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01:45
could someone help me with c++ problem I'm having?
 
3 hours later…
04:55
Is Mercedes Benz pickup truck considered luxurious automobile?
05:33
Today, I witnessed two common mynah bird running after a large group of school children, It's so weird.
 
1 hour later…
06:47
Now that this chat room is empty, I can voice extreme opinions that will would get me fired if I had a real job. For example, I've been preferring inheritance to composition in my settings data-structures and its helped reduce a lot of code bloat, especially when it comes to passing arguments to functions. Now you can do stuff like compute_engine.do_work(item,settings,settings,settings)
07:09
:o
In the std::future we'll be able to write compute_engine.do_work(item,auto,auto,auto) and later just compute_engine.do_work() where the arguments are determined from the closure alone! And if its ambiguous, it will fill them out in order of declaration!
 
2 hours later…
09:25
How to use a variable to elegantly represent schrodinger's cat?
09:43
make it an atomic variable
09:55
Good idea, I never thought of schrodinger's cat as a variable that has one presentation but can be read and written by two or more possible worlds with intermediate state undefined.
 
2 hours later…
12:32
Best troll I have heard since Monday.
Although I don't know many guys who would wear a green hat other than on San Patrick day.
 
1 hour later…
13:51
> would we teach that vector of int would be view and vector of string would not
what
 
