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22:01
@Borgleader Let's assume that PAQ has a different focus (no-compromise best compression? (Although my -adapt2 -l 14 runs should be pretty close, especially when I added predictive compression and deduplication to the mix :))
Otherwise I'd say (a) the cost of GUI (b) the cost of NTFS
woops
turns out that when I created a function overload set, I just left it dangling there instead of putting it in the module.
> tests succeeded: 2 failed: 117?
hm?
j/k
alright, 1 test down, 106 to go
ah what a shocker, all failures caused by the same bug.
22:17
@Borgleader Using zpaq now, on linux:
sehe@desktop:/tmp$ # time '/tmp/peazip_portable-5.2.1.LINUX.Qt/res/zpaq/zpaq' -m2 -r a '/tmp/CORPUT/boost_1_55_0.zpaq' '/tmp/CORPUT/boost_1_55_0/'
real	0m55.137s
user	4m0.249s
sys	0m21.193s
sehe@desktop:/tmp$
sehe@desktop:/tmp$ ls -ltr /tmp/CORPUT/boost_1_55_0.zpaq -h
-rw-rw-r-- 1 sehe sehe 99M feb 21 23:16 /tmp/CORPUT/boost_1_55_0.zpaq
That's /really/ underwhelming. A lot.
It's all but 10x as slow and 2x the resulting size o.O
And under identical circumstances. Let me see whether I can squeeze it a bit more
Lol, even an update run (with no changes) takes more time (13.7s) then /just compress the damn lot/ with pcompress :)
Nope. Even with all dials down and all output suppressed, it takes 37 seconds, resulting in 104MiB for boost. Wow. That's bad!!!
Who said this PAQ thing was useful?
18 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
PAQ will never cease to amaze me
> I have only tested the JIT code in 32 bit Windows and 64 bit Linux
(Ubuntu). There is code to support 64 bit Windows and 32 bit Linux
but it is not tested.

-- Matt Mahoney
@Borgleader ^ Well @CatPlusPlus what can you say about the devestating results?
Maybe I ran the wrong type?
Is the default selection
user1804599
I think it’s time to watch season four.
A mod! RUN! D:
@Borgleader Oh god. Running the paq8o version shows it spending several seconds compressing individual hpp files?!
This all smells like 1985 BBS quality software
user1804599
22:33
@Borgleader It’s Flexo—he’s hot.
It gets better! I canceled the zpaq -m4 that seemed hung (I had suppressed all output, to help benchmark scores...) What it left in /tmp is just .... TOO CUTE: i.imgur.com/2cPRY5W.png
o.o wtf
No wonder it's slow. And insecure too! And crappy for leaving the debris
@Borgleader Which version did you run? Surely not paq80? If so, cancel it now. It's too embarassingly slow
zpaq IIRC
22:38
Downloading the 10Gb benchmark off mattmahoney.net/dc/10gb.html now...
I wanna know why this myth exists and what causes this fantastic malperformance
@Borgleader Oh forgot to mention, killed it at ~10 minutes
Mmm Downloading that will take 65 minutes. Not waiting for that. Tomorrow!
louman?
Oh, shitty titty. Anne said "all Valentine's day stuff is overpriced, so don't get me anything. I've booked a meal for the week after". We went out tonite, £54 just for the wine. I should'a got some roses from the all-night garage on the day :((
and here I hoped people wouldn't do the dumb V-day thing at 58 :(
@Rapptz Less complaining, more sexy rumpus.
@MartinJames lol. she picked the place?
22:55
I got the sex, but £137 restaurant bill. A decent hooker would have been cheaper...
Or, you drink too much
@sehe Oh, yeah :((
@MartinJames You tell her
@sehe YOU tell her. Stroppy customers I can handle, but Anne...
Put her on :)
22:59
@sehe Err... NO!
Missed chance
I go bed, cannardly type. Ratted.
@MartinJames What the hell is the point of "decent hooker"? To be worthwhile at all, a hooker must be thoroughly indecent!
I'll let you kids fight over that :) I'm off to bed as well
@JerryCoffin Decent whore: ROI.
@sehe Nite all:)
23:07
4
Q: Is it possible to completely avoid heap fragmentation?

user3123061For example, if dealocations of dynamic memory are always done in oposite direction to allocations. In that case is it guaranteed that heap will not become fragmented? And from theoretical point of view: Exist some realistical way for nontrivial application how to manage memory to completely avo...

^^ Interesting question. Though it's probably gonna get closed.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz dat command.
would it be a bad idea to use WebGL or related "semi" supported stuff on a professional personal web page? I want to work in Web development, so...
user1804599
Have a fallback for bad browsers.
@Crowz You might want to include a page or two that used it, but probably avoid using it everywhere (still want something impressive for those who can't use it).
how much browser support should it have? 2 revisions back on IE, chrome, firefox, and opera?
23:20
@Crowz Who/what is your intended audience?
@JerryCoffin employers, mostly. Just like "hey I have some idea how to web dev look at my website"
2
A: Is it possible to completely avoid heap fragmentation?

EJP Exist some realistical way for nontrivial application how to manage memory to completely avoid heap fragmentation Yes. Allocate everything on the stack. This may seem like a counsel of perfection but I've done it in non-trivial programs.

^^ I actually liked that one. :)
@Crowz "Employers" doesn't narrow it down enough. You need to think enough about potential employers (especially, who you'd want to work for) and make a judgement call based on that. For example, if an employer were running IE 6, I'd probably rather find someplace else to work (but that's me).
@JerryCoffin yeah, but for example, firefox only has partial webGL support and it's a pretty modern browser.
23:35
@Crowz Sounds like you need (or at least want) a fall-back if WebGL isn't available then.
meh, CSS animations are pretty cool as well I guess
I can definitely see why SO needs more mods. My custom flag from this morning still hasn't been looked at yet.
> Support listed as "partial" refers to the fact that not all users with these browsers have WebGL access. This is due to the additional requirement for users to have up to date video drivers.
posted on February 21, 2014 by Eric Battalio

A few weeks ago, I had an opportunity to share a few scenarios where C++ really matters to an internal audience from the field. No demo code or sample projects were reviewed, just the scenarios and first-hand examples. Why C++? Learn "what those...(read more)

> Code maintenance. There is a lot of code out there. Much of it is C and C with classes, but much more is C++ and relies on the flexibility and control of the language.
lol
user1804599
23:51
lol

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