@Mysticial If they can generate circuitry denser than they can power, that leaves them more space to include redundant circuitry to increase yields.
Gotta figure the only way nVidia (for the most obvious example) can produce the gargantuan dies they do now is by having a lot of redundant circuitry. I doubt they plan on any parts being defect-free on a die that's over 700 square mm.
Could someone explain to me this notation from Stroustrup's book?
template<typename Cont, typename Pred>
std::vector<Value_type<Cont>*>
find_all(Cont& c, Pred p)
{
std::vector<Value_type<Cont>*> res;
for(auto& x :c)
if(p(x)) res.push_back(&x);
return res;
}
How should I und...
I, for a pile of rocks, feel this question has some merit
OP is: - doing research - confused about some code - provides all relevant code he thinks is necessary - points out a specific part he's having trouble understanding
alas, since OP vanished into the ether upon posting the question, we shall never know if his question was truly answered
@TelKitty Most of the power consumed in a CPU (or GPU, etc.) is from reactance, not resistance. The few parts that are (sort of) resistance, are things that are intended to be insulators, but actually leak some current (so to reduce power usage and heat, you'd want to increase the resistance, not reduce it).
@JerryCoffin would you wear a t-shirt with your SO picture? so they would know that they're dealing with live Markov chain and they're doomed already, of course
There is a good chance I might be visiting Canada sometimes between March to May next year. I don't have any incentive at the moment to also visit the U.S., but consider jet lag, I might as well making a week or two stop some where along the east coast.
@Mikhail Yet another reason to dislike Rust: its developers are such tasteless morons they don't even recognize what complete crap HP Lovecraft writes.
Since the company has decided to move their goalpost from being a high quality low noise Q&A repository to becoming a welcoming community for new contributors, the next logical step is to determine metrics to measure users against this goal.
As of now, users are awarded reputation points, which ...
@BenjaminGruenbaum Take an example function, like sqrt and go through all the options of expressing disappointment, one of them being exceptions. Try not to be a terrible teacher by dumping a language construct onto them.
I'm thinking something I/O intensive since C handling of I/O is really painful. I'm thinking that stage 1 would be error codes and stage 2 would be exceptions and we'll talk about tradeoffs.
@BenjaminGruenbaum This is probably worth watching before hand. Doesn't have anything super interesting and the guy's voice is a bit annoying, but it might save you some work while giving you some confidence of the content being decent.
Thinking about this from another angle. SO is "unwelcoming" because it has lost (never had) its human element. It's so ingrained into the culture to focus on content and content only that we end up stomping out any last bit of "humanness". This ranges from trivial things like stomping out taglines and signatures to bigger things like having no PM system or any sort of social networking features. Since we're all trained to dehumanize users for the sake of content, the end result isn't surprising.
I'm not advocating that SO/SE actually turn into a social network. Since it's what it's strived to distinguish itself from. But the whole unwelcoming/lack of new users problem seems more fundamental to the current model.
SO has a buisness model problem. They aren't making enough money. Executives go to the community managers and ask why aren't more people using the website. They aka how do we engage more users. They ask the users that aren't engaged. Those guys reply they were offended or their shit questions were closed. The community managers who probably haven't written a line of code in their lives come back with the survey results, that tell them SO isn't nice to people of color, etc.
It is impossible for the site to ever be friendly enough in the eyes of the people that run it because they are always motivated to increase users, engagement.
@Mikhail In fairness, some of the CMs apparently can write code. For one example, if you look at Shog9's early history, you'll find some perfectly competent answers about C++.
But fundamentally, I think you're correct. SO has kind of the same problem Twitter did for quite a while (and may well still have, for all I know). On one hand, it's become such a fixture of life that many people (at least in its niche) find it hard to imagine a world where it didn't exist--but at the same time, nobody's figured out a way to achieve profits that even come close to matching its ubiquity.
It's as if the guidance for startups that say "Focus on exponential growth. If you make something people like you will find a way to monetize it" wasn't correct after all.
If it is appropriate for this forum, I would like to complain about user HBruijn at ServerFault. He keeps interfering with my posts. Now maybe I haven't spent months learning exactly what specific topics are acceptable as questions, but I do find these fora useful for getting questions answered d...
