How to passively becoming the worst (because both of your neighbours and the building opposite the road have all been newly built within the past 5 years).
What could a genius mind do if (s)he does not arms, legs from birth and has to depend on others to survive? That's what the best A.I. could do without a robotic body.
This would my pitch line for my next A.I. robot venture. But I have nothing to pitch for the next 2-3 years.
Brain-to-body mass ratio, also known as the brain-to-body weight ratio, is the ratio of brain mass to body mass, which is hypothesized to be a rough estimate of the intelligence of an animal.
@Mysticial Read and write are about 2x higher than they should be. Especially for sequential. Some kind of caching, optimization is happening. Try running a more thorough test.
Anyways the moral is that with increasing IO speed, CPU micro optimization is dead (especially manual vectorization) and everybody should use GPUs or be fired.
NVMe has this problem. There are no back planes that do NVMe. So you gotta pay about $500 to merge the drives on PICe, then merge the PICe drives on the OS level. Not fun.
Actually it appears SuperMicro released NVMe backplanes
One of my experimentation boxes has a 2-drive 2.5" back plane box in the front drive port. Basically I put the 2.5" SSDs in the there one at a time and do full installs and shit. Which I can easily swap out.
That sounds boring. I would be impressed if you figured out a cost effective way to convert PICe lanes into nvme storage. Like getting PCIe expanders and breaking out into cheapo-mc-cheap-face SunRich (tm) expanders. Then fill it with $20 SSDs.
Those drives aren't plug in, therefore whatever benchmarks you are showing, or have shown are falsified. This chat isn't academic research, you can't just make stuff up.
I have spent a couple hundred dollars on a printer that's almost as bad as the free one I previously owned. It's a lot faster and can wifi print. But other than that, it's almost as bad, 50% of the times I would encounter either paper jamming problem or printer head clogging.
Printing at great speed = paper jamming at great speed.
I built eight storage nodes for >$15k, with mixed success. Overall, what I learned was that you need more 5V power than is typical of a gaming PSU and Adaptec is a shit RAID card but better than competition.
At the end of the day, the only way to get better SSD sequential write speed is to use a more robust foundation. I for one, after many years of trial and tribulation, have learned to prefer plastic mats for my servers.
But on a less serious note, recent changes to Qt's build tool (blog.qt.io/blog/2018/01/24/…) have lead to parallelization of the build process, and substantial wall-time improvements. Maybe 25% out of the box.
I told some chick at the bar to use a GPU and she got confused. For some reason only dudes are interested in seeing my DGX-2.
The tragedy is that with all those PICe lanes, I still need to actually work.
Also, if the lack of moderation on this chat website will allow me to express potentially subversive and dangerous opinions, recent progress in machine learning has shown that training neural networks leads to over-fitting. Whats interesting is that if you keep training, keep overfitting, most models will actually start performing better on test data.m In most cases you cut training off when you get worse results, but if you kept going, you'd get apotheosis.
@StackedCrooked On my downloaded, but not yet watched list. :)
@ScarletAmaranth Only partially though. The entire unit is 100% hardwood floor - including the bedrooms. So I wanted some carpet back without actually getting rid of the really nice hardwood.
Other thing is that the office chairs damage the hardwood.
I kinda like damaged hardwood floor; it's there to be used - but I understand not everyone likes the wear and tear - also a single carpet can help a lot to absorb a lot of dust, sort of gathering it for easier hoover action
@ScarletAmaranth I also like to walk around barefoot.
The unit class (the's a bunch of them on different floors), is supposed to have carpet in the bedrooms. But for some reason the previous owner ripped it all out and put hardwood in it. They also used area rugs to in the bedrooms.
I'm about to pull my hair off, perhaps someone can help me out with a task about making an old game work on my PC
the last track I get is faulty module: ntdll.dll
But I'm almost certain the DLL is fine, and it's the program acting up instead.
For background, the game's called Ground Control, it's developed in C++ 6.0 if I'm not mistaken, and throws an error at some instruction, but I'm not proficient in C++ or assembly yet, so I literally have no idea what's happening
then again I don't have the game source code, so I can't correct the mistake myself
What exactly are you expecting from us? You cant correct the error cuz you dont have the source code, and all the info we have is that it throws an error on "some instruction"
If you can get the game working on a different computer and have debuggers on both working and non-working, then you may be able to step through the program to see where the behavior starts to diverge. Then reverse engineer from there. This is how people crack DRM.
Might be easier to try and run it in a VM with an environment similar to what was common when it was released
(unless youre already doing that ofc)
I say this because for a long time (and maybe still) drivers had to list OpenGL extensions in a really specific order because Quake only allocated a very small amount of memory to receive them and so if the ones it needed didnt fit in that amount the game couldnt run
So its not impossible that it would be a similar kind of bug
@Mysticial Indeed, this game gave me a decent dose of trouble back in the day. Everything seems to be hardcoded and you have to pray with all your inner strength
@Borgleader I was running a W10 Pro VM because I wanted to mirror the environment I had as close as possible. It worked there but only while I had dgVoodoo configured to fit the VM settings, now that I removed those settings to make room for the debugger it's crashing.
Now I'll create a WinXP machine and see what happens.
But I'm afraid I probably won't be able to hook my VS instance into such an old OS
Okay, so I created a new VM, the game's working in it. I attached the debugger, now the problem is that I can't attach in time to get through the same instruction in time