There are 2 CPUs and 2 GPUs . GPUs can handle compute intensive workloads . There are 5 work loads. How will you schedule them ?
1 hour later…
user7659542
6:23 AM
@Rick Only offload work to the GPU when it needs to be done. As for the dual core, you could either go for assymetric mulitprocessing or symmetric. How you schedule everything on the CPU largely depends on the situation I think.
user7659542
The most naive approach would be to just have a symmetric approach where every workload gets the same timeslice. I presume you offload stuff to the GPU when an event occurs. Why not go for preemptive round robin?
user7659542
On a sidenote,
user7659542
Is factory pattern a real thing in the industry amongst programming gurus or is that one of those things they learn at iniversities that is good in theory but you ll never use in practice ?
Hey guys. A bit lost here, I'm in v8, for node.js and I want to expose a function that takes a callback. that callback is executed with an object passed as a parameter. That object contains a list of functions that are exposed from the C++ code. how can I do that?
What would be a good practice for managing custom built libs on a Mac / Linux?
I usually build them in a lib directory in my home, then I have to set the lib path manually in CMake when I build something that uses it and use LD_LIBRARY_PATH when running a binary that depends on these libs.
We have PowerPoint 2007 for some reason and I need to change the text background color. PowerPoint 2007 cannot do that, but you can do it in Word and then copy/paste while keeping the formatting.
ppt template meta programing using vba is where the real money is at
So, I'm at this IBM POWER architecture related event (trying to get free compute time), whats some stuff I can say about the architecture to really piss them off?
We do lots of reverse engineering with the disassembler IDA from Hex-Rays, in order to achieve things that are not possible via the documented Microsoft Office API.
Also ThinkCell has been aggressively soliciting employees for a the last few years. #1) Does this mean there is something terribly wrong #2) Is it actually profitable, and also why the fuck do their charts sucks.
I've been looking into it for a bit. And by that I mean I looked at the glassdoor site. There is some stressful code review by the boss and flat hierarchies, meaning no way to move on from being a code monkey.
And yes, apparently they are profitable enough that they can do whatever they want without any money giver having a say.
Yeah, the thing is pretty fucked, because addTab has the expected ownership transfer behavior
int QTabWidget::addTab(QWidget *page, const QString &label)
Adds a tab with the given page and label to the tab widget, and returns the index of the tab in the tab bar. Ownership of page is passed on to the QTabWidget.
So, the underlying reason for certain structures requiring delete is to facilitate sharing. I have no clue why the fuck, they require explicit deletes on structures that, can't in principle be shared.
Fuckers at IBM pushing the importance of MPI for machine learning and large data sets. This is fucking bullshit. The ML training is among the most easily distributed workloads imaginable. It is so predictable, latency should not matter.
There are 30 people in the room. I should stand up and ask them why the fuck we should pay 2x AWS price.
Does anyone have problems connecting to stackoverflow.com with Firefox?
I am getting this:
> An error occurred during a connection to stackoverflow.com. A required TLS feature is missing. Error code: MOZILLA_PKIX_ERROR_REQUIRED_TLS_FEATURE_MISSING
Suddenly, today I am having issues connecting to https://stackoverflow.com/ from Firefox:
An error occurred during a connection to stackoverflow.com. A required TLS feature is missing. Error code: MOZILLA_PKIX_ERROR_REQUIRED_TLS_FEATURE_MISSING
I checked https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/ana...
@Puppy Nah--5.0 was really the zenith of web development. Eliminate all possible compatibility problems by running the one true browser on any OS that matters: Windows, Mac, HP-UX or Solaris.
@StackedCrooked When I first moved to Colorado, they had a highly effective way of getting people (men, anyway) to slow down: they hired young women to hold the "slow down" signs, and very directly gave them permission to wear bikinis while they did. Eventually had to stop on the theory that it was sexist though.
@StackedCrooked That was part I couldn't figure out. They'd actually started with mostly men, and started to notice that when the men took off their shirts, it was more effective (traffic slowed down more). Then somebody figured out what was going on, and decided to hire some pretty girls. I think women got angry mostly because 1) they missed having as many men to oggle, and 2) some...less-attractive women got angry when their husbands/boyfriends/whatever looked too much at pretty girls in bikinis.