@MarfGamer Unless it's good code, just leave it without a license. It's on github so the code is recorded and dated if anybody's silly enough to copy an enthusiast's private project
> Because what list of the worst ideas ever conceived would be complete without a baby Chewbacca watching a robot fail to give an instructional video for 8 minutes?
I'm basically getting tons of spurious, useless profile information from MSVC2015 trying to slice off ~2ms from my parallel queues by removing locks etc.
Also going to need to replace all reference to std::mutex because MS sucks
When I dip my dirty paws in the soft feathers of my well fed chicken, I have a moment of pleasure. Sometimes I pat her a little, sometimes I give her a light little squeeze. She often turns around, get close to me and look at me with those loving gaze
Who the heck buys Mac Book Pro nowadays .. It has become pro machine for web surfing .. due to limitations imposed by apple. Here is a real pro machine for sweet 4400 USD;/ http://www.techradar.com/reviews/razer-blade-pro-2016
@Mysticial well man... those 700 Bucks.. not big deal for me,.so. And I would say those who are willing to be smart in investing of their rig probably go for cheap ES xeons on ebay
The GetSystemTimeAsFileTimeAPI provides access to the system's wall clock in file time format.
A 64-bit FILETIME structure receives the system time as FILETIME in 100ns units, which have been expired since Jan 1, 1601. The call to GetSystemTimeAsFileTime typically requires 10 ns to 15 ns.
In or...
Another interesting attribute is the mismatch between units, NT internal resolution is in 100ns BUT the winapi resolution calls like TimeBeginPeroid are in ms.
Unspayed cats and dogs will have a period – or more correctly – come into heat. In female dogs, at the onset of heat, the vulva becomes quite swollen and will bleed. Some bitches bleed so much they will leave spots of blood all over the house.
Calls to timeBeginPeriod/timeEndPeriod or NtSetTimerResolution may change the system time by as much as ActualResolution. Doing it very often results in considerable changes of the system time.
I am trying to create a class which stores its instances in a map like so:
class Apple {
public:
static Apple* getApple(const std::string &name) {
auto it = allApples.find(name);
if (it == allApples.end()) // if this apple doesnt exist, make a new one
...
@Mikhail Depends on how you do the linking. If you link by name, you're usually pretty safe. If you link by ordinal, chances of breakage approach unity.
> You can buy a brand new Cessna 182 today, and they want you to put 100 octane leaded fuel into it. It has an 8.8 liter engine with an 8.7:1 compression ratio producing 250ish horsepower. Now, forget motorcycles for a moment: my car puts out the same power with a 3 liter engine and a 10:1 compression ratio, and it runs on 87 octane pump gas with God only knows how much ethanol blended into it.
I learned of this as one way for an AI in a box to obtain "arms".
Design an appropriate genome, cross an air gap to access the Internet, find some dirt on an individual with suitable personality traits, and blackmail them into ordering some specific proteins from such a company and produce the organism you designed. Once that's done, you are bootstrapped.
> Kolos ma ponad 6 metrów długości i waży przeszło 40 ton. Napędzany jest 12-cylindrowym silnikiem diesla o mocy 640 koni. Jazda nim to kosztowne hobby: pali od 360 do 460 litrów ropy i 30 litrów oleju silnikowego na każde 100 kilometrów.
The western blot (sometimes called the protein immunoblot) is a widely used analytical technique used in molecular biology, immunogenetics and other molecular biology disciplines to detect specific proteins in a sample of tissue homogenate or extract.
Artificial antibodies are created that react with a specific target protein. The sample to be tested is prepared and put together with these antibodies on a membrane – if the specific protein sought for is present, after a gel electrophoresis step this will result in an accordingly stained band on the western blot.
A number of search engines, such...
It is a good idea to to keep member variables as private; however, you should give them access by set and get functions which must be public. — macroland1 min ago
@BartekBanachewicz Arguably this is better than ordering 3D-printed robot parts, because the organism can assemble itself from a microscopic seed, i.e., the schmuck doesn't need to know what is happening.
There are 2 hard problems in computer programming. Cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors. Your choice of two variables leads you to having a "cache" of the value (am I alive or dead?) in two spots. Don't make hard problems for yourself. — Yakk20 mins ago
@Ell Not being a comparison sorter, it's doing a lot of work behind the scene to handle many types. I'll feed it to my benchmarks in the evening to see what it's worth.
Maybe it is time to change all passwords to different long random passwords.
Now that I think about it writing the passwords on a post-it and putting it on the monitor is not actually terrible. It doesn't get hacked and people with physical access to your monitor can screw you over without the password.
@BartekBanachewicz Those post-it notes are not that hard to transfer, they fit in a wallet nicely. And arguably you are screwed anyways when your wallet gets stolen.
@ThePhD Definitely less paperwork. I like the work itself better, but it takes up quite a bit more time, leaving less to spend with my kids. Pay is a little hard to compare, since I moved from Colorado to California, so cost of living is higher. If I were still single, consulting would probably be better financially, but my wife can't "keep her hands out of the cookie jar". For example, when I was consulting, I got a $30K check once.
I figured we had enough to live for at least 4 months, probably more like 5, and if were careful could probably make 6. With my wife managing the money, however, it all disappeared in something like six weeks.
@ratchetfreak No. The part that pissed me off more than anything else is that about $10K of that I can't account for at all (and yes, we have....discussed....this at length, with no resolution).
@ThePhD Well, there's no question that I've bought made some pretty impractical purchases at times, but I've always been careful to assure that necessities took precedence, and I really did have something in exchange for the money. The strange thing, however, is that many purchases I made knowing they were completely impractical, actually ended up working out pretty well financially.
@ratchetfreak If anything, my wife tends toward the opposite of that--she'll scrimp and save, squeezing the last penny out of costs that are already so small they make no difference, then turn around and waste 1000 times that much on crap we don't need, and as far as I can tell even she doesn't really even want very badly. Practically every time I work on cleaning up stuff in storage I run across something she bought N years ago that she's never even bothered to take out of the package.
For example, just a few weeks ago I found a 2014 wall calendar still rolled up and sealed in its original packaging.
@ratchetfreak I don't think it can be done. I dread the ensuing fight, but I think about the only way I can get things under control is to open a new account to which she doesn't get access, deposit my checks there, and simply give her some "allowance" that she wastes however she feels like.