The platforms I've seen live on top of kubernetes so I'm afraid it is possible. nvidia-docker, all the cuda libraries and drivers, nccl, vllm,... Large scale distributed training and inference are complicated beasties and the orchestration for them is too.
I wouldn't call it metabolic if parts were missing or otherwise had communication malfunctions without any issue in acquiring/using energy itself.
But I'm sure lots of things go wrong when the brain doesn't get the energy it needs and is forced to compensate.
Even more to the point: If something generalizes without a qualifier like most/many/some/can be, there might be an implicit "all/every" (or careless communication) and that makes it all suspect.
I haven't found an OCR tool reliable enough when it comes to scanned PDFs containing financial data where accuracy of amounts in the document is very important.
People spend an inordinate amount of time and money solving this problem rather than spending the same amount of money in lobbying and standardization efforts for financial institutions. I’ll throw this out there: when all you know is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
Although keto & low carbohydrates is an important topic, there are many other causes & solutions discussed in the book. For example:
1- Genetics & Epigenetics
2- Chemical Imbalances, Neurotransmitters & medications
3- Inflammation
4- Sleep, light & Circadian Rythms
5- Food, Fasting & your gut
6- Drugs & Alcohol
7- Physical activity
8- Love, Adversity & purpose in life
If I understand correctly, one of the main ideas is that mental disorders are metabolic disorders of the brain.
Then in part 3 of the book, Dr Palmer(author) explains the causes & solutions mentioned above.