@Borgleader SSDs definitely are fast. Reliability depends a lot on how you define things. For example, physical abuse can kill a hard drive much more easily than an SSD. SSDs are much more prone to simply wearing out though--Flash memory supports a limited number of write cycles, at which point it just doesn't work any more.
Failure rates tend to look vaguely like this (upper line is HDs, lower is SSDs):
I haven't extended it out, but the line for the HD keeps extending a long ways to the right, long after SSDs are dead and forgotten. It does eventually start to curve upward, but much more gently than the curve for SSDs.
@Borgleader The article you linked has quite a bit about that--but just as a quick guideline, figure half a petabyte or so (for a good quality one). Enterprise class SSDs (that use SLC memory cells) generally do quite a bit better than that. Total amount depends on drive size too though--it's basically a maximum number of writes per cell, so more cells means you can write more data overall.
@JerryCoffin right, but i thought maybe you had other figures from different sources.
anyway, half a petabyte? thats uh 500tbs? even if we lower this to say 100 TBs, and say that in general a normal user would do at most say.... 10GBs of transfer a day, thats what... 3 years before it fails? until that time failure rate is better for ssds
@Borgleader I've seen a few other things, such as the standard for how to measure such things, and documents from both Seagate and Kingston talking about it.
@TBohne I was being somewhat conservative with my estimates.
id have to lookup stats on how long ppl generally keep their drives before changing them but i wouldnt be surprised that for this amount of time the failure rate of SSDs would be lower than that of HDDs
which brings us back to my original comment about them being more reliable
I'd imagine for most people the amount they write is basically coupled closely to the bandwidth of their Internet connection. A typical programmer can generate a lot more writes in a hurry (modify 10 bytes of source code, write half a gigabyte or so of object code. Repeat interminably).
I've thought about @Mysticial's situation a bit though. He's pointed out that for computing Pi, he'd blow through an SSD in a few months. After considerable thought, I've decided what we really need is a box with a, say, 10 GB/s Ethernet connection, and a few terabytes of DRAM sticks.
@DonLarynx I got an '82. Was never disappointed in her at all. (We are talking about the year your first girlfriend graduated from secondary school, right?)
Metro stations close at midnight, on a saturday night. Buses don't come when they should. When they come, they won't let you buy a ticket on board and they won't tell you where to buy one. Taxis are all full and not even that many. If you book one by phone, it arrives 20 minutes after the estimated time of arrival and costs 15 pounds for a 15 minutes ride.
@AndyProwl Obviously not. If it were Italy, it'd be more like: "The trains were on strike yesterday, the buses went on strike at midnight, and the taxis did sympathy strikes both days." (Or maybe it's just me, but the one time I visited Italy, the first thing they gave me at the Hotel was a schedule of who was going to be on strike which days...)
@JerryCoffin Yeah Italy's a joke but if they won't sell you a ticket on board at least they won't throw you out of the bus. And if they do (which they won't) they will at least tell you where to buy the tickets. This fucker was just "get off mate, get the fuck off"
@AndyProwl Yeah, I sometimes think Londoners got envious of the French being so well known for being rude, so they decided to prove they could be even more rude...
I wish github provided a mailing list. I feel like that's the only thing github doesn't have and everyone who uses/discusses the project uses the mailing list
I have been studying PHP for few days, but so far I doesn't seem to be useful in a matter of style of the webpage,am I right? And database.. Is it useful for something else except for sites you need to register to?
@Mysticial Looking at things though, DDR4 (at least theoretically) supports up to 512 GB per stick, and something like 40 sticks per box would still be pretty reasonable, so that'd give you 20 TB per box. Not sure about when/if DIMMs with that capacity would be available though...
It would be cool if you provided some reasons instead of just saying "turrible" over and over again like barkley would if he had been watching lebron's little accident the other day
@JerryCoffin Are there any actual CPUs that can handle like, 2TiB+ of RAM?
@Prismatic they are absurdly unreadable, hard to search, none of the software to showing them works well on mobile, they are full of arbitrary line breaks (as if sane software doesn't break lines), and then they inherit the rest of email terribleness.
Mail software is universally shit, the archives are usually not indexed in any way (or done badly) and just left to the mercy of external crawlers, nested threading is a terrible idea when you read threads from start to finish, emails are a jumbled mess of outdated design and unstructured text that can't be rerendered in any sane way
@MartinJames They don't physically have lines for all 64 bits. I believe the first few generations of 64-bit processors only had like 40 bit address lines.
There's this thing I've seen where people tie mailing lists to forums where posting in one automatically posts to the other and vice versa which is kind of neat (though it doesn't work as well as you'd think)
@Nooble Yes (at work I do). At home, where I have to actually pay for it, I have a much less expensive processor (an AMD A8-7600). The latter is definitely slower, but not by nearly as much as the difference in price might suggest.
@Nooble Yeah, as integrated graphics go, it's pretty sweet. I'd previously used a fairly high-end discrete graphics card (but an old one--nVidia GTS-8800), and this seems pretty close to the same speed, though I haven't tried to test it thoroughly at all.
More like whenever the fuck. Its a problem with resources like file handles or something more difficult like hardware handles. There is indeed a method called __del__ but it seems to be called at whim.
@Mikhail You could (of course both Java and .NET have finalizers) but they're pretty much a dead issue. Destructors are useful largely because they're predictable--when an object goes out of scope, it's destroyed. No ifs, ands, but, or delays. With garbage collection, you get a guarantee that an object won't be destroyed until sometime after it's no longer accessible--but that's pretty much it. It might happen almost immediately, or it might happen a lot later.
@JerryCoffin In java its something ugly, right? You need to use the zombie object paradigm with a field called isAliveso that you don't destruct it twice?Is it any better in .net?
No the point is to basically survey the property, check boundaries, and then give technical material to be used legally to trim land off a person's property since beaches disappear.
Generally variant calling programs (such as GATK-UnifiedGenotyper) look for differences between reference genome and submitted sequence. However, we all know that reference genome consist rare variants in various positions. If submitted sequence has this rare form of that variant, variant call do...