@wilx Ultimately, they won because the court found that the specific intent of the wording wasn't clear, so they looked at the intent of the law as a whole: that in general, overtime work should receive overtime pay--and since the exemption didn't provide a clear and unambiguous statement to the contrary, it was best to follow the basic intent of the law as a whole.
@Mgetz That would be a disaster given how many security bugs OS's tend to have. And every fix would need new hardware. If you go the microcode approach, then it's not entirely hardware anymore.
@Mysticial Fixes wouldn't require new hardware--they'd just require a new bitstream for the FPGA. The point (I'd assume anyway) is that there's no circumstance under which user-mode code would have to write to that memory. User-mode code wouldn't be able to modify kernel code, because the kernel would be in isolated memory.
@Mgetz Seems like you could accomplish pretty much the same thing by simply putting the OS into ROM (probably Flash), and booting from there (and provide some independent means of Flashing, that doesn't involve user-mode code).
@JerryCoffin so the idea was to have something where the cpu can maintain multiple page tables simultaneously and have everything in "kernel" mode be asynchronous. The goal being to context switch VERY quickly so blocking isn't as expensive.
I believe there's also a purely marketing reason for not selling CPU in a form FPGA. Because users will eventually improve already sold units and would resist buying a new ones. :)
@login_not_failed That strikes me as fairly minor compared to the simple fact that the FPGA would be substantially more expensive and run substantially slower.
@Mgetz So what you want is mostly an expanded version of hyperthreading. I don't think you need an FPGA for that.
@JerryCoffin it should be far slower currently, but I was wondering about the theoretical FPGA, which would be not slower than current CPUs — direct replacement in speed
because it's a fairly bad deal if you trade speed for flexibility of updating your own CPU yourself
@login_not_failed A time will (probably) come when that can be built--but by then, the speed of a current CPU will look about like a 166 MHz Pentium does to us today.
@login_not_failed That depends. I've designed a CPU and implemented it in an FPGA. I enjoyed doing it and certainly couldn't have afforded to have it implemented in an ASIC. But yes, for mass distribution, it'd be a lot harder to justify.
@login_not_failed It is--but it's also somewhat painful. FPGA development tools (at least all that I've used) were pretty clumsy compared to software development tools.
When/if you decide to do it, I'd advise picking up an FPGA with at least one hard-coded CPU though. For example, the Arrow Sockit board has a built-in ARM A9. That way, you don't have to code circuits for everything, whether it really makes sense or not.
@Morwenn Well, the thing is until now at work I always was the one who did the stuff that nobody else would, because either too risky/too difficult/too painful. That's how I got outstanding results. Managing indian people is all three, so we stay in the theme.
@Mgetz ALU stuff is at least somewhat interesting, and reasonable to test, so I don't mind doing it. At least to me, having a fully tested, hard-coded DDR DRAM controller (for one example) was a much bigger thing.
Speaking of toilet bowls, I've been doing most of my moving recently either using a friend's car or by hauling suitcases across town. I don't normally haul suitcases at night since Chicago isn't the safest place in the world. And I've gotten to the point where all the cleaning supplies need to be moved.
So I have this used plunger. Which I imagine I can carry across town by hand. And if anybody has a problem with that, they are free to mug me. I'll be armed with a used plunger.
I tend to think of loans as wasting money when you are already low on it. A tax on people who just cannot stop themselves from living over their standard. But I'm overly idealistic when it comes to those topics.
@LearningCpp "but all my confusion was why not make_binary_object as the data may get really huge" - that's like saying "Yeah, thanks for showing me how to bake an apple pie, but all my confusion was why not use motor oil because it is very slippery".
Hoping to send this pupil a fasttrack to enlightenment, or he/she is going quite before they can fire him/her. For now I'm betting on the latter
The other thing is rent vs. mortgage. It'll take years to save up enough to buy without mortgage. In that time, the amount spent on rent will be larger than the interest paid on mortgage. (of course I can always opt to live in a shithole, but I'm not gonna keep living in a shithole until I'm 40)
@Xeo That's that part that I'm scared off too. But it's easier for condos since you simply pay an HOA fee and the building management handles (almost) everything.
@Mysticial Fair enough. You always hear about ridiculous renting prices in major US cities, but I would never think it would be that bad. Good for you.
@StackedCrooked To some extent or other, yes. Unfortunately, you generally pay for it in other ways. The state with the highest effective disposable income (i.e., taking cost of living into account) is North Dakota. Its neighbors (South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas) all do pretty well also. So, you have quite a bit of disposable income while you freeze and die of boredom.
@Xeo A house generally means a much longer commute.
@slaphappy There's no place to park. I've been using a friend's car for all the big stuff. And he's usually sitting in the street watching the car while I bring stuff down.
I was driving to Los Angeles from the Bay area, and was on a wonderful, straight road with no cars in sight. For whatever reason (doesn't matter) I was briefly speeding around 111mph (179 km/h), and was pulled over by an officer. This isn't on an interstate road.
Some facts:
I was driving a re...
The most I've ever done was 90. And that was with a very stable car on a straight country road with no other cars and I wasn't looking at my speed gauge when I realized that the wind was kinda loud.
@hwlau But German drivers are typically better at driving than Americans. If you're going 200 km/h, you have to pray that nobody in front of you spins out of control. And that happens all the time in the US because nobody knows how to fucking drive.
I'm exaggerating. But I do keep hearing a lot about how it's really hard to get a license in Germany and therefore everyone who drives is really good at it.
Whereas in the US it's really fucking easy to get a license.
So there's a lot of shitty drivers. Not just that, but shitty drivers with one hand on the steering wheel and the other hand along with their eyes on the fucking phone sexting with their partner in the passenger seat.
> Frazier Glenn Cross Jr. (also known as Frazier Glenn Miller), 75, was convicted in 2015 of three murders at the Overland Park Jewish Community Center and Village Shalom, a Jewish retirement community. Cross, a white supremacist, had gone on a rampage in 2014 because he said he wanted to kill Jewish people. None of the people he shot was Jewish.