Comment Re:Prediction (Score 1) 316
What do you mean focus on playlists rather than albums? The only thing that I use playlists for in iTunes is overlapping sets of genres, I use albums the rest of the time.
What do you mean focus on playlists rather than albums? The only thing that I use playlists for in iTunes is overlapping sets of genres, I use albums the rest of the time.
Oh dear, you don't seem to grasp the point so well. If I replace a single processor that performs a task with a set of parallel processors then I cannot claim the power is reduced just because the time is shorter. The energy consumed depends on both the time and the power use of the set of processors. Given the discussion that followed in that thread it is quite clear that understanding the distinction would have added something.
Your logic is flawed:
the less time the machine spends active the more time it can spend in idle which quite obviously results in less heat and power consumption.
The caveat is that power consumption must not increase during the shorter period of operation for this to be true. In the case that we are offloading work from the CPU to the GPU then it is not only the length of time that is important, but the relative power consumption of the two devices while drawing the text. It may be that offloading the text rendering to the GPU reduces power consumption (Microsoft claim that in the article), but it does not logically follow from the claim that the operation can be performed in less time.
If you can do that in five minutes then are you not being a little harsh in not providing the info to the nouveau project?
Sounds Soggy, Dude.
What would calculating the theoretical peak tell them about the (real) sustained performance?
Partitioning the problem in chunks that can be distributed to the nodes in the cluster adds overhead. Assembling the finished results does the same. It is kind of hard to predict what this over will be as it depends on the interconnect. In this case they used 100Mb/s ethernet, but there was contention from running NFS over the same network. Building it and measuring it is the only way to find out what kind of performance you really get.
Wow. Really?
I can't believe that you missed the point of his post so completely. Did you really read it, or just skim the first couple of entries, miss the painfully obvious pattern and then post the most self-humiliating reply that you could? Try reading it again. Maybe see if the words are familiar between items on the list and see if he is making some kind of wider point...
What about iBrowser?
Have you read your own link?
Microsoft claims that malware infections will rise on OSX in the future, and as evidence they dissect an exploit that only works on an obsolete version because it is fixed in the lastest version. Your signature is oddly appropriate.
You need to lift your finger to flick between home screens. Nothing in the claim about lifting your finger, just moving above a velocity threshold
Says who?
verb/flik/
flicked, past participle;flicked, past tense;flicking, present participle;flicks, 3rd person singular presentPropel (something) with a sudden sharp movement, esp. of the fingers
- Emily flicked some ash off her sleeve
Notice that flicking something off of a surface would be distinct from flicking something across a surface, but that both are forms of flicking.
The patent covers something very specific: using the velocity of a swipe across a touchscreen to decide to remove an object / set of objects when a threshold is exceeds. Or in other words flicking / swiping through a collection of things, like the iPhone home screen or cover flow in iTunes. Ignoring whether the patent is valid or not (seems quite trivial to me) how is this "something we already know how to do, but on a computer"? It's a HCI gesture, not sure how it could be done without a computer...
There is a man over here that will sell you that dream. Just don't ask him how long it will take...
When you can freely block AC posts using the tools that you already have available why would you want to ban other people using them? It does lead me to suspect that you are a fundamentalist - it's not good enough that you can't see it, you still have the nagging suspicion that somebody somewhere is doing something that you disapprove of.
Maybe you have been in a smaller more sheltered pool than you realise? I can't think of an office that I worked in where there were not sick jokes around the water cooler. I'd say that it is obvious that there is a wider range of humour in the world that what you consider acceptable, and I'm surprised that you think you have the majority view.
Seemed easy enough, took a couple of minutes without a calculator. Seemed like a well designed test that was thought out to check the underlying skills. The spread of answers was well chosen to provide an appropriate number of red herrings. Tl; dr Easy test, well designed for target audience.
IF I HAD A MINE SHAFT, I don't think I would just abandon it. There's got to be a better way. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.