The suspect who killed 49 people in New Zealand is an Australian citizen. This looks like a diplomatic/judicial complication, albeit, on a small scale.
Thank you all for your answers for my "simple food when you're lazy" question, it made me realize once more that I don't have any meat at home though x)
@Mysticial The part about silent hardware bugs was nice, but the one that surprised me the most in the end and made me a bit sad abut all your work was the one about how CPU wasn't an issue anymore for pi and how network became the bottle neck ^^'
Also I liked that you're very honest about the shortcomings about your own tech
I did google search on this picture I have taken myself, 100% accuracy. It's an 'eastern prickly pear'. And according to stackexchange, its fruit is edible :p
@Morwenn I don't usually see cactus like this around where I live, but you go west inland, weather becomes dry and cactus is common. This was taken on a piece of rural land I visited yesterday. Apparently they didn't have any rain since Christmas.
I actually wanted to try the fruit, but I didn't know what it was and didn't know whether it's poisonous :p
One of the interesting things about the cloud PI computation was that it was comparably cheap to get the PI record (maybe $2k?) because you aren't paying for local network traffic. Although you'd pay for outbound/inbound traffic. I wonder if they will start charging for that kind of traffic. For example, you aren't charged for wearing the fuck out their SSDs, but you could be.
@PeterT I've done that before, but really the phase is phase shift between the transmitted (DC) and scattered (AC) light. So the phase shift is almost like a height map.
@Mysticial Actually I'd really like to see an estimate of the cost of the computation.
I pulled up some numbers for Google Cloud Platform server and storage pricing to see how much it would cost a layperson to do the 31.4 trillion Pi calc.
I didn't look into network costs, or extra time for configs/restart - just raw computation time. I get a price of $173,335.76
Although in practice its a little bit harder because you need to have multiple threads/mpi processes going to achieve it, as well as have the right placement/topology
In terms of usability its probably easier to do it on a real HPC system because the storage shows up as one single drive, and you use lustre user space commands to "bless" the folder with the IO topology (stripes, for example)
The fun part is that Blue Waters has the same cost for U of I and affiliated companies (John Deer?) as EC2 (although 10x too much for me).