Comment Re:How about this comparison (Score 2, Funny) 752
Alright wise guy. Explain twitter.
Alright wise guy. Explain twitter.
Minor nit: fetch prediction logic in modern processors has to deal with unconditional procedure calls. Fetch pipelines aren't shallow anymore, so you need to predict the target address and speculatively fetch that cache line. Often this is before you even know you've just fetched a branch/call/jmpl.
The jump tables/switch statements in Ruby/Python/PHP make target prediction a necessity. The target of this jmpl is rarely the same twice in a row.
Or they have something to sell you. Marketers: Shooo! Go away! Leave me alone.
Let me guess, you inadvertently also found the candidates who eat candy constantly while at their desks.
There is no beauty in perl. Period.
Your example is spot-on, though. It can be completely obfuscated ASCII art or an unreadable single line.
Someone tell that to Verizon. They seem to think it's best practice to send the same marketing email to both the original address with the + and the same address without. Better yet, their unsubscribe facility refuses to accept the +.
I wish more people understood the +. I've used it to make incoming mail self-sorting for well over a decade.
File a bug report on it.
I'm not sure how you have StarOffice configured, but it opens
In Windows I had to change the default handler from Excel. That's a simple one-time switch by right-clicking and changing the "Open with..." setting.
There's rounding in virtually every transaction you already encounter. Do you live in a location with sales tax?
In pay periods where my paycheck is mathematically supposed to be consistent, it also fluctuates by a cent sometimes. The value averages out but there's still rounding and it's quite obvious.
The one more common typo that comes to mind--and the one alias that I do have to fix it up--is "dc" to "cd". The mind boggles.
For the purposes of this argument, why does it matter at all who runs it?
Reed Elsevier does not get its content for free. Part of my thesis made it into one of their textbooks. The author/editor of the textbook does, in fact, get royalty payments from them. I neither know how much, nor if he also received an advance or other lump payments upon reaching various editing milestones.
Okay, I'll bite: Reed Elsevier. Net profit margin: 23%.
This initialization is called BIST (built-in self test) and it has been a standard feature on processors since caches were introduced.
Variables don't; constants aren't.