@sehe Most likely missed any real unpleasantness, but got upset when somebody complained about a "microagression" (which, more likely than not was something like: "that's undefined behavior").
If anyone has heard talk about the golden lands of Discord and want a ticket, here it is. You'll be stuck in a lobby at first, I forget why... join us, we have cookies, for ourselves
@PeterSommerlad union is fine. enum should just be an alias for an int, disallowing operator| and friends is stupid, pointers are fine. I have more problems with, for example, C's usual arithmetic conversion.
A friend of mine trades Bitcoin and often asks me to pick up money for her, i.e., someone sends money to me (on my name) and I just pick it up and give it to my friend. The amounts are usually around $500.
Is this legal? Can I get into trouble doing this?
I have no idea who the senders are. T...
hah, I read something like this in Wired a few years back.
The lady got involved with some online boyfriend (it was a scam) who eventually asked her to do exactly this. Pick up money and drop it off somewhere, always <500$ (because thats below the limit that banks check IIRC) and eventually she got caught by police and the "boyfriend" disappeared soon after (more like immediately)
When I saw the title in the side bar I remembered that article immediately. No way that shit is legal.
@Borgleader The population has certainly dropped. Interestingly, the number of arguments and flames seems to have dropped pretty dramatically just after LRiO left...
@Mgetz The number of thread in general dropped. Real question would be whether the percentage of inappropriate threads dropped (but yes, it probably did too).
It just came to my attention that when flagging (not VTC) a Question as duplicate one is presented with the following options:
As we can see, among those is the "a duplicate..." option. However, if we select the "should be closed..." option instead, we are presented again with an option to fla...
@Mikhail IPC has been saving Intel for a while, but pretty soon they're going to have to get on the stick and get something below 14 nm to work, or AMD's going to steal more of their lunch.
@JerryCoffin the major concern that I have is that Process technology always used to be Intel's bread and butter. It's how they could get that IPC. But with their process tech lagging Global Foundries and Samsung at this point that advantage is negated
@Mgetz Global did a half-shrink, so to speak. Honestly, their shrink from "14 nm" to "12 nm" probably doesn't do much more than achieve close to parity with Intel's "14 nm". For the last decade (or more) nearly everybody else's "nm" has been rather larger than Intel's, so even at the same (claimed) process node, they've still been a bit behind.
@Mikhail The only recent talk I've heard of a Broadcom merger was with Qualcomm, and that got blocked (but still put enough pressure on Qualcomm's board that they laid off ~1200 people last week).
A tensor processing unit (TPU) is an AI accelerator application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) developed by Google specifically for neural network machine learning.
== Overview ==
The tensor processing unit was announced in 2016 at Google I/O, when the company said that the TPU had already been used inside their data centers for over a year. The chip has been specifically designed for Google's TensorFlow framework, a symbolic math library which is used for machine learning applications such as neural networks. However, Google still uses CPUs and GPUs for other types of machine learning. Other...
@Mikhail you used a double negative in your original assertion, I had to respond with a negative to negate the double. So yes I think they are massively overvalued
I guess my point is that ASICs are getting cheaper in the specialized hardware market. GPUs are still expensive at that range, nearing ASIC prices. The ability to dictate your own hardware is a massive incentive to NOT use a GPU
@Mgetz Specialized hardware has always been cheaper. This is just a matter of the ML market settling down enough that you can reasonably hope to design and use an ASIC before it's obsolete.
@Ven I'm going to take over Robert Martin's job, and write about best practices for how to create an interconnected network of no fewer than 17 classes and 14 interfaces to have the user enter a number.
What's happening?
There's a plethora of posts on Stack Overflow Meta as a result of the latest blog. They're not hard to find, have a look.
Is Stack Overflow really racist/sexist?
By saying Stack Overflow is racist/sexist he’s saying that I am racist/sexist, which offends me deeply. And he’...
@JerryCoffin Don't forget the most important part, at the end say "This development strategy works for every situation, and if you later find it hard to understand / maintain, you probably just implemented it wrong" without giving any real practical examples.
@Mysticial The last sentence is the best part: "I'm going to do my best to start a huge fight, then disappear, instead of taking any chance of contributing anything constructive."
o/ Just a very quick question for anyone around and who knows anything about it. I'm writing my honours dissertation and need to know if PBKDF2 is still secure, I've seen a number of posts on SO and InfoSec, but most seem pretty dated, anybody know much about it?
@JerryCoffin It makes me feel that moderator elections are almost a joke. As a constituent, there's no way you can possibly make an informed decision on candidates. This type of confrontational behavior is something that would come out early in say a US presidential election. But of course we can't go to those lengths for SO elections.
It used to be better. But ever since they took out comment voting during elections, it makes it very difficult to bring up issues for candidates.
@Mysticial Yeah, I dunno. The part I find disheartening is that both the blog post, and this post seem to be saying that we can make a big difference without lowering quality standards, but neither seems willing to tell us what that would actually be/look like. About the only suggestion I've seen is: "don't be mean/rude in comments", which is fine but unenforceable and (I think) mostly pointless.
Most posts I've seen reddit, quora, etc. complaining about SO pointed specifically at questions that were either unanswerable, or else people felt insulted when they were told that their duplicate question was a duplicate.
@Mysticial ...and that's fine--if they admit that they're hoping for input into how to make things better. But they all seem to be written with a tone saying: "I know how to make it all better", but then either don't suggest anything at all, or give the same tired old suggestions about limiting comments and/or chat, as if either of those hadn't been discussed to death and clearly shown ineffective already.
@Mgetz Whats the actual process for testing in shops that do Qt? How can you even write validation tests without the GUI elements in place. Honestly, I'm curious wtf people do.
@Mysticial I think they started a problem where non-existed.The site could keep running fine, and they have a massive potential to monetize from things like job boards, spin-off projects. I really suspect Jay Hanlon had nothing better to do with his time. I mean, if he did nothing, he wouldn't get paid right?
@Mysticial Also all the solutions to fix SO are really good. Its a shame none of them will be taken.
@Mikhail I suspect they've seen posts (and they certainly do happen) elsewhere complaining about SO/SE, looked at the post-#metoo political climate, and thought it would be a good thing (i.e., more profitable) to work at being more welcoming and inclusive. They have a fundamental problem: they still want us to provide them with free answers, but they want to do even more of what's driven most of us away.
@Mikhail Everybody who feels left out, picked on, ignored, condescended to, or hurt in any other way tries (and usually succeeds to some extent) to conflate themselves with whatever "minority" currently has a particularly visible and obviously legitimate gripe. It's the "metoo" to the "#metoo" movement... :-)
In this case, "minority" in quotes because regardless of how they're treated, from a numerical viewpoint, women are actually a majority.