@Rob For those who care, Jon actually once posted his daily schedule to meta. If you're Jon Skeet, even something as silly as this gets well over 150 up-votes!
@Pavel Please use English here. I doubt many can even read Cyrillic letters, let alone understand what you're saying. (That's why your message got flagged, BTW. We don't know what you're saying, and it might be something inappropriate. At least, to us it's useless noise.)
More or less, yeah. We had to help a bunch of developers with porting over the changes they had in progress correctly, and they found a few makefiles and such that had to be tweaked a bit, but yeah
trickiest part was that we had a bunch of developers who'd never used CVS or SVN or anything like it, who had to be brought up to speed on Git in a couple of hours. ;)
although tomorrow should be interesting. Like I said, was my last day yesterday, and the only other guy who had really been involved in the Git project goes on vacation tomorrow ;)
@0A0D This is a field I am considering doing my master in. Actually not in CV since I couldn't find a course of that subject alone, they usually teach it in AI as one of the fields
the exercises in our CV course were hilarious. We were supposed to reconstruct a 3d model of a room at university from a couple of photos, and everyone ended up with a random blob of vertices.
@ÓlafurWaage we did it according to all the rules. I think the specs describing the camera used were off or something though, so the math didn't add up
@jalf yea that's the hard part.. I remember our 3d rendered building weren't perfect either since you have to take into account the parameters of the camera
But I'm an electronic engineer and I have experience in image aquisition and stuff like that... adding CV to the mix would enable me to do some pretty cool stuff, specially these days that the ARM chips are powerful and cheap
I run openCL /openGL program which uses wxWidget as gui enviroment
Inside object of class ,which derives from wxThread,I perform some complicated calculations and build many openCL programs.
I want to delete the thread .But the thread is not deleted immediately – it continue to build program...
@TonyTheTiger I saw this is SO, there is this big question with hundreds of answers with stuff like that. It's the same question from the Soviet guy that did pushups on compiler errors :P
@TonyTheTiger unfortunately, this means I'm back on dualcore as well, which is kind of low-end for testing my stm lib. When can we get 16-core laptop cpus? ;)
sadly, not getting a laptop at the new job. they're getting a desktop to facilitate lots of horsepower for faster compilation. Can't really argue with that, of course ;)
@EtiennedeMartel Yes, of course, but in the past I was searching for an answer to a problem, went to the duplicate read some of the answers, then went to the linked duplicate question, read some more, then to the next duplicate and understood it all. There were about 12 or more answers explaining the same thing. Very helpful
it's easy t get from a closed-as-duplicate question to the "original", but hard to go the other way. So it's not necessarily a bad thing if you find the duplicates first through search
@EtiennedeMartel It isn't hard. Not sure i would be able to if I did. Both sides of my family have long problems with alcoholism. Dont want to get started.