@ratchetfreak Is that viable without tool support? I mean looking through the code and instanciating all templates that only use types defined in precompiled headers seems like something a build system should do.
@Ven That's just the tip of the iceberg. Once many-core machines become commonplace, it will become standard practice for every thread to just spin because it's the type of shitty programming that's easy to do and it works.
I'm surprised Firefox hasn't started doing that for every single tab.
i think there is something wrong with your setup then i link a static executable of 71 MiB in 15 s, and that’s on windows with ld.bfd, dynamic links in 0.9 s (no lto tho for both)
@Mgetz My guess is that the Skylake Purley die is native 32 cores. They intended to only sell them as high as 28 (4 cores disabled) for yields. But I guess in this case AMD is forcing them to max it out.
So it'll come down to price.
How many 32-core Skylake chips can Intel produce given their yields? And at what cost? They're going against AMD's Naples 32-core with 8-channel DDR4. Skylake Purley will only have 6-channel DDR4.
IOW, Intel probably got caught with their pants down.
If Intel needs to over-extend itself to produce enough 32-core chips, and the yields are shit, we might have a market flooded with cheap lower core chips. I'd like that.
@Puppy Intel got caught there on the consumer end. They've been denying the high-core-count chips from consumers for so many years. So that's the first place AMD is hitting them at - with the Ryzen 7s.
@Ell No it can't. It can load 100 pages with ads in about an hour if you have 100 ARM cores. But it's not gonna get a single page of ads to load in under 30 minutes.
So I recently got a job through a recruiter, everything has been going well I've been completing my tasks on time or before. The recruiter who got me the role is working with my employer on a part time basis. As he's responsible for hiring over half of the team at my current employer and occasion...
For example, the E7-8890 is hardwired with a Max CPU Configuration 8. As we know the 4xxx line is 4 CPUs, the 8xxx line is 8 CPUs, and the additional CPUs require extra circuitry.
@Mgetz For a chip this large, 50% yield would be really good. I can believe that can get to 50% with the possibility of up to 4 bad cores, but if they need all 32 cores, my first guess at the yield would probably be closer to 10%.
I'm creating a library such that there are functions that look like this:
template <typename T> bool A (int, int, T&);
template <typename T> bool B (int, int, T&);
template <typename T>
class IFoo {
virtual T funct(int i) = 0;
};
template <typename T>
class FooA : IFoo<T> {
virtual T ...
Interesting; I think casually reading C++ questions (along with reading Stroustrup) is helping me remember C++. I think I'll idle here just to see what comes up.
Can I use the 💩 character as a legitimate status indication on, say, a web application, or in a desktop application? Or will it offend/embarrass people?
NSFW = "Not safe/suitable for work", although it's also become generally used regardless of the environment (for example: public places), and ...
@jrh So "embedded reporters" were the ones who always had crappy video taken on (not very) smart phones. Does this mean an "embedded developer" is one who writes lousy code with second-rate tools? :-)
An embedded system is a computer system with a dedicated function within a larger mechanical or electrical system, often with real-time computing constraints. It is embedded as part of a complete device often including hardware and mechanical parts. Embedded systems control many devices in common use today. Ninety-eight percent of all microprocessors are manufactured as components of embedded systems.
Examples of properties of typically embedded computers when compared with general-purpose counterparts are low power consumption, small size, rugged operating ranges, and low per-unit cost. This comes...
what's retarded about this is that that's a surprise to anybody
the Web is the friend of everybody who wants to share and spread information, and that includes terrorists and criminals as well as governments, businesses, political parties and individuals
@Abyx perhaps it's like going to Stack Overflow to check if the solution you've thought of for the problem you're trying to solve has any gotchas, or if there's simply a better way
of course, that usually results in poking around until you have three different questions on the same topic, then reading through every comment on the page to see if anyone at all is complaining about the solutions provided, then researching the complaints...
it's not like having the most votes or being accepted is an indicator of the best answer