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15:01
it’s weird but the Marabout flyers in French are particularly funny in a way that’s not found with the English-speaking ones, even though some come very close
they’re usually genuinely a riot
Crêpes au four, ce scandale @Morwenn @slaphappy @Rerito
"craps!"
with mariah carey
@PatrickM'Bongo tumblr warned us about appropriation, and this is the result
en + crêpes froment au jambon je te dis pas l'insulte
je pige pas
toi t'es pas breton
15:09
encore heureux
Ven
Ven
hehe
@PatrickM'Bongo ah putin jsuis con jviens de piger
Ven
Ven
@PatrickM'Bongo WTF
Wops, wrong room?
Lounge<France>
user1804599
I'm gonna order a Haskell mug
user1804599
15:22
and maybe T-shirt
user1804599
Usually the quick thing is more complicated
@PatrickM'Bongo There's a couple of inconsistencies in the question. One, the edit and the comments say that right is faster than left. But the first part of the question with all the graphs say left is faster. Furthermore, I don't see how the OP is not blowing the stack with 2 million nodes all going right or left.
user1804599
user1804599
super rad
Ven
Ven
15:29
@Shoe Lounge<hey bby>
> Physicists have discovered what makes neural networks so extraordinarily powerful. Nobody understands why deep neural networks are so good at solving complex problems. …
> There is no mathematical reason why networks arranged in layers should be so good at these challenges. Mathematicians are flummoxed.
> These guys say the reason why mathematicians have been so embarrassed is that the answer depends on the nature of the universe.
good quality writing
Ven
Ven
they are flummoxed
nwp
nwp
is there something like std::reverse_view that allows me to iterate over a container in reverse order with a range based for-loop? for (auto &element : std::reverse_view(container))
@PatrickM'Bongo "My code works, I don't know why."
classic case of ^
And they managed to misspell paramters twice in the same graphic
probably because of the nature of the unverse
15:36
@PatrickM'Bongo What is this nonsense.
@nwp no, you’ll have to write your own
@R.MartinhoFernandes trigger warning
what a clickbaity url
> the work of Henry Lin at Harvard University and Max Tegmark at MIT.
No link.
Stopped reading there.
It's at the bottom
15:38
> So in theory, there can be 256^1000000 possible images, and for each one it is necessary to compute whether it shows a cat or dog. And yet neural networks, with merely thousands or millions of parameters, somehow manage this classification task with ease.
I don't follow.
> The laws of physics have other important properties. For example, they are usually symmetrical when it comes to rotation and translation. Rotate a cat or dog through 360 degrees and it looks the same; translate it by 10 meters or 100 meters or a kilometer and it will look the same.
lol
There are 256^1000000 possible images, and yet no one would find it surprising a function with merely a couple of lines could classify it as being mostly dark or light.
where are those witch flyers again
@PatrickM'Bongo Fire a cat through a double slit, and it will interfere with itself.
"Destructive interference". Google it.
@PatrickM'Bongo That is quite extraordinary. I've see writing like this before, but this is the first time I've seen an HMM produce a matching graphic.
15:45
@JerryCoffin lol
Also, lol at mathematicians being flummoxed.
From the first sentence of the article's abstract: "although well-known mathematical theorems guarantee that neural networks can approximate arbitrary functions well"
Well-known mathematical guarantees => flummoxity
(How to you noun "flummox"?)
a flummox
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's already a noun. The plural is flummoxen.
"Woolfardisworthy" is pronounced like "Woolsery". Fuck England.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Upon further reflection, I think "flummoxidation" would work well.
@R.MartinhoFernandes whatever’s the answer, I really like 'flummoxity'
Oh, and since it may not be obvious, Flummoxen are oxen native to Flonders (one of the lesser known parts of Belgium).
lol, D. Davis says Brexit will be based on quantitative, empirical, mathematical assessment of UK's interests. /cc @Puppy
Empirical?
16:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes The British Empire will resume following these short messages from our sponsors.
@JerryCoffin In order to gt sponsors, you need people to like you.
@Borgleader I need me? Who would ever have thought?
