The first image I've generated on my own PC! My favourite animals, of course. [Fooocus/Stable Diffusion XL]

https://media.kbin.social/media/88/da/88da599243b071879a4fc5eaa4b26166083fc5f6d6448036b878a70ee5f8e9d2.png

Generated on your own PC, how? Is there a tutorial you followed that you’d be willing to share?

Check here easydiffusion.github.io Old models still works with my GTX 970 from 2016, but I can’t run SDXL on it, with Stuff like Dreamshaper 8, I can generate an image in less than one minute. I plan to change PC soon (may-be for the January sales), and will take a bigger GPU to run SDXL. (That said I am affraid that in a couple of years, model will be even bigger and will need these Multi-GPU dedicated rack which are used for example in CT scanner)

But at the moment if your PC  has a gaiming GPU, no need to pay credit for an online service, you already paid for a PC :)

Easy Diffusion v3

A simple 1-click way to create beautiful images on your computer, by installing Stable Diffusion. No dependencies or technical knowledge required

Easy Diffusion v3
Only works with nvidia tho. 😠
Is it still only nvidia or does AMD work ? I am on a market for a new PC, and I heard AMD works better on Linux. Moreover google tells me that automatic111 runs on AMD but don’t know if someone tried

I do Stable Diffusion on a XT 7900 XTX on Linux. So, yeah, that works.

The problem is that well-performing support is relatively new (the RDNA 3 cards are okay), and older cards may or may not be practical; that particular card is their latest generation. I agree that generally-speaking – not talking specifically about generative AI – on Linux, it’s preferable to use AMD these days. For generative AI – not Linux-specific, but in general – Nvidia started earlier than AMD. Problem is that Nvidia is also charging considerably more for their hardware, and you want a high-VRAM card to do Stable Diffusion…I’d probably recommend at least 16GB if possible.

Also, a popular library for doing some generative AI stuff, “transformers”, doesn’t currently run on AMD cards. Stable Diffusion can run with it – it speeds operations up – but doesn’t require it. But a few other things, like Tortoise TTS, a piece of software that can generate speech in someone else’s voice given some samples of that voice, do require transformers.

AMD has been putting out Linux support for generative AI before Windows support, actually – they just got out Windows support for my card card, and it’s been usable on Linux for a while.

If you’re going Linux and you’re willing to get 7900 AMD card (new and high-end) and you don’t need to run transformers, yeah, I’d say go AMD. If you’re going Linux and you don’t care about generative AI, then I’d get AMD whatever. If you’re trying to use older cards, I’d consider Nvidia; I had been using an older Nvidia card prior to this, and while it could do the generative AI stuff on Linux, for everything else I’d prefer the AMD card.

I’m running a 3060 with 12 GB VRAM on a 2014 rig. Can confirm it works well, the only sad part is the random all-computer crashes sometimes.