@wilx About 3/4 of them are able to implement the hash table. Among those, about half are able to do it with the thread safety reqs.
I have the feeling that the candidates that I get are already heavily filtered before they get to me. I don’t see a lot of shitty candidates. But I hear about it a lot from my colleagues.
@Mikhail These are for direct hire full-time positions. The bar is lower for fresh grads as they’re they go into a separate track. But the job isn’t guaranteed. It’s more like a super-extended internship.
I don’t think we’ve ever hired a software dev straight out of school.
Many 'top talents' hired to solve a 1 dimension problem - $ can only go up or down. Algo trading, spin the simplest maths concept into most complicated ones since the 20th century! -Telkitty
Fuck, I've gone too far, I'll never get a job using std::mutex :-)
Also one of our machine learning DCNN keeps overfitting, somehow I don't think synthetic data augmentation will help. I'll cite one Mikhail Belkin's paper on the interpolation regime to explain why.
@Mikhail Don't worry, 90% of programming jobs are "How do I get the data from the database to the UI and back? And how do I make sure I don't have to rewrite every year?"
And interviewing fot these jobs typically doesn't require you to implement hash tables.
@Mysticial Does lockfree simply mean compare-and-swap?
Well, most of the jobs I applied to were pretty good, and they did require that stuff, and I got a few of them. Personally, I'm probably going to go entrepreneurship or medical image processing, as faculty jobs are requiring past a 800 citations (these days, for men in my field).
Lock- free data structures seems like something you would use for mapping a maze or constructing one. So I would think you would encounter them in games or any big data organization
1) Instead of lock free, just go single threaded (or task parallel), or use mutexes 2) wtf is a big data organization? Some failed SQL business like Palantir?
@Mikhail companies that implement stock market trading algorithms, NSA, Google, Facebook, Alibaba. Anywhere they scrape the web or any large dataset in real time or as fast as possible.
@Mysticial Yeah, like java.lang.String.hashCode which uses a lockfree int for caching purposes. Because it doesn't matter if multiple threads "interfer" with each other, they're all going to compute the same result, anyway.
When you think about, it's irony - computer science is all about getting every bit right, being 100% correct, but the fields where the people who use it and get paid top salaries are the ones that doesn't need 100% accuracy. Trading - statistically, you only need to get it right 60%-70% of the times in order to make money and in search engines, well, you just have to be better than the rest. As long as you return top 30 out of 1000+ relevant results, you could be possibly fine.
@Rick Accuracy is not referred to the code itself, but the results the program produces.
For example, in high frequency trading the program might be to decide whether to act on an order and execute a trade. The aim of the program is to make an profit on those trades. The reality is that a certain percentage of the trades produced by the program would be losing money.
So in a way, the programmer is indirectly 'guilty'. Not as the mastermind, but as the henchman.
If by losing money you mean, not talking risky decisions. Algorithmic trading capitalizes on speed and strategy. I don't think any single software engineer can take on that kind of responsibility, unless they are a genius. In which case they shouldn't be working for anyone to begin with.
Kind of funny. If msvc doesn't implement a standard feature they get hounded until it's implemented. If gcc and clang don't implement it, then it just gets removed a few versions later
@Rick A bit like our brain works, imagine a software that can eyeball the result of some operation. Say x * y is somewhere close to z.
The result isn't accurate but can be quite close to what's expected.
You could make a sort alogirthm that sort complicated data structure very quickly without ensuring that the list is completely sorted but can give margin that 90% of the element are sorted
I'm always amused by the fact that hash tables in theory are one thing, and in reality they can be an absolute performance nightmare if they don't handle the cache correctly.
so in Big O the constants out front of the runtime are removed. If the constant for O(1) is massive... and the constant in front of O(n^2) is small or 1 then for smaller values of n it can dominate
lets say the constant is say... 72... then until n is 8 n^2 could be faster if the constant on the n^2 is 1
sometimes O(1) can be amortized and implementation matters, for example, if you are using pointers. If n is small, sometimes a sort can be faster nlogn than a O(1) "hash" if you are using a library and you don't know how that "hash table" is implemented and what that O(1) is actually based on.
another example is merge sort, because it uses a data structure that is inherently slower, do to the data structure used in the merging and the physical limits in the material physics of the chips. In this way, It turns out to be slower than the theoretical time complexity would state.
Ah okay, if we're using unspecified constant the algo will still be faster but in different usecase it would could behave differently if you can't just swap the algorithm. In the case of insertion sort, it makes sense if you can keep the structure mostly sorted.