Oh wait. They don't need me, just people like me. But nobody's like me; I'm unique. My school counselor told me everybody's unique, and now you're telling me I'm not? But everybody else is unique, and I'm not. Wait, if everybody else is, and I'm not, that makes me unique--if and only if I'm not unique. Now I'm flummoxed!
16:32
@JerryCoffin Oh don't worry, you're definitly special
@JerryCoffin std::unique_ptr<Jerry>
@JerryCoffin that was unique :p
@milleniumbug ymmd
@JerryCoffin guess it takes a life like yours to develop that sense of humor
Seriously though
What is up with the "This is the best [X] we have ever made" motto from Apple
They use it for everything
They repeat it ad nauseam
It means nothing
It just means that they are not going back
Fuck you Apple
It's easier when you make things subpar at the start.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
16:43
@Shoe Say something often enough and eventually people will believe it
@Ven Hey :$
@Borgleader Well, you don't really have to believe it. It would be weird if the latest version of [X] wasn't the best they've ever made. That's just progress. That's what they are supposed to do.
Yes, in theory youre following iterations should be better than the previous ones.
@iksemyonov That was senseless humor.
@JerryCoffin probably i was referring not to this one exactly, rather the whole thing
oh.. wait, now i get the pun. ahhh great one
@R.MartinhoFernandes "subpar" makes no sense to me. "par" is (primarily) used in golf, where "under par" is actually a good thing, and the person the furthest under par is the winner.
16:48
Subpar is clearly different from under par :p
maybe it's a different kind of par?
some Latin roots e.g.
It's really from golf
This is interesting.
holy cow,
@R.MartinhoFernandes holy cow that's some real big data, didn't know about that service!
why are they doing this, just for the science?
17:05
@iksemyonov I think like a lot of things Google does, they have enough ad revenue to let them do it, and a notion that if they collect enough interesting data about what people search for, there's at least a reasonable chance they'll be able to eventually recoup their investment.
Curious where the idea that Nordic countries are the most suicidal comes from.
Clearly not from looking at the data.
I guess the opposite could be argued, that Southern Europe is less suicidal, but Norway and Sweden are on par with most of non-Eastern non-Southern Europe
It seems summer eather has a positive effect, but the effect of cold weather seems overshadowed but other factors.
Why is Hungary so suicidal?
Right.
Maybe it's because they're so hungry.
(But I couldn't help but think of that)
Alcohol consumption also comes to mind.
Lithuania is special too.
17:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is there a version covering Americas as well?
Dunno. Pretty sure the WHO dataset would include it, at least for NA
Though per-country data in NA is less useful.
Wonder how things have changed since 2012, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I suspect it's simply based on old data, from when Russia, Lithuania, Estonia, Plland, Hungary, Romania, etc., were all just a giant blob labeled "USSR", for which no (accurate) data was available. If you look at "western Europe" as (I imagine) most people thought of it circa 1980, the Nordic countries are pretty high.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The conclusion supported by the data seems to be that the closer you are to financial meltdown, the happier (or at least less likely to commit suicide) your people will be.
Yeah I noticed too.
It's weird. I thought economy would overshadow any other factor.
The more Russian speakers, the more suicidal.
The only Russian I know is Abyx, and he's suuuuper negative.
17:23
Distance from Russia appears to correlate well.
Maybe that's a cultural thing.
Or maybe Russia makes everything worse for everyone.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It probably does have a large effect, but keep in mind how they got into the problems in the first place--largely by spending money on benefits without requiring people to pay enough taxes to pay for them. Those benefits probably do really help quite a few people who'd otherwise have serious problems.
Speaking French also seems to increase your suicide rate.
Inflective grammar.
What is a freeform question?
17:26
Explains Hungary.
@EtiennedeMartel It'd be interesting to see numbers for Belgium split into Flanders vs. Wallonia.
@Columbo question for which you write a full answer, as opposed to one where you pick out of some options.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's what I thought. Thanks!
@Columbo The easiest question to answer because if you don't know it you can probably just bullshit your way through and get at least some of the points.
Hah, wait. What about immigration?
