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2:12 AM
One headline read “Panic grips Australia” with another warning “Some (Melburnians) will die”.
This is amazing, does that mean some other (Melburnians) will not die and live forever?
Apple does escaping character ^_^
 
 
2 hours later…
4:39 AM
@Mgetz That's the super mobile chip right? It'd make sense.
 
 
4 hours later…
user1804599
8:13 AM
I want AVX1048576.
 
10:09 AM
@rightfold just imagine the creaking noise when you push the register file on context switches!
 
TIOBE index for the Go programming language popularity. Funny how the peak in 2017 coincides with AlphaGo's victory over the no1 Go player in the world.
 
@traducerad Windows drivers go through a static analysis process, while in the Linux world Linus calls you moron a few times.
Driver wise Linux has had trouble standardizing on graphics and networking related functionality. So that vendors typically are forced to implement functionality that would otherwise be shared, or a common api.
The scheduler is garbage and attempts to optimize it for desktop use famously were met with hostility.
Weird need to purge the kernel space of all SIMD has made the life of things like zfs hard.
epoll
 
10:36 AM
Windows is great for end users, especially those who knows nothing about programming (which is majority). IMHO Linux is not known for its graphics, but it is chosen for its stability (if you know what you are doing) and its transparency.
Most of the times, I just ssh into my linux server and carry out tasks I want to perform.
Also if you say linux schedular is garbage, you are obviously using it the wrong way.
 
11:37 AM
@traducerad So on windows from a kernel perspective everything is async... period. The architecture also favors zero copy designs if possible by allowing drivers to use DMA windows etc.
 
Some of us look up to people in the past as

artists look up to Pablo Picaso, Vincent van Gogh, or Rembrandt and how
engineers look up to Nikola Tesla, Henry Ford, Elon Musk, or Leonardo da Vinci and how
scientists look up to Albert Einstein, Marie Curie, Isaac Newton, Richard Feynman and so on.


It's the same with some computing scientists who look up to Alan Turing, Edsger Dijkstra, Donald Knuth and so on.
In your (informed) opinion, if someone wanted to be like these famous people, what would they have to do, what steps do they have to take?
 
@Mysticial well according to Dr. Cutress its not because mobile... it's because Tremont doesn't implement it and sunny cove does. Thus for programs not to go WTF they have to only use the shared common instructions
 
@Lapys which engineer looks up to Elon, I think it's most enterpreneurs that look up to him. Not sure he's done much impressive things engineering-wise
 
@PeterT Alright, you got me there but I figured he's note-worthy going on the list XD
 
@Lapys he was.... until the Thailand cave incident
 
11:41 AM
Thailand cave incident?
 
nwp
@Lapys You'd need to create something good. Go beyond what people tell you to do and make something that wasn't there before. And to keep throwing energy at it despite all the naysayers. And be lucky enough that the hard work actually (partially) pays off.
 
Elon Reeve Musk (; born June 28, 1971) is an engineer, industrial designer, technology entrepreneur and philanthropist. He is a citizen of South Africa, Canada, and the United States. He is the founder, CEO and chief engineer/designer of SpaceX; early investor, CEO and product architect of Tesla, Inc.; founder of The Boring Company; co-founder of Neuralink; and co-founder and initial co-chairman of OpenAI. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2018. In December 2016, he was ranked 21st on the Forbes list of The World's Most Powerful People, and was ranked joint-first on the Forbes...
 
@nwp So basically the entrepreneurial route, eh?
 
nwp
That would not be the route I'd choose.
 
Also, what are you asking people here for? It's not like any one of us is Albert Einstein
 
nwp
11:50 AM
If I were ambitious and cared about my career and fame instead of spending my day on Discord I'd go with making systems that avoid data races which in my opinion could have huge impact and I would finish my IDE or work on making other IDEs better.
 
@nwp It's similar to entrepreneurship though, create a good product (or service) that solves a demanding (or new) problem and keep investing in your solutions until the hard work pays off in some regard
Yea, we may not be overly-ambitious or Albert Einstein but what would you say to a kid who wanted to become the next Albert Einstein (is all I'm asking)?
 
nwp
I guess in that sense everyone is an entrepreneur. I thought you meant managing a business side which I would not do.
 
