@LucDanton It looks to me like we're in the "coast" part of the cycle, though I'd say they are making more progress than they have during the previous slow development times. Hard to guess exactly when the next major upgrade is likely to happen though.
@Mysticial Hmm...I'm thinking the points I lose to rep cap should go into a special account where even if they don't count toward my rep, I can still give them away as bounty without losing the rep they did let me have. (e.g., I lost 290 points to rep cap yesterday, so I should be able to give out 290 points of bounty without being penalized on my own rep).
It's been surprisingly hard to find somebody with actual experience in this regard
And I'd rather talk to somebody who knows more than me before I just start coding
I've written applications, I've written web applications, I've written database-driven enterprise applications, but I'd really like to find out what questions I should even be asking before I start a project that is meant to be spread out across multiple server instances running on someone else's boxes
If your data is hosted using a cloud service - either in some database you run yourself, or something abstracted away like Amazon's S3, how ridiculous is it to have your application's code querying that database from some other VPS node before responding to the request?
I have all these questions, and I'm not even sure they're the right ones
But if things DID explode, right now I don't know how I could switch to larger distribution in a week or less
And maybe if I did know how distributed webapps worked a bit better, there would be one or two small changes that I would make while I was writing it that would make my future self able to cope with spreading the app around
I just need to find an experienced distributed solutions developer, get him drunk, and let him ramble on for an evening
I know a good point about writing scalable applications at this point. But I still know very little about spreading applications across multiple nodes.
And I know even less about the options offered by various cloud providers.
I feel like I need to read 50 posts or so before I'll have a good idea of how to convert from Ted Dziuba inflammatory post to useful facts to incorporate into my knowledge base
But at least it's entertaining, so I guess I'll keep reading :-P
If you are dealing with financial numbers - anything to do with money - and you are using floating-point arithmetic at any point, you are living in a state of sin.
...Yeah, not exactly... I know I should, but... I know, I know, I'm not doing exactly what's suggested, but I just prefer to usually work directly with DirectX.
though I suppose (if I do it right) it would give me a better edge in the 'engine development' side of things, if only a little.
If you'd like to know, my current project consists of continuous amounts of integration of polynomials, repeatedly generating a constant, and then integrating, generating the next constant, etc... which eventually leads to a lot of division, which then leads to my FPEs, considering the original constants are... normally < 10.
Damn... 29 votes over the repcap... I don't think I've ever done that by "normal" means... (As in days where I didn't pick up 50+ votes on a single answer that made the hot-list and/or got linked.)
Partially because I tend to stop after I hit the cap...
He writes for laymen, mostly, but he writes his technical posts to be useful to people like us - technical people without all the experience he has
Also, he's a really good writer.
No problem. I really value all the amazing blogs in my RSS feed at this point, and I'm happy to help other people work their way to that useful situation
Aggh... have an assignment due in 2 hours. haven't started because i've been exploring other things XD. I'll save the link, and check it out later. I gotta go!
If college was actually useful, there would be a class for developers where all you did was talk about which blogs were essential for programmers to follow, and which posts were required reading
@Pubby I suppose if you wanted to badly enough, you could write a little header of your own with typedef int GLint;, but I'm not sure what it would accomplish.
ClassName * items; items = new ClassName[capacity]; hello, I have a problem. I would like to know if I can pass arguments to the `ClassName` constructor
*actually, with a prime p, it should work regardless. But in any case, if someone got a method to work, but you didn't, you should probably try again. Because it probably works.
I have large Boost/Spirit metaprogram that is blowing gcc's stack when I try to compile it.
How can I increase gcc's stack size, so I can compile this program?
Note: There's no infinite recursion going on, but there is enough incidental recursion to exhaust gcc's stack.
There was a (now deleted) comment saying Lucas' Theorem isn't wrong. I have to agree. If you're getting wrong results, then it's probably a bug in your code (or wherever you got it from).
it's also inaccurate if n is sufficiently high because Lucas Theorem requires lots of mini combinatorics, and sometimes these throw things off because they require an alternate function
@GManNickG I manually check for updates about once a week. And with that I ask myself why the heck I didn't set up a cronjob for it... goes set up a cronjob
@Pubby I had a logarithmic depth function that had 11 calls to a function that needed 2k of stack.
The Intel compiler inlined all 11 calls into the recursive function but failed to overlap the stack usage.
So each recursive call needed 22k of stack. When I bumped the datasize to 4 TB, the recursion depth reached 34 or so levels deep. And boom... stackoverflow.
With a 6 day repro time. That currently stands as the most expensive and time-consuming bug that I've ever fixed. (It took 4 weeks and tied down 4 workstations before I could finally trace it.)
No it wasn't cool... I estimate it cost $2000 - $3000 USD from just hardware depreciation.
Fortunately, I only took a fraction of it myself. But I feel sorry for the guy who had the big machine and was helping find this bug. Apparently he burned out two $800 sticks of server memory...
@GManNickG Yeah, that's the problem when you subject machines to ridiculous loads for extended periods of time.
The problem was even worse in my case. The motherboard was initially designed for 95W processors. But was "recertified" for a newer 150W processor model (which is what I had).
It happenned a total of 3 times on that same motherboard (and RMA'ed 3 times) before I finally bought a different (even more expensive) model which didn't have this problem.
Yeah, after having damaged/destroyed close to 5-grand of hardware over the past 4 years... (from a combination of overclocking + suicide-programs) I get a feel of what the limits are...
Don't know if you've seen this one yet. But run that on a laptop fully-threaded for a few months. If it doesn't auto-shutoff from overheating, I can almost guarantee that it'll severely degrade if it doesn't burn out completely.
How can the theoretical peak performance of 4 floating point operations (double precision) per cycle be achieved on a modern x86-64 Intel cpu?
As far as I understand does it take 3 cycles for an sse add and 5 cycles for a mul to complete on most of the modern Intel cpu's (see e.g. Agner Fog's ht...
The answer I posted there uses only the CPU. It can get worse if you start using cache and memory at the same time. (I have some code that'll do that...)
Probably in another year or so, I'm might need to update my answer to include fused-multiply add support for Intel Haswell and AMD Bulldozer.
I already have a peak flops FMA code for AMD Bulldozer. But I don't have physical access to the machine I wrote it on to measure how much heat it produces...
Blue Waters is the name of a petascale supercomputer to be deployed at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. On August 8, 2007, the National Science Board approved a resolution which authorized the National Science Foundation to fund "the acquisition and deployment of the world's most powerful leadership-class supercomputer." The NSF is awarding $208 million over the next four and a half years for the Blue Waters project.
On August 8, 2011, NCSA announced that IBM had terminated its contract to provide hardware for...
So they'd be pretty pissed if I burned it out. Though it's supposed to be made to handle "anything" so its not my fault if I burn it. :P
Like mentioned on uservoice:
For something that can be done so
easily by accident, there should be
the ability to undo mistakes.
I know that I have clicked several times on a comment up-vote without actually wanting to.
I would suggest being able to cancel the up-vote (maybe only for a...