2 hours later…
That's super cool :D
Yeah. Didn't see that coming.
16:10
@StackedCrooked I actually had to keep this one super-secret since Google told me they were going to make a big deal about it.
Yeah, I was kinda surprised you hadn't mentioned it to us before.
How big is the deal though?
lol
@StackedCrooked It probably would've been kept a secret even from me had they not run into some minor UI bugs.
17:01
@Mysticial I found it quite funny that they really just ran your pi cruncher :D.
17:11
@Mysticial The story ran on the BBC as well although you and your program were not mentioned, just Google.
Google managed to... run the program? Yey.
There's a thing in std:: that does this the static cast dereference part of: template <typename X=decltype(*static_cast<Iterator*>(0)-2)> right? What's it called? My google-fu has failed me
they ran it on the cloud though
@ScarletAmaranth Google is really getting it from the HN thread for that reason.
I don't understand why they don't credit you first and foremost and say that they just provided hardware infrastructure or some such
(I can't blame BBC or other media tho, the reporters probably don't understand what transpired there - I blame google for not being more forward about this)
17:23
Google has nothing to gain from promoting me.
If anything, it's quite the opposite. Because yes, they didn't write the program. The person who wrote it (me) left them years ago.
yeah the irony is quite sweet
people who don't know any better already knew Google anyway - and people who do know are now aware of how crummy Google can be - those could be, perhaps, potential employees
@ScarletAmaranth though their own article is a bit more forward about how great cloud is for doing this
The other thing is that I've gone to quite extreme lengths to hide the complexity of the computation inside a single closed-sourced program. So it sorta devalues my contribution quite a bit to outsiders. Though all the technical people will easily see through it.
it's quite easy to say that "just as you run your Microsoft Word, Gooble ran Yee's picruncher"
well, picruncher is quite a bit more involved if memory serves
but still not as involved as writing it ;p
17:32
ok let's try this one; "just as you run Vim..." ^^
@Puppy That's correct. None of the records have involved "just throwing it on a machine and running it". All 6 of the records done using y-cruncher have had significant involvement with the person who ran it.
I don't run Vim, I have brains
This time, it turns out that GCP can't handle memory-intensive loads very well.
For example, the program overwrote the 1.4TB of memory every few minutes. That basically fucked up their live migration.
The NAS nodes had some timing issues that caused them to unmount in Windows. Emma had to hack the registry to work around that.
While decompressing the 31.4 trillion digits, she hit the 16TB EXT4 filesize limit and wasted 10 hours.
And then there was that silent hardware error which scared both of us shit. Because it meant we couldn't completely trust the hardware anymore.
And then there are areas where she had to work-around limitations in y-cruncher.
y-cruncher asynchronously creates checkpoint files. You are then supposed to manually stop the program and manually backup those files.
She had to do some crazy scripting shit to "detect" when the program creates them and automatically make those backups in a manner that wouldn't collide with the program while it was running.
I like how you're being 1000times more honest about this than the entire fucking Gooble :)
So it's something I've put on my to-do list in the future: Make the backups more automatic.
17:51
"It would take 332,064 years to say the 31.4 trillion digit number." - thanks BBC
@Flexo std::declval
@ScarletAmaranth Google is a great place to work. But it doesn't mean that people won't leave for other opportunities.
@Mysticial Sounds like a nightmare of a job.
All those hurdles.
@Mysticial they used their former employee's program and didn't even bother to credit properly is what I see right now - but I've heard good things for the most part as well
@StackedCrooked can't wait for the new Neverland! (@Mysticial you gotta start watching the show)
Oh right, it's today.
18:05
... pfft; forgetting that...
@StackedCrooked Yeah. After each major computation like that, I try to tackle some of those hurdles for the next one. And then new ones pop up after that. It's a never-ending journey that I've never really talked about.
@LucDanton thanks
@Mysticial Btw, I could be wrong, but it seems like the disk and network bottlenecks can be overcome with todays technology. A 100 Gbit/s network card can send the data to a switch that distributes it to the storage nodes. That would give you ~10GB/s. (And there are also 200/400 Gbps cards.)
Not to mention double bonding.
@StackedCrooked Yep. Emma mentioned that when she flew over last month to plan this and the conference presentation.
She admitted that GCP's interconnect is shit. And wasn't really designed for this kind of high-bandwidth HPC stuff.
They are working to improve that. But all other details are still secret.
18:15
One wonders what exactly you're paying for in that case.
But the live migration thing was probably the biggest unexpected problem.
Most live migrations take minutes, but migrating this computation easily took hours and IIRC, she said it timed out one of the migrations.
So overcoming that barrier was an accomplishment that's worth talking about. I don't recall if she did anything on this or whether it was just a "wait it out" or "don't migrate that often" sort of thing.
Live migration meaning that they node to clone the state of the program and run it on another node?
yeah
They do copy-on-dirty or something like that. But when everything is dirtied every few minutes, it causes problems.
Heh. It's kinda cool that your program brought it to its knees.
Why are they shuffling live instances every few minutes?
18:20
They did it once a week. It's just part of the usual GCP policy. They didn't do anything special to the platform. The point was mostly to prove that it can be done using out-of-the-box GCP.
It also took more than half an hour for the program allocate, NUMA-interleave, and commit 1.4 TB of memory each time it had to be resumed from a checkpoint.
But that's pretty common. It can take a minute on my own 128GB boxes.
18:51
Lol, why do they feel the need to explain what PI is and why it's significant. It's taught in elementary school at around age 10.
Don't assume people go to school. :)
But then they don't explain what "terabytes of storage" means.
Much storage. Pretty constants.
19:12
what meaning does frontticks (not sure if thats the correct name) ´ have in c/c++? Im trying to run a code example from a C book, but the code example isnt working and giving me an syntax errror
give up now
You can't use those in C++. It only allows single quotes and double quotes.
@abobakrdy it means whomever formatted that book messed up
im trying to run it in c, i was thinking maybe you guys knew since c and c++ share some similarities
hello
dealing with shared_ptr is a nightmare!
19:20
but thanks for answer
ARGH!
@abobakrdy definitely forget C
@puppy What do you mean? Forget about using those characters in C?
well I more meant that C is a shit language that's not worth learning
@sergiol Not as bad as dealing with raw pointers.
@Puppy Hey, it's been a while!
19:30
Im sure there are better languages, but ive heard its great to learn to understand how the computer works and thats what im up for.
@EtiennedeMartel yo
I've heard your country is going straight to hell.
well that's really a misconception
we're busying arguing about taking the scenic route to hell or maybe an all-expenses-paid holiday to hell
Ah
@abobakrdy C is going to help you learn how an abstract machine works, but it's not really a computer.
perhaps a Boeing 737 Max 8 to hell
19:34
Those don't fly a lot these days.
I think that was the idea
@abobakrdy Like, people seem to think that C is a low level language that gives you direct access to the metal, but that's incredibly far from the truth. Modern programs go through tons of layers of abstractions. If you want to learn how they work, learn about operating system design, processor architectures, that kind of stuff. You won't really have a good grasp of how stuff works under the hood simply by using a programming language, regardless of how "high" or "low" it is.
As it is, C just gives you a lot of headaches for not a lot of good things in return.
@EtiennedeMartel Thanks for tips. Ill definitly look more into that.
20:46
This is not an invitation. It’s a challenge.
This is your chance to join thousands of coders, creators, and
crazy ones this summer to do the insanely great.
Apple's WWDC19 email. It's not an invite, but I am not mentally challenged, so it does not apply to me.
So many interesting things to do, I wish I have 800 hours per week.
Field day again today, better put on a lot of protections. Got bitten raw by fleas last time when off to inspect some farm land.
 
2 hours later…
23:25
Fuck. Our university is dropping imap support, and switching everybody over to shity outlook.com

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