Do AVX instructions run slower on commercial chips?
For power consumption perhaps? I ran a benchmark on my computer for AVX2 insturctions for a subprogram and it was roughly the same speed of a BLAS equivalent
and then I ran it on a intel xeon aws big box and it was about 10x faster
Why does this neuron network thing look like a brute force algorithm repeated multiple times from smaller components to more integrated elements then to the whole picture?
So ... is there still no elegant solutions to find the global maximum/minimum of a multi-variable function, unless it's of a special form that has known solutions?
They are computational intensive, and implementations convoluted. But concept is not that hard. Current stage is not implementing a neuron network so I don't have to get into the details.
Thinking attracting active members as a vector, implementing good neuron network as another. The best way to attract active members is to put effort into that vector, not putting more effort into some other vector which might have significant correlation with the first.
Oh, doing a look, it's now at the Flint Center for the Performing Arts, in Cupertino. At least at first glance, it looks like it must have shrunk a bit since I was there--at that time, they had (if memory serves) three tracks running simultaneously through most of the conference, but it looks like now it's single-track. Probably an improvement. Multi-track programs usually have at least two things you want to see at once, then an hour or two when there's nothing you care about.
@Mysticial You obviously have no future as a technology reporter. A proper reporter can spin "we haven't heard any news" into a full-page story. You're sitting where there might be real news, and blithely saying: "Yeah, you can probably figure it out for yourself." :-)
Anyway, the presenter was talking about the "bad rep" that blockchain has due to Bitcoin. Hence the topic of criminals, drugs, hookers, ponzi schemes.
Then he went on about using blockchain to record non-digital events - such as a wedding. In case you need to prove to your wife that you actually got married or something.
And then we went on about issues involving GDPR and immutability.
Obviously I'm not here for a blockchain presentation. But it's interesting nonetheless even if I kinda knew half the stuff already.
This guy really hates Bitcoin and crypto currencies since it's a zero-sum game that consumes an enormous amount of power. But he really loves blockchain as a concept and technology.
@fredoverflow just watched your recursion vid. How about a follow up where you show how you could have it print "123" as "one hundred and twenty three".
@fredoverflow At first glance, it strikes me as a "going out of business" model--exactly what a lot of couples getting "married" in Las Vegas would rather avoid.