@qaispak Just pretend its an interface, you only get in trouble if it needs to own something like a list of pointers... Thats why you can't inherit multiple QObjects. Also use Qt.
@Mikhail Yeah. I have a loop that simultaneously iterates 23 streams. Now I know that I can't have 23 pointers since there aren't enough registers for it. So I'm abusing the capability of indirect addressing to get 23 pointers with only 13 registers. The problem is that ICC is identifying the 23 streams as induction variables. So it creates 23 induction variables and spills them.
IOW, ICC clearly has an optimization that finds all "induction values", and turns them into induction variables without regard to how many there are. Once the register allocator gets a hold of it, it doesn't know what the fuck to do with it other than spill everything.
@Mikhail The loop as written in the source code has 7 "real" induction variables that are incremented by 32 bytes each iteration. ICC generates code with at least 20 of them. Half of them on the fucking stack.
> I don’t know how much time I want to devote to this — it is just an experiment — but Sol will make it go preposterously faster. It’s single-handedly made a proof of concept look feasible.
Help. The praise is making me feel all warm and fuzzy inside.
@Mikhail Its probably an encoding thing. We're only getting 32 vector registers because they added completely new encoding specifically to support it. It won't be as easy for regular instructions since they're so diverse.
By "diverse", I mean compared to SIMD instructions. SIMD instructions are generally self-contained and don't have side-effects such as messing with the flags register.
#MakeLSTMGreatAgain #MakeAmericaLearnAgain I'm a Neural Network trained on Donald Trump transcripts. (Priming text in [ ]s). Follow @hayesbh for more details.
forced to live with a community of idiots who choose to live in the middle of a desert, the worst place for human condition, animal or plants, not good for farming, not near the sea or a river or a forest, and with a harsh weather that reach 60C in summer peak, in a country so vast that it could've been located northern, southren, westren or eastren to this stop
@ReousaAsteron well, Eygpt has the best "theoretical" university education in the Arab world
@R.MartinhoFernandes The coup was in 2014. How is that hasty?
On other news, there is an article regarding wage gap in Czechia (this country).
It tries hard but it had to acknowledge that there are only 6,5 % gender gap for same position in industry and even smaller, 1.4 % difference when comparing same position in the same company.
>>Sure enough, it’s a tweet from Hot Pockets, and I had already favorited it. In fact, every time you download express, you favorite this exact tweet from Hot Pockets: introducing their new signature Hickory Ham sandwich pastries filled with real ham, real cheese, and a variety of chef-inspired sauces.
> Imagine if the apple you were eating for breakfast had 291 ingredients, or if the car you drove to work had 291 parts. You’d be worried, wouldn’t you?
The most important question is why do serious people spend money on Twitter, or other advertising if the statistics it generates have an unclear effect on the targeted outcome (more sales, or visibility).
If it's always the same, then it doesn't really do anything; each user can only like a tweet once.
> If the entire recorded history of humanity could fit in a single megabyte, then Babel alone would consist of SEVENTEEN times the entire recorded history of humanity.
If the entire recorded history of humanity could fit in half a megabyte, then Babel alone would consist of THIRTY-FOUR times the entire recorded history of humanity.
If the entire recorded history of humanity could fit in a single kilobyte, then Babel alone would consist of SEVENTEEN THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED AND EIGHT times the entire recorded history of humanity.
I'm trying to make a videogame from scratch, but I'm really new to this and keep running into basic issues. Most importantly, how do videogames store offscreen information? What I mean is, how does the program know what to display next onto the screen? Or even, if the player changes the environme...
KIC 8462852 (eponymously Tabby's Star after the initial study's lead author Tabetha S. Boyajian, or WTF Star, formally for "Where's The Flux?", but also a reference to an expression of disbelief) is an F-type main-sequence star located in the constellation Cygnus approximately 454 parsecs (1,480 ly) from Earth. Unusual light fluctuations of the star were discovered by citizen scientists as part of the Planet Hunters project, and in September 2015 astronomers and citizen scientists associated with the project posted a preprint of a paper on arXiv describing the data and possible interpretations...
Who else is disappointed that no technology radio signals were found?
Pretty unlikely it's an actual paperclipper :(
Or maybe it's a paperclipper smart enough to not use radio.
I guess you don't need to communicate between builder bots if they are autonomous enough, or if they are dumb enough and the entire construction is planned to enough detail before it starts.
Or maybe they just use passive communication.
All agents have a panel that can change its reflective properties (so it can change "colour") for output, and a small telescope to read other agents' panels.
That's gonna have lower bandwidth than radio, but should be enough to coordinate sufficiently smart agents (worst case it can be used to send a recall command so the agents come back to some source that dispenses actual commands by physical means or via small range signals.
I can come up with so many possible ways of doing this without radio; a paperclipper can certainly do much better. So WTF Star might still be a paperclipper :D YAY
Though covering the star is a surefire way of giving yourself away, so avoiding radio isn't crazy helpful.
Oh, maybe WTF Star isn't where the paperclipper originates; just a von Neumann probe sent to paperclip elsewhere.
Actually, if you can send vNPs at speeds close enough to c, your victims would only find out about you too late. The probes will reach their victims soon after the light from the star that gives your presence away reaches them. So if you send probes in all directions, you're relatively safe unless your probes meet another paperclipper.
I should go back to work.
Sorry for the monologue.
Actually you can send the probes even before you start construction. That would make it even less likely that your victims would get any warning signs.
The logical conclusion is that since we can observe the events at WTF Star but we are not paperclips yet, WTF Star clearly doesn't host a paperclipper.
> Yet, for some reason, we’re totally fine installing 291 individual modules just to power an enterprise-grade web server capable of handling thousands of incoming requests per second.
The only dubious point would be the externality of the dependencies. Making it harder to guarantee a working combination. But other than, at, 291 is ridiculously a low number
> In fact, every time you download express, you favorite this exact tweet from Hot Pockets
That's mild. They could have injected script to do it on every page served
> If the entire recorded history of humanity could fit in a single megabyte, then Babel alone would consist of SEVENTEEN times the entire recorded history of humanity.
If my dick reached the upper floor from my living room couch, I could easily answer the doorbell using just that, without having to get up from the couch. (As well as implying some less convenient logistics in other areas)
@Griwes I think the guy may - understandably - be confused into thinking the Bible holds the entirety of recorded human history. Because that /does/ roughly amount to 1Mb
@Puppy Actually, I think it's the development of vaccines and antibiotics that had the greatest impact. Note how things barely change between 1700 and 1900.
> And — surprise, surprise — it didn’t work (as if npm ever works am I right?). After writing JavaScript for a few hours you get used to this sort of thing, so we’ll move on and try another boilerplate. The react-transform-boilerplate, also from Dan Abramov, looks good and has many stars.
threshold for code duplication: If code is duplicated once you leave it be, if it appears 3 times it needs to be factored out into a function. Good rule of thumb or terrible? The rational is the observation that if you factor code out when it appears twice you end up with worse code than if you allow some duplicates.
supposedly factoring out the duplicate code makes the code in general more complicated and often enough it turns out that the code isn't that similar after all so you only use the factored-out-function once
It isn't a proven fact, more like a question if this sounds familiar and everyone does it since ever or if no-one ever heard of that.
If you need to inject complicated flags/callbacks to get the variations in behaviour you need, you likely have the abstraction ill-designed. Consider not refactoring until you spot the clean way to have a non-surprising abstraction
Especially OO heavy languages (C#, Java) invite the refactoring into meaningless object hierarchies that interact in completely intransparent ways.