17:30
@EtiennedeMartel Odd--when I was in school, I hated them. Even the shortest possible summary of what I'd learned about X involved a painful amount of hand writing.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't think there's a link there.
Oh, I'm just doing spurious correlations.
You spurious you.
("spurious" is a very cromulent word)
What's the source?
17:36
Better
Damn Nordics.
Funny to see the difference between Sweden and Denmark.
(I'm bored in line to return glass bottles)
France and... Portugal.
Well.
And here I thought Italy would do a better job.
Ukrainian immigrats correlates well, too
lol
@EtiennedeMartel They would (if the job was making shoes).
17:48
It even explains Portugal standing out among the Southerners (the second most common foreign nationality in Portugal is Ukrainian)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Did you have to sign one of these when you moved to Germany?
47
Q: Landlord is watching my data traffic

Olba12Update 12/09 I am moving to Germany, and in the contract I signed I had to accept that all my data traffic can/will be checked by the apartment owner. The contract states: Flatrate, aber hinter 30GB Tarif priorisiert, aslo etwas langsamer Ja ich weiss, daß meine Daten überprüft werden. ...

I blame typical Eastern European pessimism.
I, for one
I, 4 1
I, 41
1+ 41
42
Sounds like the sort of clause that shouldn't hold in court.
17:50
@Mysticial What is this barbaric language?
Wait.
That sounds like something the contract with the ISP would say, not the landlord.
@EtiennedeMartel Given that the language is spoken in Germany, it's probably German.
Sounds like the landlord just repeated the ISP clauses verbatim.
I.e. you rent it, get Internet access included, and you agree to the ISP terms.
That's what it looks like to me, which isn't as shady as the title implies.
@fredoverflow You see, the joke is we're all speaking barbaric languages because we're not speaking Latin.
You mean ISO 8859-1?
17:57
Smooth
@Mysticial I contracted Internet access on my own; my renting agreement has no mention of Internet access.
@EtiennedeMartel The Greeks used it first, so Latin is too.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah. That title is pure click-bait on the hot questions list.
@JerryCoffin Damn.
I could be wrong but it really looks like the landlord just covering their asses by making sure you use the Internet access under the terms the landlord contracted them.
I think public hotspots use similar agreements (haven't really checked them) for the same reason.
You often have to click some I Agree thingy to login to hotspots around here.
Originally the excuse was child porn; now it's terror.
The provider of the hotspot needs to cover their asses in case someone uses it for cp or terrorism or whatever crime. I can see the landlord being in the same situation.
18:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes ...and evidence suggests nobody reads them. papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2757465
When the landlord gets served, they can give your contract to the authorities to assign blame to you.
Also noteworthy is that the OP assumes it is the landlord doing the logging, when the contract doesn't really make that explicit. It just says your data will be logged [by someone].
Though all this collection stuff and blameshifting has been overruled by courts as unreasonable or whatever the legal term for voiding clauses for being abusive is.
In case you can't be bothered to read the paper, this was a study of who (if anybody) would read the contracts to which they were agreeing. They started with the agreement from LinkedIn, then made a few minor edits saying that by signing up, you were giving your first-born child to them.
That's new, though, so I'd still give them the benefit of the doubt.
@JerryCoffin I'm shopping so I just bookmarked for later.
I often read terms but my German isn't up to snuff for legalese yet.
If clang and GCC both accept my code and work properly at runtime, but VC++ doesn't work properly at runtime, can I assume VC++ is likely the bad compiler?
So sometimes I do the lazy option.
18:14
Hey guys, I got this sample code from the book called "Professional C++". Why should there be a `[0]` after that dereferencing? I can get it to work too with it->str(). Can there be other values other than [0] there?

    regex reg("[\\w]+");
    while (true) {
        cout << "Enter a string to split (q=quit): ";
        string str;
        if (!getline(cin, str) || str == "q")
            break;
        const sregex_iterator end;
        for (sregex_iterator iter(cbegin(str), cend(str), reg);
@user2296177 I always assume VC is the wrong one when it behaves different from gcc and/or clang.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What's wrong with this guy???
