Comment Re:Windows Driver (Score 1) 348
Installing the ext2 IFS on Windows XP leads to frequent lockups and crashes. I've tried it on several machines now, and over several versions. Wny would you want one anyway? Work in Linux.
Installing the ext2 IFS on Windows XP leads to frequent lockups and crashes. I've tried it on several machines now, and over several versions. Wny would you want one anyway? Work in Linux.
...Of course, since the biggest bottlenecks in code usually occur in essentially serial sections of code, you can't just reorder them and hope for the best.
Well, that's highly dependent on your code. If you're writing something like matrix manipulation or most image processing routines, none of your code is particularly serial. You can even get away with things like WAW hazards because of register renaming.
If you've already done all of the high-level optimization that you can, maybe it's time to start looking at a VTune or CodeAnalyst and figuring out where your branches are being mispredicted and where you're seeing stalls. But the reality is, those optimizations get you the last 20%, which doesn't mean shit if your algorithm is inefficient or accesses memory inefficiently.
TFA using examples such as shift-vs-multiply sound like your grandfather complaining that you don't double-clutch on downshifting into first gear. "True" in the sense that yes, it once had meaning and no longer does - But totally wrong in the sense that people who think about their code at that level have moved beyond such trivialities and onto actual modern ones such as how to feed N pipelines so as to minimize stalls, or what degenerate conditions flog the latest branch prediction techniques (or more usefully, as a classic example, how to write your code so as to minimize branching)
I also hate the 'instruction weenie' optimizations. It doesn't matter (for example) if an integer multiply instruction has two-cycle latency and a shift instruction has one-cycle latency. Something like 1 in 5 instructions is a memory access, and another 1 in 5 is a branch. Both of those are potentially far more problematic than an extra cycle that's probably going to be scheduled around anyway.
Mostly this article sounds like exactly the reasons I don't like Java for every task, and why the vast majority of Java apps feel like molasses in January despite every benchmark telling you that in theory they run just as fast as unmanaged code - Because although you can do the above, you have to work against the language rather than with it.
Pretty much no benchmark shows Java (or
Also, Java doesn't feel slow because of execution performance. It feels slow because it has crappy UI libraries that are slow. There are many, many GTK+/Python apps that are perfectly fine despite the fact that Python is abysmally slow compared to even Java.
When merely assigning a value to a basic machine-supported data type (32 bit integer, as the simple example) involves an implicit function call (and the whole stack-frame preservation that entails)
I'm not sure where you're getting this, but assigning to an int (not an Integer) in Java does not involve a function call in any mainstream JRE I'm familiar with; indeed, it performs very similarly to assignment in C.
The big fault of Java (and also
Simple cases, like assignment to an int, are well-optimized by the JIT.
The vaccine rush was started in the USA, where these companies are based. The US gov't was fearmongering every other day, far more often than any announcements or data from the WTO. Don't kid yourself, this scare was purchased by big pharma.
That would be so cool. Imagine a vastly powerful, intergalactic race, tracing the origins of the only extraterrestrial contact they've ever had, these probes. Imagine they find their path circling back around, to originate from their very own home planet, from so far in the past as to be lost beyond memory.
Awesome.
Which trilogy was that again?
That is poor logic. It is possible for any virus to mutate and become extremely dangerous. It is also possible for the mutation to cause existing vaccines to not work. The 1918 had a mortality rate of about 10%, and it was obvious to everyone that the current version wasn't anywhere near as dangerous. So spending a ton of money on vaccines for a single virus that isn't that dangerous, and might not even work if it became dangerous, when many other viruses have the same risks is poor judgment at best.
Now, if a highly virulent strain of human infectious airborne Ebola begins spreading through the US, then I'd be worried.
Right on!
For the record that music is from the movie Where Eagles Dare , starring Richard Burton and Clint Eastwood. It's a pretty entertaining WWII yarn, especially when the music swells and you hear that iconic drum roll. I didn't know about the movie until late one night when I was in my twenties I caught it on cable and said, "Hey, that's the music from Wolfenstein!" It's one of my favorites now.
Yes, if they can get some actual science done.
A blind man could see in a minute that there's something going on with the atmosphere. We have all kinds of anecdotal evidence that temperatures are warming. We don't need any more suppositions as to the cause of this trend.
What we desperately need are scientific facts, not predictions based on mathematical models. We've seen what using unsound mathematical models can do in the financial sector. We know from historical records that just within the last thousand years it has been both warmer and cooler than it is now. We need a rigorously tested model that can account for what we already know. The model that generated the famous 'hockey stick' need not apply.
One other thing that would be valuable is a worldwide sensor network to get some rigorously defined temperature data. What we have now is a hodgepodge of airport readings surrounded by asphalt, land grant university instruments in rural locations, and various other methods and locations that don't give us an accurate picture.
In short, if politics and activism can be kept out of a nascent climate service, we might actually learn something useful. We, and by we I mean Americans, need to tackle this problem without bankrupting ourselves. We need to know the facts, and to how many decimal places.
Only through hard work and perseverance can one truly suffer.