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12:23 AM
@JerryCoffin Hey, I wrote code exactly like that for my thesis =)
 
@CaptainGiraffe I extend my sincere condolences (albeit, somewhat belatedly).
 
@JerryCoffin My memory is that I very much enjoyed writing that code. It might be a mental defect, but I imagine it boils down to writing productive code is building stuff. Building stuff is fun.
 
@CaptainGiraffe Fair enough.
 
building stuff others like to use is fun
if none ever want to lay a finger on it, you wouldn't be as motivated
 
12:38 AM
I'm nowhere to be found on "social media" But the only time "Cpt. Giraffe" is to be found outside of stackoverflow is on meta in a high profile question. There I get to understand I'm a part of an inhumane toxic wasteland. I don't care much for the person that wrote that.
 
Also I don't take this 'want to do go but plan has unforeseen consequences', I call that be dumb. Being an intelligent person one should be able to see 3 steps ahead, involving both action and reaction ... at least be able to correctly forecast reactions.
 
@TelKitty If I could see even one step ahead, I'd be a multi-billionaire. "If I put this on the market will it make me a lot of money?" Yes? Awesome!
 
there are not too many intelligent people, but enough to crowd your path
for example, top 0.01% being intelligent, with 7.6 billion people you still have 760,000 competitors
that's enough to block your path in every possible industry, and remember there are heaps people born with literally billions in their future bank account (adjusted for inflation)
and also, some intelligent people's end goal is not money, after all money is only resource, one of the most commonly accepted resource
@JerryCoffin so yeah in order to become a multi-billionaire, you need to 1) like money very much 2) start with enough resources 3) have enough good luck and 4) being reasonably intelligent
 
That is a perfect example of seriously fucked up use of arithmetic.
 
but ... maths don't lie :x
 
12:53 AM
@TelKitty I disagree. If you actually knew up-front what products would succeed, you wouldn't need a whole lot of resources, and you wouldn't need to like money all that much. Most people who make a lot of money are fundamentally finding a problem people have, and fixing it. Wanting to successfully fix a real problem for a lot of people doesn't require that you particularly want money.
 
I knew Sydney property would make a lot of money - with leverage, literally 3 times of my initial investment between 2012-2017, just no bank would lend me all the money for 3000 properties, otherwise I could be a billionaire now.
@JerryCoffin Also ... fixing problem has costs, making people aware of your solution also has costs. Even if you have a medicine that can make people live forever and free of charge , can you use $0 marketing cost and make everyone to be aware of it in 1 years time??
 
@TelKitty I don't recall mentioning anything about "in 1 years time". While you have some point, the fact is that I've made enough money (especially when I was single) that if I'd invested even a little of it even sort of well, I'd have more than I care about by now.
And if I'd known something would succeed (to even a semi-reasonable degree) it would have been pretty easy to convince myself to make such an investment.
 
the problem is that ... opportunities are everywhere around us, most of us just miss them all
it's hilarious
you don't need them all, you just need 1 big one to succeed :p
 
@TelKitty It doesn't even have to be all that big. You just need to be able to sort out a few reasonable winners from those that will be complete losses.
I guess I can't really complain though: I've pretty consistently just invested my time in things I enjoyed, and it's worked out reasonably well so far.
 
1:18 AM
I always thought genius are not those who makes billions but those who are extremely good at reaching their goals. Like ... Issac Newton, Marie Curie or John Maynard Keynes amongst others.
 
@TelKitty I dunno about billions, but having enough money that you can do exactly what you want to, instead of spending time supporting yourself seems like it would be a fairly substantial step toward achieving whatever goal(s) you had.
Just for example, Newton's father was a wealthy farmer. He died shortly before Newton was born, and when Newton was three, his mother wed another wealthy man. When Newton's mother died, he inherited enough money that he didn't really need to work.
 
my macbook is in a zombie stage ~_~
France Avčin (6 October 1910 – 21 February 1984) was a Slovene electrical engineer, inventor, and mountain safety expert
what a weird combination
also intrigued by all the myth surrounding Nikola Tesla and whether it's true
 
2:24 AM
registered_only_error
how to write obscure error code
 
2:54 AM
ERROR: Could not complete request.
Query: SELECT "INBOX"
Reason Given: [SERVERBUG] Internal error occurred. Refer to server log for more information. [2018-05-11 21:53:48]
thanks ISP, I asked you to fix thunderbird problem not ruin squirrelmail settings!
 
 
3 hours later…
it appears to be some sort of adorable canine
 
my cockerels are constantly hungry, the previous hour I would have given them a plateful of veges, rice/bread, nuts/cheese or meat. The next hour, when I open the door, they will try to eat my toes :(
@jaggedSpire that's really funny
 
thought you'd appreciate it :)
 
6:50 AM
Good morning
 
good morning
 
@jaggedSpire It is neither good nor (for another 4 minutes) morning.
 
@JerryCoffin Move east :)
 
or much further west
or north for that matter ...
 
@jaggedSpire The correct phrase is Head East!
 
7:02 AM
 
@JerryCoffin how do you feel about something a little more instrumental?
 
@jaggedSpire There's certainly instrumental music I enjoy, but I can't say this is really my cup of tea (but then, neither is tea).
 
fair enough
 
7:26 AM
@TelKitty :(
 
7:38 AM
Should I write some code in C++?
Need to analyze a lot of nuerscience, nueron data
Got to do peak detection
 
 
6 hours later…
1:18 PM
@thecoshman bought another bike for the missus ;)
 
@makerj That actually works. Consider making that an answer. — nwp May 1 at 15:11
@nwp Our paths cross at the mainsite again :)
 
@BartekBanachewicz How's she doin?
 
@Mikhail is there no standard software for that task
 
1:45 PM
@Shoe enjoying her 8mo vacation before last uni year
 
 
@BartekBanachewicz oh, she drives bikes too now?
 
2:31 PM
@thecoshman she always did, the small one last year, and now she's doing A2
 
Oh right
 
And we got a 125 for now
 
 
4:08 PM
@BartekBanachewicz Nice
8months seems a lot
 
 
2 hours later…
6:33 PM
Has anybody actually improved performance with __builtin_prefetch?
 
I've heard factorio had some success
 
7:17 PM
@Mikhail No. But I have with _mm_prefetch().
 
Besides bench-marking, is there any good way to verify the pre-fetcher is doing what it should be?
 
@Mikhail VTune it. And compare the CPU-time bars with and without prefetch.
 
My memory access pattern is pretty predictable, but the stride is bigger than the cache (about 20 megabytes)
I don't remember how to check that with vtune...
Do you just compare bandwidths to the theoretical?
Wait, it has them as hardware events...
 
7:35 PM
More surgically than that:
No Prefetch:
With prefetch:
 
So, the time per line, right?
 
Pretty much. And relative to the stuff around it.
There's 3 sets of expensive operations in that example. The 1st and 3rd are memory accesses. The 2nd are long latency instructions.
Notice how the 2nd set doesn't change much.
But the 1st and 3rd drop dramatically once prefetching is enabled (elsewhere in the code that precedes this loop).
 
I see. Anyways, I need to get back to coding.... scuttles away....
 

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