Reminds me of my days in Syria... wtf!
It's like saying: Don't close your bathroom door all the time, or otherwise people might think you're having heroin in there...
I like that one
@Morwenn I just dabble. But we discuss important proposals at work and that helps (sorry for late reaction, been traveling)
std::string str; should be outside the loop
As is, one of the benefits of getline's interface is lost.
18:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's a sample code I copied from the book :)
It's not my code! I wouldn't put that str in the loop
@Cubbi I was a little worried for a moment there. Mention of heroin use followed almost immediately by "I just dabble" didn't seem like a good combination...
Reconstructing variables consistently is something I avoid all the time...
Yeah, go all or nothing. No dabbling
@R.MartinhoFernandes As a long-time oxygen addict, I favor the "all" option.
I used to be a chemist, I'm used to people making those assumptions.
18:31
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do you have any idea why that [0] is necessary and whether other values are possible?
@Cubbi Hmmm...maybe that's how I should think about people assuming I'm a drooling idiot. It just reflects that fact that I was a baby once. Then again, maybe I should just learn to act less like an idiot. That would disappoint my mother though--she so wanted me to become president some day.
18:58
@R.MartinhoFernandes Actually I thought that sort of thing was illegal in germany
@Mgetz What's illegal in Germany?
Encrypting traffic?
@TheQuantumPhysicist spying on your tenants
Ah, that. Sure!
I thought that was restricted to the ISPs and even then they weren't allowed to use it for commercial purposes
I encrypt everything... I even use ssh tunnels for my normal internet usage
I think even ISPs need a good reason to do it
19:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
@TheQuantumPhysicist For some definition of "good"...
@JerryCoffin Sure... legal crap...
AFAIK privacy is quite a serious thing in Germany...
19:28
Woo got my copy of Baten Kaitos.
@EtiennedeMartel You're ready to put your "new" gamecube to good use, I guess.
Most of my favorite games are GameCube games.
@EtiennedeMartel I'm tempted to throw in something vague like "well, that explains a lot", but I've done little enough gaming that I really can't draw any larger meaning from it. :-)
@JerryCoffin No, no. Your remark is relevant.
19:58
@Mgetz It is.
2 hours ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Sounds like the landlord just repeated the ISP clauses verbatim.
In German, you also have to inflect abbreviations.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You mean when those college girls moved in, I wasn't supposed to put up a web cam in their shower? This is a violation of my rights!
Jh.: Jahrhundert (century-ɴᴏᴍ)
Jhs.: Jahrhunderts (century-ɢᴇɴ)
This makes sense, but irks me.
What happens if a cache-aware process gets scheduled between two cores with different cache line sizes? Bad things. http://www.mono-project.com/news/2016/09/12/arm64-icache/
/cc @Mysticial
Xeo
Xeo
@Borgleader Fun stuff.
As if multicore wasnt hard enough :P
20:14
@JerryCoffin protip you don't need to understand your own jokes to be funny. Your audience can do the legwork.
@Borgleader Oh shit. I was like WTF, until I realized it was ARM. x86 doesn't support variable cache-line sizes.
Cache lines have been 64 bytes for a very long time.
Hi!
I need to choose a problem with high computational cost to parallelize, what do you suggest me to do?
calculate pi :D
Yess, I was thinking on that
@milleniumbug Too obvious (especially when @Mysticial just posted something).
20:20
I had searched a little bit and I was finding in all places PI
@Borgleader Btw, my no-prefetch unit test run last night didn't fail. I'm running two more today. If I get home and neither one has failed, then there's definitely some funky shit going o. Prefetch instructions are functionally no-ops. They aren't supposed to have any side-effects on the program.
@JerryCoffin Precisely why I posted this
@milleniumbug thankss!
@QuicoLlinaresLlorens Here's a starting point: github.com/Mysticial/Mini-Pi
@JerryCoffin ok, I will take a look. Thanks!
20:21
@Mysticial "Effects: none (other than randomly crashing)"
@JerryCoffin Every time I look back at that thing, I laugh at how I managed to get that thing down to 1000 lines. And at the same time realize that I have something that's 100x faster and more than 200x longer.
