You can raise the imem value from it’s default to like 15 or even possibly 23 GB on Google Colab. You’ll see if it errors out if you use too much RAM.
Figured it out. Thank you.
Was having trouble finding where to actually type in the intent and duration but I see it’s the headline in the last box.
Do we need to have commas and periods when writing our intent?
If you feel it is better gramatically, you can have commas, but it’s not required.
I have Colab Pro, so I can go up to 23 for the --imem. It will show a ^C if you put too much RAM.
How strong does the Colab feel to you?
Yeah, it looks like it’s running. You don’t have Colab Pro do you? I pay $10/month cause I think it’s worth it to have a faster GPU. I’m amazed you can do 23 GB on regular Colab. Even now after working with the Repeater for 2 years I still feel the Colab running so it’s pretty strong.
I don’t, I just started using this a few hours ago…I’d be interested in purchasing Pro.
I’m running this on a XS Max Iphone 256GB
Oh, it doesn’t use your phone’s RAM. It uses the Colab server. So it’s their GPU. It won’t really even affect the battery life of your phone.
Can I do the txt file input through mobile or is that something that can only be done on a PC?
Ohh ok, I understand.
Yeah, you can. If you want to get fancy, you can put the intent.txt file on your google drive, and get the share link id (make it sharable to anyone with the link), and !gdown that id and use that intention file. Just like is done there already.
That’s 144 quintillion iterations. Your intention must be somewhat long, cause with “I am calm” it hits 1.5 EHz. Did it seem to work for what you put?
My intention was “My dopamine receptors are healthy and blissful. It is done. Thank you.”
I read that on the website of how others used that format. Definitely can feel the energy.
Obviously with an intention like that it takes time.
Short intentions like “I am confident” or “I am charismatic” I imagine would work a lot faster.
Thanks for you and @MasterOfYellow for brining this tool to light.
Do you think that dopamine intention feels better than say weed or alcohol or anything similar?
Yeah I definitely do. I’d much rather feel the energy if that’s what you mean.
By the way does this use up chi energy?
I don’t believe it does. It is Intelligent Infinity, which is infinite in supply.
I’m doing the dopamine one now and it definitely feels better than weed, which I’ve mainly done energetically. However, they say that drugs like cocaine use up all your dopamine and you crash after.
I don’t know how it works with energy, if there’s a crash after. But I’m going to chill with it for a bit.
So I was actually intending on healing and repairing my dopamine receptors from porn and not trying to stimulate the production of dopamine.
Definitely not trying to flood my brain with dopamine…just to heal my receptors.
Hi @AnthroTeacher. I’m running the IR Google Colab (online) with 3 intentions (on separate boxes) on a tab simultaneously with 2 intentions using the IR web version on 2 separate tabs on my old mac. I prefer this than writing a long text of intentions linked to the IR. My questions are:
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Is this set-up still effective for me?
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Can I run multiple intentions on the web version (one tab)?
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Can I run many intentions on the Colab version (one tab)?
Thanks for everything.
If you insert a link, it should be in quotation marks, like text? Or without quotes?
I think the Colab can only run one intention statement at a time.
You can put all your intentions into an intents.txt file and upload to your Google Drive.
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Make it sharable to anyone with link
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Take the share link url: example https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Iy1e6nrpYKUhfIVrABt9E0_IX2xAUmvh/view?usp=sharing
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Extract the id from it: example: 1Iy1e6nrpYKUhfIVrABt9E0_IX2xAUmvh
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Download it into Google Colab before you run: example:
!gdown --id 1Iy1e6nrpYKUhfIVrABt9E0_IX2xAUmvh -
Run the intents.txt as the intention.
You can name it any filename you want. This will allow you to run even 1000s of intentions at once with just a simple statement.
Yeah, anything in the --intent should be in double quotes.