But amazon is based in Seattle, they probably think kindle is great for their weather ... if amazon is based in, say San Diego, they probably call it the likes of 'sea breeze'
I was thinking making the drone to scope and dump dry ice into bush/forest fire
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix too small ... probably all vaporize when enter atmosphere
Hard to compare but I'd say your CPU is likely to win because not only because it has more cores but because you're also likely to have much faster memory than I have
It is. In many senses of the word (I bet Reiser4 became much more reliable, but it would be too late for many to notice. JFS and XFS have taken the cake)
@Borgleader Only valid option for Windows is hardware RAID. There is a good article by Toshiba (?) showing how storage spaces quickly serializing any array that isn't pure SSD.
Storage Space (TM): you got 24 drives, but when you add them with RAID6 equivalent parity they end up going as fast a single drive... Which really sucks.
I'm looking to have a NAS for storing files that I can share between computers (mostly videos and music) but I also want to store backups of my machines on them. I need a solution for surviving a drive dying.
There seemed to be a discussion of various filesystems vs RAID going on
If have set up a pair of virtual ethernet devices veth0 and veth1:
ip link add veth0 type veth peer name veth1
# Bring the interfaces up
sudo ifconfig veth0 up
sudo ifconfig veth1 up
sudo ifconfig veth0 1.1.1.1
sudo ifconfig veth1 1.1.1.2
Inside my application I connect to veth0 using a raw ...
@sehe Don't got the time to improve it. But you're not wrong, serious users use other software/networking solutions. I've been using this crap because my lab is financially destitute, but also because I messed up and thought it would work...
I would strongly discourage anybody from using the accepted answer, a better solution is to crawl the top level directory and launch a proportional number of rync operations.
I have a large zfs volume and my source was was a cifs mount. Both are linked with 10G, and in some benchmarks can satur...
@BorgleaderSee the top of my wall of images, I rationalized posting it here because I'd already solved the problem and wanted to complain about C++, although I failed at doing that because of my own lack of knowledge.
Sure you fixed it, but your complaint was essentially "ugh, the first one didnt work and I dont understand why so I'm gonna blame C++ for it" and that is pretty much asking for help understanding why it didnt work
ahh... & * have so many different meanings I feel like a dozen or so different keywords, so that there's one for each usage, would be so much better <- is this something that should go in this chat or the Questions chat? 0.o
I tried to scan the whole process for some reason, but it cauesed crash. I do not understand why that happened. What's another equivalent but safe way to do so?
void searchAddrByValue(const int value) {
int *p = (int *)0x00FFFFFF;
while ((int *)0x0FFFFFFF >= p) {
if(value == *p)
...
@TelautonomousKitty You might be able to order those separately. They should not be overly expensive. Though I would wait until they are unusable and not just a bit scratched.
@Permian not sure about him but I got most of my compiler knowledge by watching presentations by compiler writers and my language knowledge by reading authoritative sources on the language
@thecoshman According to Google walking from Ghent to Lyon would take 135 hours. That's 11 days if I walk 12 hours per day, or up to 22 days if I only walk 6 hours a day. How many hours would be reasonable?
I suppose it depends on whether there's anything interesting to do besides walking.
Oh. And I'd need to find a place to sleep every night. Hm.. that sucks.
I would recommend you stick to civilized areas in the beginning so you can call a taxi or pizza when needed. Also getting a travel buddy who did that before would help.
I linked to the resources you need to understand that. Just don't expect to understand the C++ compilation model fully in minutes. Take your time learning this new language. (Note: if you're in fact in the same course as Andrea, remind them to accept the answer if it helped :)) — sehe32 mins ago
lol seems I guessed correctly, since Andrea just responded.
Okay, I'm lost. LLDB shows that RCX is filled with some pointer value, yet the instruction it segfaults on, which loads from RCX, segfaults with fault address 0x0.
@Columbo register is a hint only (like inline). So volatile is not strictly the same (you might know that in this case the same code is generated, but)
@sehe In this context, it is part of the syntax to declare a variable that will be initialised with the value of a register? I said "makes no difference" because I tested it, anyway :-)
Just for fun, added 10 different distributions with those properties: Live On Coliru. Pick the normal distribution, unless you know what you're doing : ) — sehe7 secs ago