@wilx 5 speakers + 1 sub yes, and they are positioned for my tv (2 of the speakers are as behind the couch as i can with the space i have)
for the PC not right now, i used to have 2 of the bolted to the ceiling behind me but then i moved the pc and havent gone through the hassle of doing that again
Also fuck Bazel release 19 for not detecting the version of CUDA I'm running. Bazel version 18 just looked it up, version 19 wants some fucking environment variables set.
But in my opinion, cat fights between countries can be good for innovation and real progress of humanity - when ones existence is threatened, one will stop investing in money making scams and start focusing on what real matters.
That's why two of the biggest discoveries - nuclear bombs and internet, both were invented during war times.
... waiting for 'interesting' period to unfold ...
The guys at Jet Brains are pushing hard for the "use brace initializers everywhere" style. The style is not possible to do safely/efficiently without their code hinting tool. Is this some kind of conspiracy?
Facebook offered big tech firms more user data than previously revealed
I don't know why people raise their concern about their own privacy yet offer their personal info online for free.
I have learn the lesson the hard way some 10 - 15 years ago being pretty much the first internet generation. That's why I generally do not use social media. I am sure whoever really want to contact me will find a way to contact me. People who have not contacted me because either they do not know me or don't want to contact me. Sometimes when you put up hurdles, you get higher quality people.
@Mysticial so weird thought this morning: all the Spectre and Meltdown issues with hyperthreading... one of my professors did research on this in 2002 it looks like DOI: 10.1109/MICRO.2002.1176268
Well, I have settled with ffmpeg -y -i "$f" -vcodec copy -filter:a "[in] dynaudnorm=b=1:f=1000:c=1 [out]" -ac 2 -c:a libvorbis -qscale:a 4 -reserve_index_space 50k "out2/${f%.mp4}.mkv"
I tried pan plugin but you have to supply the downmix formula. I tries several, the last being FL<FC+0.707*FL+0.707*BL+0.3*LFE|FR<FC+0.707*FR+0.707*BR+0.3*LFE but I wasn't sure. Using -ac 2 sounds good enough.
@Mysticial yep, he was describing how deep pipeline CPUs with hyperthreading can experience architectural level Denial of Service attacks by forcing either cache thrashing or pipeline flushes IIRC. His target for this research was netburst because it was particularly vulnerable to it.
I don't think he thought about the side channel attacks, if you think about it the new 'attacks' are just weaponization of his research. He found IIRC that you could easily get IPC rates of 1 instruction per 200 clocks. And if you found a particularly bad case you could get upwards of 1 instruction per 2000, but I'd have to look up the paper to confirm it's been awhile since he told me about it.
In theory everything he thought about is still true, and can still be used to bring systems to an absolute crawl
> Glium is no longer actively developed by its original author. That said, PRs are still welcome and maintenance is continued by the surrounding community.
@towc please observe how you've spent more time pondering on the OS to use than it took me to set up entire multi-component build chain for Rust on windows and compile not one, but two example projects basing on two different frameworks with native C++ dependencies
Used to be the old school way of "cracking" hex rays
`1>ptxas C : /Users/QLI/AppData/Local/Temp/tmpxft_000048b4_00000000-6_kernel.ptx, line 17789; error : Call has wrong number of parameters 1> ptxas fatal : Ptx assembly aborted due to errors`
@BartekBanachewicz as have I. Honestly I don't use it because I don't like the ergonomics of the language itself. But there are good things about it that I do like the concepts of.
I'm joking of course. I think the thing is that I'm learning c++ to actually kind of relax and goof around, with the intention of eventually getting somewhere, at this point
@towc Does not mention std::string. Does not mention standard containers. Reimplements sorting. Mentions "on older compilers you may want to #include <iostream.h>" implying as if you may want to use >20 year old compilers.
So regarding books, I bought C++ Primer a good while ago and liked it, but it was a good while ago
from what I've heard though, right now there aren't any great books that are current, so picking something relatively modern, say C++14, should be okay
got any example challenges that have very unintuitive better solutions than what I'm probably going to come up with, so I can ask about them and look them up?