@JerryCoffin There's slightly more than that. When I disabled the prefetch instructions, the compiler will optimize out all the pointer-arithmetic that's used to generate the prefetch addresses. So it isn't entirely accurate to say that the prefetching should have no functional effects.
@Mysticial Not a bad tradeoff (especially when you're the current record holder)
@Mysticial I'm almost surprised it's only 200x longer, considering all the "stuff" it does that isn't really related to the computation itself.
@JerryCoffin The program stands at about 340k LOC when I last checked about a month ago.
But that includes all the other constants and fluff like the stupid menus and shit.
@Mysticial I was just thinking of documentation in an Intel architecture manual. "Name: prefetch\nEncoding:0x12 34 56\nEffects:..."
20:26
And probably about 5k lines of just benchmark validation and tampering checksums - totally unnecessary if all you care about it Pi.
Probably another 5 - 10k lines of redundancy-checking related code which isn't necessary for a bare-bones Pi calculator.
@QuicoLlinaresLlorens I wrote a version that used C++11 threads instead of OpenMP. I probably still have it around if anybody wants it. /cc: @Mysticial: would you like to add this to the repo?
@JerryCoffin Sure. Send me a poll request.
@Mysticial I'll try to remember to when I get home tonight.
I won't be a hurry. Because of my fucking laptop.
The next thing I'm gonna do is to downclock the memory. Then pull out the 32GB that I got off Newegg.
@Mysticial Did you mean to ping @Aaron3468? Not that I'm not interested in your prefetching troubles, but you seemed to be having an animated discussion with them about it.
@Mysticial Ye, its ARM but still... fuck that shit
20:34
I read on Prime95's forum that a lot of the guys in GIMPS actually buy higher rated memory with the intention to downclock it because they say that the, "manufacturers are over-zealous with binning".
@Borgleader I wasn't thinking when I posted that. :)
@JerryCoffin I'm trying to think if I can squeeze out any intermediate speeds ups with a smaller factor in code increase. A factor of 2 is probably possible for maybe 300 more LOC. Maybe a second factor of 2 for another 500 LOC. Anymore than that, and I'll need to switch to the "heavy-weight" multiplication algorithms. The shortest one that I have stands at 40k LOC and requires binary arithmetic. But binary arithmetic requires a radix conversion - which is probably another 2 - 3k LOC at best.
@Mysticial how do you manage 40KLOC of code in your head, so to say?
It's not in my head.
is it a self-contained module that you just call functions from?
20:49
@iksemyonov Yeah pretty much. It does (more or less) one job - multiply a pair of really large integers and return the product.
i wonder how many people wrote it and how they actually handled the communication and maintained an overview of the whole thing
i'm quite sure it's not an one man's work?
somehow an "algorithm" sounds more monolithic to me than say an OS or an application
The shortest one I have is 40k LOC - dates back to 2008. I haven't really improved upon it much. The longest one I have is probably around to 80k including dependencies. That one is from 2012 and I still keep it up-to-date.
is it, like, your personal work?
that's fantastic
how long did it take to code?
20:53
Just to be clear, I'm not proud at how large these implementations are. Large is bad.
@Mysticial that's not what she said
@iksemyonov There isn't one answer to that. The first working version will be a lot shorter and unoptimized.
to be clear too, "how long" referred to the time it took
@Mysticial pollen alert
does it take any OO or other structural design to code this or is it mainly maths, asm, bits, that sort of thing?
20:58
It requires structuring of any kind. All complexity is usually managed by distributing over several layers of abstraction. How the organization is done is ... less essential
Hello from the Compiler Class.
Burn the witch!
We're talking about Ada, SNOBOL, COBOL, Fortran and now we're on Haskell.
For that 40k LOC one that I mentioned, the answer will range anywhere from 6 months to 9 years depending on what you measure:
- 6 months from start of coding to working prototype excluding dependencies.
- 1 year from algorithm conception to working prototype.
- 1.5 years from algorithm conception to first production release.
- 9 years from algorithm conception to last touch.

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