Fake bravery is when you drive a boat to a remote island, get into water & being the only one in the ocean there. Then sees a large octopus wondering whether it's poisons. But soon after sighting a 1 meter fish/shark, quickly get back into the boat and never being back to the ocean again.
It should not matter that the map is in shared memory, at least not for the access itself. But maybe you need a semaphore or a mutex to prevent multiple, parallel access. — Rene4 hours ago
That's a nice underestimation
People tend to forget that while allocators are a nice abstraction, shared memory allocators are necessarily stateful, and stateful allocators require lots of library support and hand-holder by the programmer. — sehe6 secs ago
I'd tend to agree: AMD is doing well, but Intel is still selling chips (at a very decent profit margin, I'm pretty sure) about as fast as they can make them.
How do they even work? "You are required to only buy Intel for the next 5 years otherwise we can sue you for all your assets including your children for slavery?"
Or is it buying 5 years of hardware/support, but paying upfront for it?
@Mysticial No--they had some on that general order at one time, but they've been judged illegal. Now they're mostly: "you guarantee you'll buy at last N million dollars a year, and we'll guarantee your supply, and give you an M% discount."
@Mysticial It is, but from what I understand, Intel will typically offer a much bigger discount if the "N million" is as much as you stand much chance of selling. As I understand things, if (for example) HP is doing poorly on sales at a given moment, they're often better off selling some at a loss than cutting volume and losing their discount.
@Mysticial It certainly still includes a very decent profit margin for Intel--but I think the base price is the same for everybody, so if one manufacturer gets a 30% discount, they really are getting it for less than a smaller vendor that only gets a 25% discount. To be honest, I think the big attraction for both is generally stability though.
A difference of 4% on the CPU isn't going to kill HP or Dell, but knowing they'll have supply, and won't have to pay triple if the supply runs short matters a lot (and the same, of course, with nVidia, memory vendors, and so on).
IOW, people aren't going to easily switch from something which they know works.
I'd also loop that into brand loyalty. But one of the reasons for the stability is probably because of the wide margins. Once there's any market pressure, the margins will start thinning out and they'll start to cut corners - which will bring down the stability/quality.
@Mysticial Not so much track record, but Intel guaranteeing that they will provide N chips per quarter, and if chip supply runs short, you'll still get a supply even if others can't. Good bet that Intel pays a hefty penalty if HP or Dell needs chips, and Intel can't supply them (up to some limit, of course).
So, you and I buying chips one at a time on Newegg (or whatever) are subject to a lot of fluctuation. HP and Dell already know pretty well what they'll need to pay Intel for a CPU in (for example) the run-up to the Christmas season of, say, 2020.
@Mysticial More or less, yeah--basically a privately run commodities market.
@JerryCoffin That has me wondering. If the retailer (like HP or Dell) has higher demand that is needed to satisfy their end of the Intel contract, they are free to buy AMD right? Is it illegal to have anti-competitive clauses in such contracts? (i.e. "You cannot buy non-Intel or else...") And if it is legal, how would Intel even enforce. (though I guess Intel can just probe their product line)
It's perfectly legal, however, for them to say something like: "you sold a total of 3 million PCs last year. If you agree to buy 3.3 million CPUs from us annually, we'll give you a 15% discount" (so they can now get 3.3 million CPUs for less than they'd pay for only 3 million without the discount).
Anyone tried to rewrite old async code with C++ coroutines? I've found that they don't really work with weak_ptrs - have to write lots of boilerplate. Any workarounds?
A few days ago, multiple own apps malfunctioning, multiple places & other issues need resolving back in Sydney. I wanted to be back in Sydney to solve all those problems. But now holiday is ending, I would rather be out here swimming with tropical fishes than solving all these problems :/