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4 hours later…
10:17 AM
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5 hours later…
3:36 PM
Using popular reddit threads as a source of revenue on Youtube.
 
 
8 hours later…
11:19 PM
You guys working on anything cool?
I took up a mini project doing LabView
 
user7659542
@Mikhail what are yuo working on?
 
user7659542
@Mikhail yep a fixed wing UAV, from scratch
 
So, I'm trying to wrap a SDK for interferometric reconstruction into LabView VIs
Performance is getting fucked due to deep copies and function call overhead
Without changing the source, LabView lacks a mechanism to wrap a pointer
 
user7659542
@Mikhail wow, it s been a while since I heard that word. Interferometry...
 
Its a pretty stupid concept :-)
 
user7659542
11:25 PM
What is the application?
 
Mostly because it only makes sense for coherent fields :-)
@traducerad phioptics.com
My hobby is doing free work for these guys, in exchange for arbitrary job titles
 
user7659542
@Mikhail yep and IIRC sunlight (our major source of light) is not coherent, right?
 
user7659542
@Mikhail why do you need to wrap pointers?
 
Kinda. The ultimate problem is that the only thing that is coherent in the optical is a laser. Everything else is pretty random (incoherent) and people start splitting stuff into spatial and temporal coherence (which is wrong...).
1
A: External function to user displayed image

Joe FriedrichsenThere is a vi.lib VI not on the palette that you can use: GetValueByPointer. Detailed walkthrough For the step-by-step explanation, see this NI document. 2D arrays are represented as an array of arrays. Since an array is really a pointer, a 2D array is a pointer to an array of pointers, whe...

So the dude that answered my question works at NI (makers of LabView)
In short the SDK returns internal buffers, and I want to avoid deep copying these.
This is the the 3rd commercial SDK I wrote and I think the only thing I've learned is to provide a bunch of functional signatures to enable many kinds of interop.
 
user7659542
sigh
 
11:29 PM
Although really, I've learned nobody cares about performance, and you should deep copy all the things.
 
user7659542
labview is definitely not my thing. I'd just end up making my own components writing C code in stead of using all their components
 
So, basically academia is a bunch of 30 year old people who haven't been able to find jobs. These guys can barely connect a wire. So, it takes them months to control a camera using LabView VIs.
 
user7659542
@Mikhail their products look expensive
 
Microsocpes cost from $100,000-$1,000,000
 
user7659542
not bad
 
user7659542
11:32 PM
would you be able to build one yourself in your garage?
 
I would but nobody else
Last guy that did it, got a noble prize. Although he probably spent $100,000
 
user7659542
Everywhere I worked after a couple of months I always to the conclusion that I now can build that company's product in my garage and sell it for 50% less
 
Have you considered working for Intel :-)
 
I would like to know how to build a 300kg mini micro excavator from scratch.
 
user7659542
@Mikhail so even all the optic parts and so on or only the sw?
 
11:34 PM
The only kit I found does not ship to Australia.
 
I also designed some of the optics.
But basically, you buy stuff from other people and put it together.
 
user7659542
@Mikhail well... I have! They have offices in Dublin. This being said, when you read their job description, they seem to want the creme de la creme and the unicorns
 
user7659542
for the interesting vacancies
 
Where you the guy who goes to SPIE?
I'm going to be in SF on the 31st
 
user7659542
Nope
 
11:40 PM
Yeah, I'm going to be really sad when I discover I'm not worth as much as I think I am :-(
The thing I really like about LabView call graphs is that the functions aren't called before all conditions are satisfied.
There is some C++ library from UIUC that had the ability to trace out this kind of callgraph/processing workflow but it coupled poorly to underlying low level threading primitives, and had no immediate way to avoid deep copying memory.
If you're moving around 40 megabyte images, you can't deep copy for every step.
 

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