@Mikhail I think we need to charge them some interest on these words we're loaning them. Of course, any claims about our owing interest on loan words from the French or Italians are obviously specious nonsense.
@Mikhail Speak for yourself. "Coffin" is about as English as it gets. The name's been traced back as far as a knight who fought for William the Conqueror.
@Mysticial That actually came rather later. Back then, "coffin" and "casket" were still basically the same, and "casket" was still closely related to its root "cask". They all basically just meant a sealed container (though I believe "casket" originally meant a relatively small one).
@Telkitty Even before I lived in San Diego, I was married to a lady from the Philippines--which was ruled by the Spanish for ~6 centuries, which is closely reflected in both her maiden name and her first language.
@Mikhail You're probably right. Any such money would probably go the family estate, which was sold off some years ago.
I believe there's another estate that's still owned by some sort of relative, but a rather more distant one.
@JerryCoffin It is interesting to trace back last names. My Uncle did something similar while were going through my grandfather's things after he died. He found what appeared to be some sort of "ancestory" list. The last thing on the list is my grandfather's name. The next one up is his father. Going up a few more and neither my mom nor my Uncle recognized any of those names.
Supposedly it went back at least 10 generations. I'll have to ask him about it.
@Telkitty I hate when the fences go out and dig holes. Damned nuisance if you ask me.
@Mysticial Yeah, my younger sister spent some time tracing things back when she was high school age or so. It was pretty easy on my dad's side; she wanted to trace back on my mom's side as well, but that didn't go nearly as well. Mom's Irish, and her maiden name is so common in Ireland that it's nearly impossible to know where to even start.
And it's almost impossible to trace back mother-to-daughter chains because it's usually the father's name that gets passed down. So you'd need a mitochondrial DNA test.
@Mysticial I suppose that could at least theoretically be an option now. In the late 1970s (or maybe just barely into the early 1980s) when she was doing this, I'm pretty sure the option wasn't available at all.
mtDNA is an interesting problem in information theory
It's basically an organism that has been in a fixed environment for a billion years
The coding density is insane. Every single base pair is part of a useful gene. Some are multiplexed where reading the same segment of DNA with an offset produces a different, useful gene
compare to nuclear dna where the vast majority is basically scaffolding for attaching molecular machines or otherwise non-coding
@ArkadiuszKoćma No deity needed, optimization towards an energetic minima. With static conditions resilience to change is not needed, so redundant information is lost over generations
Sherlock is a crime drama television series based on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes detective stories. Created by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss, it stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Doctor John Watson. Thirteen episodes have been produced, with four three-part series airing from 2010 to 2017, and a special episode that aired on 1 January 2016. The series is set in the present day, while the one-off special features a Victorian period fantasy resembling the original Holmes stories. Sherlock is a co-production of the British network BBC and the American...
@Mikhail No arguments, except with the last point. For example, Loss of information into the nucleus makes it particularly more compact, and in many cases, denser (information) than would be expected of a "wild" prokaryote with the same "complexity".
Someone earlier was complaining about folks they work with that refuse to use mutex/lock for shared variables even when its obvious its needed
@crasic It certainly makes it potentially shorter but it doesn't affect the ratio of coding/non-coding sequences. You might be surprised to learn that substantial portions of the effective gene repository can be shared among the population, to the extent that a single bacterium would be unable to survive alone (or more specially, would be unable to metabolize certain kinds of sugar).
So VTune has this "HPC Performance Characterization" profile that basically looks at your program and sees how well it does. And it give you warnings when something looks bad. However...
1. It bitches at you if your CPU utilization is less than around 90%. For fucks sake, I have to navigate a fucking UI to start the computation. And it counts idle time waiting for cin as an "inefficiency".
2. It assumes that every HPC application is floating-point. So it bitches at you if you use anything less than like 50% FPU utilization.
3. It doesn't take into account for hyperthreading when calculating your FPU utilization. So even if the application is 100% floating-point, you can never get above 50% utilization if you have HT on. (since it thinks all cores are real cores)
4. It assumes that all FPU applications are 100% FMA'able. So if your code is all addition, you can never get above 50% FPU utilization (25% with HT).
IOW, it always bitches at you.
@Mikhail I would presume it can't distinguish waiting for user input from waiting on network or I/O.
If you fix both of those, you will get very high "instruction retirement" since you're keeping everything busy in perfect balance. But then it bitches at you for that because it wants you to "change your algorithm to use fewer instructions" - which includes vectorization - even though I'm already 100% AVX512.
There's no running away. It's like somebody is getting paid for the number of warnings it can give out.
In the function analysis, it randomly bitches at you for functions with very high CPI (cycles per instruction). It's random because it may bitch at one function, but not another function with an even higher CPI.
Even though the FPU utilization thing is useless, it does give per-port utilization. Which shows in the high 60% for ports 0 and 5 (the two AVX512 ports). Which isn't bad since it the shit is memory-bound anyway.
Visual Studio
I am a computer’s nightmare,
Because it takes a ton of time to compile even simple programs
but a programmer’s best friend.
It does make finding and checking errors easier
I am both the cause of a problem and the source of its resolution.
Sometimes gives idiotic errors, solution...
Since it says "On Windows, you may use your favorite compiler" you could declare msvc to be your favorite compiler, but expect to be accused of lying or having terrible taste. — nwp18 secs ago
Apparently I'm pointlessly hating now. What have I become?
ldd, not 1dd. You "get the same error messages" - what. You realize that in command1 && command2 command2 never runs if command1 failed, right?. By the way, that's the GCC verions, not distro version. — sehe5 mins ago
@sehe I'm in a SSII so technically I still have a job (my current missions ends in two weeks), but it's likely that they won't find me another mission near my town, so I'll eventually refuse mission elsewhere, get fired, and look for another job
@MarkGarcia Personally, I don't understand the Tesla lineup. They had more RAM and better double performance. The more RAM happened because it was actually two cards (which is a bitch to code), and the better double performance isn't something I needed. COGs on the stuff I make has to be 10x, so if we stuck one of these into our instrument it would bump the cost by $100,000 :-)
wow, @JerryCoffin, this lounge is dead! have you considered using that discord application? I've heard old timers are using discord more often than this chat.
@CaptainGiraffe My passport is currently expired, so my hairline (like the rest of me) has to stop short of crossing the border. Living in San Diego, that means none of me can go very far south at all.