Being a good entrepreneur is not creating good new things, but extracting as much money as possible from as little novel effort as possible
 
@nwp Oh God no, leave that to the businessmen... (lol)
@PeterT Ah, I must've been confusing innovator + entrepreneur
 
nwp
@Lapys "Go for it! If you set your mind to it I believe you have it in you. And I'll support you along the way."
 
11:54 AM
Lol, sounds ideal and optimistic. Now I wonder what you'd say to an adult who wanted to be Albert Einstein XD
 
nwp
My point is that those people are driven and care intrinsically and will go their way no matter what you tell them.
 
@nwp Thanks for your opinion anyways :)
@nwp So an intrinsic, internal drive to advance their fields of interest. Hm
 
nwp
Personally I think these things are fun to work on and I put some effort into things too, but at the end of the day I have a day job and watching anime is fun too. That's probably the main obstacle for me getting on that list of people.
 
I don't even know if the goal is to advance the field, but rather an intrinsic curiosity for the knowledge itself. Which is why many of those people created new fields of research
they weren't concerned with the boundaries of "their field"
 
Hmm, I guess so
 
12:03 PM
The only scientist I look up to is Issac Newton. Newtons 3 laws of physics are so simple, yet took humans so long to find them.
Many other scientist have made significant findings too. But none as striking as Issac Newton.
 
nwp
Albert Einstein: By the way, Newton was wrong.
 
Lol
 
Still waiting for a spaceship fast enough for relativity to be of relevance.
 
@TelKitty then you can stop waiting... ISS already fulfills that
 
nwp
So you're just waiting for a spaceship. Relativity has been of relevance for satellites, GPS and various other stuff already.
 
12:11 PM
@Mgetz Link please.
 
nwp
Oh yeah, I guess the ISS could be counted as a spaceship.
 
@TelKitty space.com/…
@nwp powered space barge/space ship pretty much the same thing in this case
it's not interstellar by anymeans
 
So, where[as] I used to be just 6 minutes older, now I am 6 minutes and 5 milliseconds older
@Mgetz ^ this??!
 
nwp
Careful with the trigraphs.
 
@TelKitty That??!
yes, it's still effective and causes issues
 
12:15 PM
That's is based on calculation not observation. Science is proved by observation.
 
facepalm
No it's based off of observations using clocks and other tools
 
isn't the GPS example that nwp brought what you're looking for
 
No clock is mentioned in the article.
Also do clocks function the same in the space as they are on earth?
 
Why would they mention scientific observations taken ages ago
the article is about how the known relativistic affects were on humans
 
There are too many variables. Time difference could indeed be from relativity. Or it could be from solar wind for all I know. Or maybe it's from different gravitation field on ISS.
 
12:21 PM
Or maybe instead of resorting to "whataboutism" you could trust people to do their jobs
This isn't idle backyard science, it's heavily reviewed papers that have been published.
These questions are critical to making intersteller flight a possibility
 
nwp
> Or maybe it's from different gravitation field on ISS.
I thought that's exactly what the relativistic effect is.
 
Consider humans took more than 2000 years to discover Newtons 3 laws and we still have not been on any other planets, I don't think I can trust people on their intelligence.
 
nwp
Or you mean the clock goes wrong because it doesn't work in 0g?
 
@TelKitty actually... no it didn't
the Romans and the Greeks were well aware of the laws of motion
 
nwp
@TelKitty That's not a matter of intelligence, it's a matter of needing 99% of the population to produce enough food to not starve. Historically that has been a huge problem.
Having 10 Albert Einsteins is useless if they starve at the age of 5.
 
12:25 PM
@nwp it's never 0g. There is gravitational pull from earth, from the sun and from the moon, together with a bunch of other stars and planets, most are small and negligible, but not zero.
@nwp If population is a indication of success, chickens are pretty successful species, so are ants.
 
nwp
And if farting is an indicator of success, cows are doing pretty good. I don't know what you're trying to say here.
@TelKitty And yet they manage to predict the time dilation with their relativistic formulas and confirm the calculations experimentally. I don't know what more you want.
 
