@Mysticial Oh, of course. In some cases, however, some additions can be close to free--if (at least part of) a chip has a lot of logic and very little interconnect, you may be able to add more interconnect without increasing chip area (and vice versa, of course).
@sehe Yeah. I figured you notice that question soon (if you hadn't already).
@Mysticial but in theory, two pipelines can handle two threads simultaneously, while one pipeline can needs to switch? Tell me if i'm completely off regarding that
@molbdnilo Why not? Seems rather irrelevant. Last time I checked the types are not the same, and it makes sense to use the type that your code base requires... — sehe14 secs ago
@Mysticial It is a big chip, so that's entirely possible. OTOH, IBM's approach to fabrication is pretty conservative (to put it mildly), so they didn't usually need to do quite so much of that sort of stuff.
What happens in a processor is much worse than anyone's relationship status. A processor can hook up with and break up a billion things in under a second. A person can only hook up with and break with someone no more than a few times in one day?
I have been watching Day9 play through The Witness game. The map/world is awesomely intricate. I would give it a best level design award if there was one.
the problem is that there's no "shut up and save as UTF-8 by default", there's only "by default, save in local codepage" and "by default, save in UTF-8 if the characters can't be represented in local codepage"
loungé, say you have a list view and you currently see items 50 to 60 out of 100. Then lets say some items are added to your list, above where you are currently (above 50). Do you expect the list to show the same items you were looking at, or the view to stay the same and the items to be pushed down
@Prismatic Well, what I usually see is that the position of the items isn't updated until I refresh the view or change the range of items. So, that is what I would expect via previous experience.