Oo gosh, the reason why ssh stopped working had nothing to do with communication channel, but it was simply because that the Arduino was not externally powered, so whenever Pi was turned on, it starts to steal power from the Raspberry Pi. Pi didn't have enough power so shuts down itself involuntarily :/
@Mysticial so the answer to the "Will it run crysis" question is more complicated than normal. Because it will run crysis... even completely CPU rendered (GPU rendered is plenty fine).
I'm resigning as a moderator from all Stack Exchange sites, effective today.
I didn't make this decision lightly, frivolously or suddenly. A persistent pattern of corporate missteps, and a monumentally deplorable moderator dismissal, has compelled me to re-evaluate my relationship with Stack Ex...
It's been happening with users for a while. SE and users have completely different paradigms that have become mutually incompatible. Mods are getting caught in between - especially since many of them are users themselves, but have a gun pointed to their head.
“Worryingly, you’ll have to plug the gadget into an outlet. Autoblow says its AI was trained by a group of people in Serbia, who used a specialized browser plugin to, uh, simulate the up and down movement using their mouse, as Engadget reports.”
On days like these I'm proud to be part of the AI revolution
@Rick I use them every (working) day too. For example, part of what I work on at work receives data from any of a number of different sources, wraps data in IP packets, and routes them to the appropriate processor. All the input processing, routing, and output processing pieces have concurrent queues between them so each can operate asynchronously from the others.
that's like many different hands stacking cards on top of each other, why is FIFO ordering so important in this case?
and the order is only preserved from the perspective of the incoming thread. how does that ordering help the consuming threads if there is any benefit at all?
In one of my codes, certain work items carry a higher priority, for example those that are associated with the GUI. Specifically, when the user presses a certain button, a picture needs to be taken, this has priority over the passive dumping of already acquired images. In summary, when the GUI is running, the code is constantly dumping any acquired data to the disk (often take a while, as the acquisitions are TBs), but user interaction takes a priority over this.
but that's relative if you are dumping data into a shared FIFO data structure, if you dump more data on top of that users pending request, that user is still at the bottom of some process that sorta seems arbitrary with respect to some priority
As an aside, I really, liked Bjarne Stroustrup's thoughts on the direction of C++ (from CppCast), where he noted one big problem in getting the same algorithms to work on the small and large scale. Today I encountered this problem when doing some optimization that involved taking the std::max() pixel wise across images . So, std::max with and without a loop.
@JerryCoffin So the intermediary step of wrapping where a more localized queue assembles packets at some level of the hierarchy provides locality. And this provides the central processing queue context about priority?