> What is it doing to feed my family in burundi? That it has not solved everyone's problems on the planet is no argument it against what it has provided more than any other system. It's surprising how many of your…
It's because the underlying optimizer follows patterns in LLVM, which is used for a lot of languages, most applicable here is C/C++, and bit things like this are used a lot for performance. The particular patterns were…
Yeah, it only pays pensions, retirement accounts, provides liquidity for new industries, which then grow and provide jobs, and has been demonstrably one of the best inventions for pulling billions out of poverty and…
And then you summarized > 4% of ~40B times 12 years = $19B. as if this might be close to reasonable estimate of the profit off these farm repair contracts. But you pulled that reasoning right out of nowhere. It's simply…
> … so there's a physical process that's undecidable. No, since you cannot physically build a Turing Machine. A Turing machine requires infinite tape. Any physically realizable machine doesn’t have that, so has finite…
Go pull their financials, stop pulling nonsense out of thin air.
I looked over their financials. You conjectured out of feelings and ignorance. Calling my evidence naive, when you are simply making things up, is ludicrous. Go do some legwork, get some actual data, not make believe…
Last year was 5b net profit on 44b revenue. Attributing more than a tiny fraction of profit to the right to repair stuff is wild dreams, given the amount of physical goods they sell. Nothing in their SEC filings shows…
Ah, trying to move the goalposts huh? What’s the number of Teslas sold per year? Declining year over year as others have grown significantly. Profit margin sans regulatory issues? Peaked 2021, declining since then. Same…
This feels like the “we should make an internet company that ships pet food to anyone, anywhere!” of the 21st century.
You’re claiming in 10 years they made something others won’t for another century? This has no historical precedent. China is going to eat them, just like they ate Teslas insurmountable lead in a few short years.
Rent vs own is about price. If you want to own something, digital, physical, information, goods, then a vendor will charge more, sometimes a lot more, to sell you an infinite ownership vs you get limited rights. Most…
If it's on the stack, it's almost free to do. If it's held by a unique_ptr, then it auto frees, but there is a lot of programmer work to ensure things behave well, and there are nuances to allocating something into the…
It's interesting you cut out the "There’s plenty of papers showing exactly this." then pretended the rest is simply ignorant belief. > the businesses that won during the 2000-24 period (the so-called “tech” companies)…
So you replace a loop that delivers last mile goods to a lot of cars going decently out of their way to the limited places just to pick one item? Surely it’s less miles driven when Amazon does a loop hitting several…
Yes, there is always an issue upsampling since you have to make up new values. For downsampling by an integral factor, you have honest samples at those times, but any other rate will also need new samples to be…
I take it you don't know much about frequency time tradeoffs. It is not possible to convert 48 khz to 44 khz without approximation. And there is incredible room to design filters that have great response at frequency X…
It’s not that cynical. The author didn’t test on the most common rate in use, so it would be ludicrous for any serious project to wholesale replace a decades old working pipeline with it. It makes perfect sense to wait…
There’s plenty of papers showing exactly this. What do you think has driven productivity? People simply bring smarter? The fact is capital expenditure from company or investors has bought machinery, compute, pipelines,…
True. From that page RAM companies have been sued and found innocent before: “ The district court ruled in favor of Samsung, Hynix, and Micron and dismissed the lawsuit. This dismissal was affirmed on appeal by the…
RAII has nothing to do with garbage collection. It only provides a way to get a resource somewhat atomically. If the creator doesn’t delete the object, or if the object has a malformed destructor, it fails. If the…
> where the programmer is responsible for invoking "free", was a serious mistake and it was an obsolete technique already at the date of its introduction. It wasn’t obsolete then nor now. Garbage collected languages, to…
That's not a reason. That's an anecdote, a post selected and cherry picked example. Is this truly how you'd allocate resources? A more correct way to use reason is to look at all possible things that have been proposed…
It’s 500m spend without guaranteed success.
