most days we had to choose between dry rice with tasteless fried chicken, or tasteless fried chicken with dry rice.
The Dutch naming immediately struck my eye. I wonder.. it is not an easy name to pronounce for, say, English-speaking people, is it? Even in Dutch it does roll from the tongue a bit awkwardly imho.
Let's say I have a server with an h200 gpu at home. What's the best open model for coding I can run on it today? And is it somewhat competitive with commercial models like sonnet 4.5?
If you have ~$25k to buy a H200 then don't buy one. Rent them out much cheaper and keep renting newer models when your H200 becomes an outdated paperweight.
Assuming you ran inference for the full working day, you'd need to run your H200 for almost 2 years to break even. Realistically you don't run inference full time so you'll never realise the value of the card before it's obsolete.
The company I work for is in the defense industry and by contract can't send any code outside their own datacenter. So cloud-rented H200's are a no-go and obviously commercial LLM's as well. so breaking even is not the goal here.
That's still very limiting when comparing to commercial models. To be truly competitive with commercial offerings the bar is closer to 4-8x that for one node .
That said, maybe a quantized version of GLM 4.5 Air, but if we're talking no hardware constraints I find some of the responses from LongCat-Chat-Flash to be favorable over Sonnet when playing around with LMArena.
I played around with renting H200s and coding with aider and gpt-oss 120b. It was impressive but not at the level of claude. I decided buying $30k worth of tokens made far more sense than buying 30k worth of one GPU.
This! I've recently was hired to fix a company that tried to build their own niche ERP over the last 10 years and they had totally drowned in the confluent kool-aid. There is very very few projects where event sourcing is the best solution.
You don't need to watch BBC for that. Not a lot of tv shows, even child programs are dubbed on Dutch tv. So you get accustomed to it early on. Combined with the fact the languages are closely related means the Dutch usually have a reasonable grasp of English before it's being taught in school.
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