The fluids also contain various electrolytes, i.e. metal cations. But still nowhere close to those trees.
> Dr Antony van der Ent Nominative determinism strikes again
Well, that just isn't happening and hasn't happened for years. So someone stepping up to define a standard focused on performance is a good thing in principle. You also need incentives for that standard to get adopted.…
Dynamically generated code, e.g. proxy classes and aspect pointcuts being inserted into code and then recompiled by the JIT. And even "just" dynamically loading a library requires recompilation because it will…
It has been listed on the arch wiki under their list of available terminal emulators for a long time and I often use the wiki to look up things even when having to configure things on non-arch systems.
amp.js? No thanks. A blessed subset of the HTML, CSS and media that is optimized for load times and memory footprint? Ok.
All the heavy lifting for containers is built-in. It's just the mapping of tabs to containers, the creation/disposal of containers and UI parts that's managed through the extensions because users do have different…
> Unless the programmer is programming at a very low level If you write unixy tools that do just one job then you often have to deal with this. For example rsync and tar put files into sequential mode and perform…
I recall a new transatlantic cable constructed a few years ago being advertised as shaving off a few milliseconds. Trading and cloud providers were mentioned as target customers. I don't know whether they also route…
Technically neutrino signalling could make it faster, but those extra milliseconds are not worth it, even for the HFT folks... but thanks to them we have shorter fiber routes across the atlantic at least.
Averages are not particularly interesting. CDFs or violin graphs are since hundreds of requests to load a site can turn your 99th percentile into what the user actually experiences. Edit: I just noticed that clicking on…
The fluids also contain various electrolytes, i.e. metal cations. But still nowhere close to those trees.
> Dr Antony van der Ent Nominative determinism strikes again
Well, that just isn't happening and hasn't happened for years. So someone stepping up to define a standard focused on performance is a good thing in principle. You also need incentives for that standard to get adopted.…
Dynamically generated code, e.g. proxy classes and aspect pointcuts being inserted into code and then recompiled by the JIT. And even "just" dynamically loading a library requires recompilation because it will…
It has been listed on the arch wiki under their list of available terminal emulators for a long time and I often use the wiki to look up things even when having to configure things on non-arch systems.
amp.js? No thanks. A blessed subset of the HTML, CSS and media that is optimized for load times and memory footprint? Ok.
All the heavy lifting for containers is built-in. It's just the mapping of tabs to containers, the creation/disposal of containers and UI parts that's managed through the extensions because users do have different…
> Unless the programmer is programming at a very low level If you write unixy tools that do just one job then you often have to deal with this. For example rsync and tar put files into sequential mode and perform…
I recall a new transatlantic cable constructed a few years ago being advertised as shaving off a few milliseconds. Trading and cloud providers were mentioned as target customers. I don't know whether they also route…
Technically neutrino signalling could make it faster, but those extra milliseconds are not worth it, even for the HFT folks... but thanks to them we have shorter fiber routes across the atlantic at least.
Averages are not particularly interesting. CDFs or violin graphs are since hundreds of requests to load a site can turn your 99th percentile into what the user actually experiences. Edit: I just noticed that clicking on…