The Englert paper did not have the equations for the the hypothetical field that would become known as the Higgs field, and it did not have the Higgs boson. The Higgs paper had the details to make these more aptly named…
> What is it doing to feed my family in burundi? That it has not solved everyone's problems on the planet is no argument it against what it has provided more than any other system. It's surprising how many of your…
It's because the underlying optimizer follows patterns in LLVM, which is used for a lot of languages, most applicable here is C/C++, and bit things like this are used a lot for performance. The particular patterns were…
Yeah, it only pays pensions, retirement accounts, provides liquidity for new industries, which then grow and provide jobs, and has been demonstrably one of the best inventions for pulling billions out of poverty and…
And then you summarized > 4% of ~40B times 12 years = $19B. as if this might be close to reasonable estimate of the profit off these farm repair contracts. But you pulled that reasoning right out of nowhere. It's simply…
> … so there's a physical process that's undecidable. No, since you cannot physically build a Turing Machine. A Turing machine requires infinite tape. Any physically realizable machine doesn’t have that, so has finite…
Go pull their financials, stop pulling nonsense out of thin air.
I looked over their financials. You conjectured out of feelings and ignorance. Calling my evidence naive, when you are simply making things up, is ludicrous. Go do some legwork, get some actual data, not make believe…
Last year was 5b net profit on 44b revenue. Attributing more than a tiny fraction of profit to the right to repair stuff is wild dreams, given the amount of physical goods they sell. Nothing in their SEC filings shows…
Ah, trying to move the goalposts huh? What’s the number of Teslas sold per year? Declining year over year as others have grown significantly. Profit margin sans regulatory issues? Peaked 2021, declining since then. Same…
This feels like the “we should make an internet company that ships pet food to anyone, anywhere!” of the 21st century.
You’re claiming in 10 years they made something others won’t for another century? This has no historical precedent. China is going to eat them, just like they ate Teslas insurmountable lead in a few short years.
Rent vs own is about price. If you want to own something, digital, physical, information, goods, then a vendor will charge more, sometimes a lot more, to sell you an infinite ownership vs you get limited rights. Most…
If it's on the stack, it's almost free to do. If it's held by a unique_ptr, then it auto frees, but there is a lot of programmer work to ensure things behave well, and there are nuances to allocating something into the…
It's interesting you cut out the "There’s plenty of papers showing exactly this." then pretended the rest is simply ignorant belief. > the businesses that won during the 2000-24 period (the so-called “tech” companies)…
So you replace a loop that delivers last mile goods to a lot of cars going decently out of their way to the limited places just to pick one item? Surely it’s less miles driven when Amazon does a loop hitting several…
Yes, there is always an issue upsampling since you have to make up new values. For downsampling by an integral factor, you have honest samples at those times, but any other rate will also need new samples to be…
I take it you don't know much about frequency time tradeoffs. It is not possible to convert 48 khz to 44 khz without approximation. And there is incredible room to design filters that have great response at frequency X…
It’s not that cynical. The author didn’t test on the most common rate in use, so it would be ludicrous for any serious project to wholesale replace a decades old working pipeline with it. It makes perfect sense to wait…
There’s plenty of papers showing exactly this. What do you think has driven productivity? People simply bring smarter? The fact is capital expenditure from company or investors has bought machinery, compute, pipelines,…
True. From that page RAM companies have been sued and found innocent before: “ The district court ruled in favor of Samsung, Hynix, and Micron and dismissed the lawsuit. This dismissal was affirmed on appeal by the…
RAII has nothing to do with garbage collection. It only provides a way to get a resource somewhat atomically. If the creator doesn’t delete the object, or if the object has a malformed destructor, it fails. If the…
> where the programmer is responsible for invoking "free", was a serious mistake and it was an obsolete technique already at the date of its introduction. It wasn’t obsolete then nor now. Garbage collected languages, to…
That's not a reason. That's an anecdote, a post selected and cherry picked example. Is this truly how you'd allocate resources? A more correct way to use reason is to look at all possible things that have been proposed…
It’s 500m spend without guaranteed success.
The Englert paper did not have the equations for the the hypothetical field that would become known as the Higgs field, and it did not have the Higgs boson. The Higgs paper had the details to make these more aptly named…