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01:01
@StackedCrooked It is. But at least Shog was up-front with things. Nowadays they're more polite about it, but if anything even more repressive.
01:15
they kinda ran out of people to repress
but it was a more fun time
back when I thought it was possible to achieve apotheosis by knowing how to use a programming language
01:48
@Mikhail So it was.
@Mikhail Most fantasies that unrealistic involve an astoundingly good-looking person of the opposite sex... ;)
 
3 hours later…
04:56
I don't feel repressed at all in the lounge nowadays :p (albeit this room is significantly quieter due to less people).
05:15
No offence - but some of the youngsters on a game forum that I frequent 20+ years ago appeared to be more cunning than most of the ex-regular who no longer visit here, be that hacking website (admittedly easier back then), evading bans (using proxy server, etc) or show up with a fake army of supporters (one person registering multiple accounts). People here? Using genitalia as room name, rage quits.
If I had more power on this site, I would kick all the inactive people off room owner list.
 
2 hours later…
07:13
@TelKitty At least most of the people here weren't trying to be cunning. They had fairly specific ideas they thought would improve the site in general and chat in particular. I wouldn't call much (if any) of what happened rage quitting. They and the site had different goals, so they parted ways. Most quietly quit posting much to the main site years before they quit here in the Lounge. No rage involved though--they just lost interest.
I have to be honest I never understood these weird power games people play in online communities.
I somewhat understand some people power-tripping from having moderation powers, but the self rightousness and regularity some people do it with I don't really get.
 
2 hours later…
09:43
@JerryCoffin 'They had fairly specific ideas they thought would improve the site in general and chat in particular' - do you really believe in that?
10:01
@PeterT People who enjoying power tripping are generally not good leaders.
10:45
The lounge back then reminds me of my flock of cockerels - my birds fight against each other often, but if any one of them is threatened by a creature outside their flock, the rest of them will all start acting agitated and making loud exclaims as if they deeply care for that chook.
 
2 hours later…
12:57
@PeterT As best I can tell it's because nobody in the English speaking world at least teaches people how to be wrong and how to let another person be wrong. So instead people power trip about being right and thus feeling superior instead of enjoying learning together.
13:21
@JerryCoffin I miss Shog, he didn't muck about
 
1 hour later…
14:49
@TelKitty I find this a puzzling question. Do you have some reason to think I'd lie about it?
I am not saying that you purposely lied about such a claim, but some times people believe in what they want to believe.
@TelKitty A number of them made fairly specific suggestions about both the main site, and moderation tools for chat. There may be room for question about how well they would have worked out if they had been implemented, but the suggestions were pretty clearly made (and never implemented) anyway. So yes, there seems to be clear evidence that people made suggestions for things they thought would be improvements.
There were very reasonable and responsible ex-regular loungers, yes, I agree with that. But there were also a few that lacked common sense.
15:14
Anybody knows why exactly the cache allocation algorithms, ie the algorithm saying which specific slice of cache will be used, are not shared by CPU manufacturers?
Trade secret?
15:33
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn different use cases usually? Also different memory management techniques.
16:18
@TelKitty Common sense or lack thereof isn't relevant. I was specific in saying they had ideas they thought would be helpful. Some of their ideas may not have worked, or been too expensive to implement--but that's a separate question from their thinking it would be helpful.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Most of it is fairly well documented. The only detail that's usually not documented is the exact variant of pseudo-LRU they use to decide which data to kick out when all the ways for a particular address are full. When that's not documented, I'm pretty sure it's usually because not enough people care enough to justify the work it would take to document it.
I suppose other parts may not always be documented either, but most of it comes down to similar reasoning: documenting it would be a lot of work, and not enough people care enough to justify the work.
 
5 hours later…
21:14
@StackedCrooked What is so secret about this? I don't get it... This is not the secret recipe of Coca-Cola
@JerryCoffin Makes sense, thx
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn TBH I was thinking more of the cache eviction policy. I don't know why it's not documented. But I can imagine that a lot of research went into this and they don't want to give it away if they don't need to.
I specifically remember watching a Youtube video by Pablo Halpern where he mentioned that cache eviction is likely "something like LRU". And in the question section an Intel engineer commented that "it's not LRU", without specifying anything more. I'm trying to find the quote.
 
2 hours later…
23:33
posted on September 14, 2023 by Blog Staff

The C++ standard library deque is a double-ended queue that supports adding and removing items efficiently at either the front or the back. Inside STL: The deque, design By Raymond Chen From the article: All three of the major implementations of the C++ standard library use the same basic structure for a deque, but they vary in both policy and implementation details.


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