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12:02 AM
Why are 512e 14TB drives $80 cheaper than 4k 14TB drives? I would expect, that you'd pay extra for the emulation?
 
That's like asking why some new cars sell for 20k, some others sell for 200k. They are both just cars right?
 
12:25 AM
34
Q: What does the "at" @ sign/symbol/character mean in Git?

user456814The at-sign @ is often used in git to specify revisions in different ways. For example, <ref>@{<date>} specifies the reference at its state on <date>. Example: git diff master@{yesterday} master. <ref>@{<n>} specific the reference at its nth prior state. Example: git diff master@{1} master. @{-<

@thecoshman git config --global alias.lol 'log --oneline --graph --decorate --all'
@Rick That's because std::string("12") < std::string("2")
It's just how operator< is defined on strings.
It doesn't care that humans (might) give special meaning to sequences of digits inside a string.
@thecoshman I honestly wasn't aware of git merge --squash O_o
 
 
2 hours later…
 
5 hours later…
7:48 AM
// array standard header
#pragma once
#ifndef _ARRAY_
#define _ARRAY_
#ifndef RC_INVOKED
#include <algorithm>
#include <iterator>
#include <tuple>
ಠ_ಠ, muh compile times
 
I have been watching your patterns and I wonder when you actually sleep.
 
8:45 AM
I wonder whether Linux market share would be bigger if Linux was a Windows like paid OS.
 
std::memset may be optimized away (under the as-if rules) if the object modified by this function is not accessed again for the rest of its lifetime (e.g. gcc bug 8537). For that reason, this function cannot be used to scrub memory (e.g. to fill an array that stored a password with zeroes). Solutions for that include std::fill with volatile pointers, C11 memset_s, FreeBSD explicit_bzero or Microsoft SecureZeroMemory.
must have been fun to find that out
 
 
1 hour later…
nwp
10:02 AM
@TelKitty The problem with Linux is not that you don't pay for it, it's that it isn't preinstalled on nearly every PC and laptop you can buy.
It would also help if it would suck less.
 
10:46 AM
@nwp Exactly my point - free software can help to reach 10 million people, maybe. But raise a billion dollars and employ a thousand marketing people can help you to sell to 3 billion people at $10 each. (Figures are used for illustration purposes only)
And help you to make the software better, perhaps.
 
nwp
In my little world there are antitrust laws that forbid stores to default to an OS. The real world is different.
 
11:14 AM
This world is run by people with power and money. Some of them are good, some of them are not and most in between. Sad thing is that, in order to not follow the rules, you need to have enough resources and skills, intelligence, strength and courage.
 
@nwp Linux is for people who actually care about operating systems. The average Joe just wants his computer to work. Windows is excellent at that.
 
nwp
I don't think it's about following the rules or not, it's about being able to define the rules.
 
It's easier to not follow the rules than to define the rules, former you can do it yourself, later, you need the mass to support you.
 
nwp
@fredoverflow I don't know. I care about operating systems, but I don't consider Linux better than Windows. I wish I had an operating system that did basic things right and didn't suck due to having zero support for anything.
I'd go so far as to say the operating systems don't have significant differences. You decide by software availability which is why I'm on Linux. If they ever support address sanitizer on Windows I'll probably switch back.
 
Linux is excellent for programming. Window is great for everything else :p
 
nwp
11:23 AM
@TelKitty Or you just ignore the masses and then you cheat at the vote and nobody does anything to stop you.
 
@nwp You need a lot of resources in order to do that.
A LOT I mean.
 
nwp
I don't know what resources they used. There probably was some "You vote for me and I use some of that power to help you", but it's not like anyone really paid anything.
Also I want my 450€.
 
12:22 PM
@Mikhail eyup, I consider that a glibc bug that they won't implement some equivalent
 
 
1 hour later…
1:23 PM
@fredoverflow awe, that's cute. Such a tiny log command
try this one on for size:
git log --oneline --exclude='refs/notes/*' --graph --branches $( git merge-base --octopus $( git branch --format='%(Refname)' ) origin/master $( git branch --list -a --format='%(refname)' origin/develop ) )^..HEAD origin/master $( git branch --list -a --format='%(refname)' origin/develop)
If I didn't mistype something there :P
IRL, I use aliases for that, so my log command is actually spread out over, but that's the fully expanded version
I think I can maybe drop some of the --list options there from the git branch commands... but ergh... this works
 
2:14 PM
 
 
3 hours later…
5:35 PM
@fredoverflow Yeah. Unfortunately.
 
 
3 hours later…
8:15 PM
@Mysticial So, I had this thing happen with my 24 drive JBOD. The drives would disconnect from the backplane when it was put into the RAID0 (and spuriously at other RAID levels). Although I had a 1600 watt psu it ended up that the power delivered to the 5 v molex was capped at ~150 w @ 24 A which isn't enough for 24 drives. This never happened with other builds because the backplanes I had previously used drew power from the 12V (shared with the GPU +1000 W on this PSU). So fuck EVGA.
 
@Mikhail lol, don't blame EVGA when you don't know about PSU rails.
 
They've been steadily decreasing power to the 5v rails
Can't figure out how to sort PSUs by the power deliverable on the 5v rails
So, EVGA has a few 1000W supplies that are 20A@5V while competitors are 30A@5V. Why are they pushing this shit?
 
8:31 PM
@Mikhail Because no normal enthusiast PC overclocker will have 24 hard drives. At most a bunch of SSDs instead.
If you're looking for a workstation PSU, get a fucking workstation-oriented PSU.
 
I can't seem to find anything that pushes more than 30 A @ 5 V with a peak of 150 W
The max watts looks the same for all the PSUs
"RAIDMAX" <- But only gives 25 A, cannot actually be used for RAID setups
 
user7659542
You know you arrived at a shit company when you see people write stuff like int global_var = 0; instead of int global_var;
 
9:24 PM
@traducerad so you start looking for another job lol
 
@traducerad Uh... you do?
the first is way better than the second
 
 
1 hour later…
10:46 PM
@traducerad have to agree with puppy prefer being explicit
 
nwp
That's not being explicit. Those do different things.
 
@nwp aren't globals in c initialized to 0?
well I guess that statement does assume it's c and an actual global
 
nwp
Oh, we assume a global variable. Who could have known with that name.
 
well if we take the part about being in a shit company, maybe it's auto storage
 
11:07 PM
Wait what's wrong with the code?
 
@Mikhail it has snakes
@nwp I don't think Linux is for everyone the way it is now
 
nwp
Neither is Windows.
 
Linux can't properly multiplex GPUs on a laptop
Hibernate doesn't really work (Ubuntu dropped support years ago)
They still don't use static analysis to check for driver bugs
 
11:27 PM
@Mikhail afaik, you can enable it, but it's at your own risk basically
 
11:39 PM
I think it has something to do with secure boot but don't hold me to that
but yeah like @thecoshman said you can enable it
also Ubuntu sucks, @Mikhail bumblebee works for me somewhat
@nwp yes that's true, however for me personally it feels like a lot of linux software just lacks polish
 
@A.H. hibernate? nah, afaik, it's because hibernate is kinda hardware dependant, and they figured it was easier to just disable it for everyone by default, rather than work out how to get it working or detect who it works for
 
I saw a couple of bugs about secure boot disabling hibernate in fedora, but tbh I never got a concrete answer as to why it's not working just that some people have managed to make it work
holy shit I just hibernated and everything crashed on resume
does this count?
 

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