@Mgetz Did they calculated the 5ms from this formula:
 
nwp
12:44 PM
The point is that times go differently depending on gravity. It's impossible to measure with a clock because a clock always has one gravity and you need multiple different gravities over time to measure the difference. Hence it's true, you cannot measure it onboard by definition. But you can measure the difference between the onboard clock and Earth clocks.
 
Science is not based on imagination, it has to be observable and reproducible.
 
nwp
What clocks show is both observable and reproducible.
It requires good clocks with good funding, but good enough for science.
 
...
Did you read nasa's article?
It's implying that clocks didn't show any difference so it can not be measured directly.
 
nwp
So the quote you linked doesn't even talk about time, it talks about lengths.
But yeah, now that I read it they didn't have a clock onboard that is accurate enough. Unfortunate. But they did the same thing with GPS satellites already which do, so it would not have been very interesting anyways.
 
 
1 hour later…
2:08 PM
@StackedCrooked A lot of things in the standard are that way because std::optional did not exist then.
 
 
4 hours later…
6:25 PM
I think I've wasted 10% of my time as a developer purely on lag
 
And 10% of your life as a developer
Which means that at least 1% of your life was wasted on lag
Another 30% at sleeping
 
Dang..
 
@Morwenn Lol, it's not that sad XD
(Well, I say that now...)
 
Sadness is a celebration
Don't mind with the word soup I'm posting, I'm just dealing with compiler errors and need a way to release some steam
 
6:35 PM
Lol
 
7:10 PM
A Path is "a unique location in a file system",
A Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) is "a string of characters that unambiguously identifies a particular resource".

So a file path represented as a string (without modification) is a URI, then?
 
@Lapys anything can be a URI
Mind the "universal" though. A thing that identifies a thing in my top drawer, might not be very useful say on Broadway
 
More of an RI than a URI then.
Actually just need a hypernym (that works) to group URIs and file paths together.
 
Nope. That's what URI already is
URLs are a subset of URI.
URLs can be file paths, and in fact you know them: `file:///home/sehe/.secret.txt`, `sftp://silly@server:789//home/sehe/.secret.txt`
URI's are actually the hypernym - which makes them almost meaningless, and also makes it tricky to understand what it means :)
 
Oh, but I thought file paths were only URIs when they used the file URI scheme `file://`.

**sigh* So confusing... but I think I got it, thanks :)
Now curious what you're keeping in .secret.txt, hmmm... o_-
 
@Lapys Nah, thath's when they became URLs. But "123" is a URI. It might mean something to someone.
Note how most of hte XSD URI's are usually URLs targeting some company domain to avoid conflicting with other URIs
 
7:20 PM
True, although aren't URIs by definition supposed to be un-ambiguous?
"123" seems ambiguous to me, or is it contextual?
@Morwenn Just got rick-rolled at downloadmoreram.com
@Morwenn This is what lag has done to me
 
@Lapys ho did you even fall for this u_u
 
@Lapys Nope
 
@Morwenn I got desperate enough for a faster PC
 
I recently acquired a SSD and multiplied my RAM by 4, which helped a bit
 
Conceptually. In practice they are what they are. An URI within the scope of my top drawer, again, doesn't need to be "by definition un-ambiguous" on Broadway
 
7:24 PM
Anyway, back to working out, later
 
@Morwenn I still want to download physical hardware using software T_T
@sehe Hm, understood
 
@Lapys turn an FPGA into RAM
 
 
3 hours later…
9:56 PM
@Morwenn Most FPGAs contain RAM (but an FPGA is a dreadfully expensive way to get RAM).
 
10:27 PM
So back to buying RAM sticks
 
11:10 PM
@Lapys There are alternatives, of course (though the part about going to prison when you get caught does make the obvious alternative to buying rather less attractive).
 
11:40 PM
 

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