@Mikhail I think a lot of beginners have that problem. I've even started to formulate some thinking about why: they're accustomed to things that look simple being slow--so when they get to something that seems complex, they assume it'll be slow. Little do they realize that (for example) just setting a highlight on a half dozen cells in Excel is a lot more work for the computer than everything they might consider doing with their little table of students and their scores.
The problem is that you need high queuing depth to saturate modern IO devices. The only time when this isn't applicable is for a single HDD that isn't fragmented.
Also NFS outperforms Samba on Windows clients, for 2 megabyte file sizes the single threaded performance is almost 2x
Also both pNFS on Linux<->Linux or SMB Windows<-Windows> effectively saturates my connection at 900 MB/s. But Windows client, Linux server remains borked.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, so NFS is serial on Windows clients. So if you copy a million files there should be like 30 transferring at once to saturate the storage pool. But there isn't so it runs 10x slower.
@Mikhail That seems strange--MS has been pushing threads longer than (almost) anybody. Seems strange they'd write a single-threaded client for this case, though I suppose it's not really a top priority for them.
Probably because they have a vested financial interest for SMB to run faster than NFS. At the end of the day if you go Windows<->Windows you're fine because Windows server does the transfers in parallel.
Code doesn't work today
My logic has gone away
IDE seems to lag
Cursor has gone astray
My patience runs empty,
Like my conscious seems to be,
I spent hours, trying to code it nicely
Quick hacks, it's going to be
Recently, I have a problem to read 16 bits gray tiff image. Each pixel of this kind image has 2 samples and each sample has 16 bits. However, when I read it in OpenCV, it always in 8 bits and I'm not sure how opencv arranges the 2 samples in .data. I've tried every combination of flags in imread(...
This is hypothetical, but I have a class with two overloaded constructors and one of the constructors is a copy constructor. If an object is passed by reference to the copy constructor, and the copy constructor calls the other constructor, does it become a recursive function? I think that since...
@Mysticial GPU compute is "bigger" than mining. The real reason is that GPUs have real performance tiers that immediately, predictably, and consistently affect user experience in proportion to cash invested. For example, if I get a 20 core CPU its going to take a very specialized application to see a performance boost (and sometimes its impossible). On the other hand if I go from 1060 to 1080 I'm going to see a boost for all GPU tasks.
But yes, at $100 dollars a core, I'm starting to get pissed off at Intel :-)
so android has built in image sharing function - except it doesn't work on Sms, sharing can be done through mail, but without .jpg extension so mail client doesn't know what to use to open it up. Broadcasting thru twitter is great but seems to be in need of 3rd party lib if sent through Facebook
You can pass an exam if you get 55% but you can not release code that only works 55% of the time
@thecoshman I disagree. There's the cost of introducing it to teammates and then the upkeep of build. It's another moving piece with its own version and a set of bugs.
@BartekBanachewicz well, 'cost of introduction' is the fear of learning. I guess the potential bugs could be an issue... still, the benefits far out weigh any of that petty stuff IMO
Kotlin let's you write simpler code faster (compared to Java)
If you bring them in, explain you are using Kotlin, they either know it and are probably not plebs, or they can show how adaptable they are buy doing some wee tasks in it
in south park they were hunting 1 exp wild animals till they became max level, so got for these poor questions! (I assume that everyone remember that episode)
@login_not_failed Having played wow quite extensively in my younger days, once you outlevel a given mob too much, killing it no longer gives you XP. So that episode is not accurate! (still awesome anyway)
12 years ago I tried wow for a couple of weeks. The game revolved around killing hogs back then. I got a guest as a young orcling and killed a couple of thousand in a nearby forest. I rate the experience 4/5. Would not play again.
My gf is a wow veteran. Almost dropped out of university because of that habit. She managed to quit after we met and is now applying for post-graduate school.
the with runs in a DiscordBot monad, which doesn't have IO. The async lib I can find uses a bracketed style withTimer, so I can't start it i.e. in ReadyEvent
and I can't bind my withTimer to runBot, because I need access to the bot
The thing is, the code may be compiled and linked to both C and C++ programs. So it would be better if someone can provide comments on both sides. — user1127586 mins ago
Posted by the Deputy Prime Minister of #Ukraine, Pavlo Rozenko,
This is what's happening to government computers r… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/879677566382215169
We could improve our design by changing our JSON to use [] instead of {} to make our objects have an order, but that would break all our tests. It is perceived that keeping the tests that enforce incorrect behavior is worth more than having correct behavior. I feel like we are doing testing completely wrong.
The only thing that changes is the brackets. The code itself doesn't change much because it just loops over the thing to get at the objects which works either way. The thing that must change is all the test inputs.
I suppose one could have made a create_sample_input function that slaps {} around the given string that can be changed to [], but that seems very far fetched.
this makes it even worse as changing the test data is not as trivial as I thought
it seems like testing is only useful if you know exactly what you want and you will not change anything, which is not the conclusion I should be making
Apparently testing has the exact opposite effect it should be having.
Or maybe I'm projecting too much from this situation.
Which reminds me of the people who say computer science is not real science. It all goes by believe and experience, nobody demands or attempts a peer-reviewed study to prove a claim.
@Telkitty Because it attempts to separate knowledge from believe, which is super useful. Although there seem to be an increasing number of people who believe believing is good enough, knowing is overrated.
FUCK, they're shipping out my motherboard from California. And they still haven't shipped it yet.
Given that it's July 4th weekend coming up, and I have an Anime convention the week after that. I'm probably gonna have nothing until the middle of the July.
user1804599
3:38 PM
> An integrated European military force would save us 20 billion euros a year. One of Steffen Dobbert's options is to invest it in free Wi-Fi and tablets in the 62 largest cities in the EU. Let me know what you think of this idea!
@Mysticial You can have them ship it to me instead (and, obviously send me the CPU and memory to go with). I don't know why I volunteer for such duties--I guess I'm just a generous sort of guy...
@JerryCoffin Looks like they just shipped it. I have a tracking # now. But no ETA yet. It's either gonna be Friday (if I'm lucky). Otherwise Monday or next Wednesday depending on whether anybody will do anything on the July 3rd.
> As far as I can tell he's one of the leaders of the "design patterns" and "TDD" cults that gave us the likes of "dependency injection" and other atrocities. But that's a rant for another day.