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11:03
... the feeling when you have spent an hour copy an OS with data from one SSD card onto another, then finds out that the copied one does not boot ...
nwp
nwp
Forgot to copy the boot, can't walk on bare metal without them. Classic mistake.
11:29
Apparently it should be a few simple clicks, boot sector is automatically copied .. but never trust what an online instruction says, and watch what it actually does.
 
10 hours later…
21:28
is it true that C++ sucks and Python rocks ?
 
1 hour later…
22:41
The other reason to hate RapidJSON is to for writing JSON, using fmt:: is probably faster (no need to form a graph etc)
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn You'd be really wrong. Even on x86, you can get massive boosts in performance by optimizing caching. Good example is image processing where local pixel neighborhoods are often stored as a kind of auxillary structure to better hint at caching. The technique is less black magic on GPUs which provide explicit cache control interfaces: cs.ucr.edu/~nael/217-f15/lectures/217-lec8.pdf
you can see things like Halide or even TensorRT that try to optimize across this dimension youtube.com/watch?v=1ir_nEfKQ7A
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Its also amusing to see the big picture:

Caching hardware, is provided by CPU vendors to essentially improve performance when code execution is sub-optimal

The intention of optimizers is find an execution schedule that maximizes cache hits etc, so that data is basically just streamed through the cache.

With the right compiler you could deterministically schedule everything and throw away the cache (and save a bunch of silicon)
also fuck temperature dependent DRAM memory refresh

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