@Mysticial I can't claim to have a well-informed opinion on that--I barely use fb, and don't use Twitter at all. That said, my guess would be differences in how they're used. Twitter forcibly limits content size, which I'd guess attracts people who want a short summary of things as quickly as possible. If a person's usage model is to spend the shortest possible time glancing at a few tiny bits of stuff, that doesn't leave much room for feeding them ads.
Underlying problem is that server fault is poorly differentiated, also god forbid you actually ask a question about real servers/clusters, because they can't help you.
Facebook is much more about getting people to browse through each others' pictures for extended periods of time, which gives them a lot more time to feed the user ads.
Overall traffic referrals are going to include direct traffic, social referrals, and paid and organic search traffic (i.e., ads). Facebook was actually shown to drive an average of 23.4% of a site’s traffic to it, compared to Twitter’s 1.0%. For most sites, Facebook drives more than 20% of traffic than Twitter. In all the sites I’ve worked on social media campaigns with, I’ve seen this hold true.
Facebook delivers competition crushing ad performance.
@JerryCoffin Interesting. So by that reasoning, it seems that SO's engagement would land in between Twitter and Facebook. But the total audience is much smaller than either one.
Off topic (mostly), but when I'm playing a long video on YouTube that has a lot of adds, I skip ahead to just after each add and once they're gone, I go back to beginning.
What’s better than a single @intel Xeon® processor?
Two!
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@Mysticial They were. Especially when you consider that part of the core was running at double the rated clock speed, so a single execution unit could do (for example) two add/sub/and/or/xor/etc., instructions per clock cycle.
I recall that one of the interesting features of the initial P4 micro-architecture was it's double-pumped ALU. I think Intel called it something like the Rapid Execution Unit, but basically it meant that each execution unit in the ALU was effectively running at twice the frequency, and could hand...
Of course, things were different then--back then, Intel had fast clocks, but slow processing. For most tasks, something like a POWER or a SPARC only had to run at around 1-1.2 GHz to keep up with, say, a 3-3.5 GHz P4.
@Mysticial The one that just killed me was that the Pentium III had barrel shifters, so any shift took constant time. On a Pentium IV, a multi-bit shift used a micro-coded loop shifting one bit per clock...
@Mysticial It's been converging since long before that. Pentium IV was basically just a dead end--pursuit of clock speed at all costs. Other than a few blind alleys, pretty much everything's been converging for decades on the OOO pipeline from the CDC 6600 (circa 1964) and vectored execution (mostly going back to the Cray 1, circa 1976). Seymour Cray died decades ago now, and we're still pretty much just using his designs with better fabrication technology.
@Mysticial You didn't miss much. I (at least) found that era fairly painful. The transition from 486 to Pentium was "change everything!". Then from Pentium to Pentium Pro was "change everything again!" Then it was semi-stable for a little while, but the transition to Pentium IV was "yeah, change absolutely everything still again--oh, except for mobile, since Netburst is way too inefficient to even consider using it there." Trivia to memorize and mostly-useless code churn...
You guys need to be more ambitious - if I wish for anything, I would wish to rule both heaven and hell. But currently I don't wish for anything, I am having fun with my life - it's like one big game with multiple goals.
If you want to catch fish with a gigantic net, you put delicious food inside net, you start with a few apparently very happy fishes inside the net. You want to make it as appealing as you could make it. Then wait for more fishes to get in and you harvest.
@TelKitty But according to the rules of the game (so to speak) God created heaven, and if he just wanted us to be there, he could have just put as many there as he wanted, and be done with it.
@TelKitty But you're caught in self-contradictory reasoning. You're assuming that heaven does exist, but isn't what's claimed. Seems to me either the claims about it must either be true (in which case, you're perfectly happy without ruling), or else they're false (in which case we're left with no evidence that it exists at all (so your ambition to rule it can't possibly be met, so you're just setting yourself up to be miserable).
I am not claiming anything. I am just giving you one possibility. There are more than billions of possibilities. I can show you that almost in all cases subjecting your vulnerability to other's mercies is not ideal.
Even if God takes care of you, there are more than billions others already in heaven, does God place your interest above or below of those others??