@Rick quicksort would be cool with unlimited amount of cpus
@Mgetz ...which is why most implementations of quicksort switch to using insertion sort once the partition gets smaller than some preset size, of course.
@Mgetz They're still trying to sort out the conundrum: "he said he voted for Trump, but if so it's a lie, so he couldn't have voted for Trump, but in that case it's the truth, so he actually did vote for Trump, but ..."
She wasn't worried to get deported to Canada. But being Russian entering US border without visa isn't a good mix.
I heard a few months ago, a French citizen accidentally crossed the border between US and Canada without documents on herself. She got arrested and put in a cell for 2 weeks before she could actually contact anyone who could confirm her identity
As we entered the border through border agents, we only had to have some paper work filled so they could send us back to Canada. Things would be different if we crossed the border somewhere else thought
But knowing how border agent fingering and such Canadian citizen there is a bit to be scared off sometimes
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I don't really think of Canada as a separate country even though it is. The border seems more like a formality than substantive. I really wish they would remove the border altogether. I would like to be able to drive up to the arctic in the summer without a passport or needing to take a boat/plane.
Except it's not as simple as that, if people were just traveling for tourism there wouldn't be any issue. Otherwise Canada would get filled up by illegal immigrant from the US.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I can guarantee there was more to that story. Customs doesn't just do that arbitrarily. Usually there is something fishy going on.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix did you accidentally go to the border? CBP would probably just want to call Canadian authorities and confirm the permanent residency and then allow her to withdraw back to Canada.
@Mgetz no we crossed the border where we should so everything should be fine and everything was fine, just 1h30 paper seems a lot, when we entered Canada we waited 5min for validation and we were on our way.
@Mgetz I believe attempting to enter the US without a visa is illegal as well (but yes there are lots of reasons other than tourism and refugee--student visas, various work visas such as H1B, and so on).
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix so there are two schools of thought here: A) anything not explicitly outlawed in the law is legal. B) anything not explicitly allowed in the law is illegal. Traditionally (A) had been the de-facto standard. But we're drifting dangerously into (B)
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix well legally yes you're supposed to be innocent until proven guilty. But if the law is altered to such that they only have to show you did X rather than you intended to do X (mens rea) then that has a massive impact on society.
more and more mens rea is removed from the requirements of proof
Mens rea (; Law Latin for "guilty mind") is the mental element of a person's intention to commit a crime; or knowledge that one's action or lack of action would cause a crime to be committed. It is a necessary element of many crimes.
The standard common law test of criminal liability is expressed in the Latin phrase actus reus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea, i.e. "the act is not culpable unless the mind is guilty". In jurisdictions with due process, there must be both actus reus ("guilty act") and mens rea for a defendant to be guilty of a crime (see concurrence). As a general rule, someone who...
@Mgetz I'm not entirely convinced. This summer, my son and a bunch of his friends decided to go to Tijuana, and one of them (whose parents are actually from Mexico) accidentally left his passport in the car. Basically all that happened is that he had to sit in a waiting room until one of the others went to the car and got his passport.
@JerryCoffin I was being snarky? Although US citizens have technically been deported before (they were mentally handicapped or didn't speak english at all)
There was also the recent case of a US Citizen traveling on the wrong passport for dumb reasons nearly getting themselves deported (this was all over the news)
@Mgetz Being fair about it, there have always (or for a very long time, anyway) been crimes that didn't involve actual intent. For example, manslaughter is specifically for cases where there wasn't actual intent, only negligence (if intent could be shown, it would be murder instead).
@Mgetz Oh, I quite agree that in some (many?) cases things have gotten quite insane. Some of it reminds me of the kid from down the street when I was probably seven years old or so, whose reaction to anything he didn't like was: "I'm gonna sue!" Of course, at that age he had no clue of details like civil vs. criminal law. Now we have some adults with the same attitude and little improvement in judgement or knowledge.
@Mgetz It's been a mess for a long time. The court of appeals for the federal circuit was formed specifically because it was a mess--but the SCOTUS has written some rulings that were pretty unclear, ambiguous, and so on. Especially when it comes to questions like the dividing line between patentable inventions and unpatentable ideas, I doubt there is a nice, clean, clearly-correct decision to be made.
Zen2 is TR with 7nm CPU... in other words, it's a huge cpu that almost nobody needs except that you could potentially used the higher end one to run games without graphic cards but just raycasting realtime