Electric semi trucks have appeared from all major European manufacturers in the last years and I expect them to become dominant even quicker than electric cars on simple cost grounds. Electricity is cheaper than diesel…
You can find the whole integration routine here https://github.com/ad-si/Woxi/blob/36343ab2cbc97e5081f7c811e.... It's essentially a test mock-up (not even trying partial fraction decomposition for rational functions).
Fully agreed. I have never seen a programming language which is so badly designed as Wolfram. I really wish there was another way to access all of Mathematica's functionality with a more sane interface.
Did you really just attribute the deaths from a bombing raid on a dam during WW2 to a hydropower incident?
TeX is written in a literate programming style which is more akin to a math textbook than ordinary computer code, except with code blocks instead of equations. The actual programming language in the code blocks and the…
Yeah, I'm not saying it's a good idea. But you could do it if you wanted to.
A 1 MWh battery isn't actually that big. There's electric trucks on the market right now with 600 kWh batteries sitting on the frame between the front and rear axle. That would easily fit into a basement room.
They are cheaper to run almost everywhere (depending on the cost of electricity versus gas of course). No breakthrough in battery technology needed for that.
I have never seen a conductor on a metro/subway system in Europe. Mainline trains often have one, but not always. I've ridden trains on small branch lines in Germany which were operated by a driver only.
Range is somewhere between 350 and 600 km depending on conditions. Aerodynamics, weight, weather all have an influence as well as the battery size and efficiency of the specific model of truck. The guy on the youtube…
I'd love to see the system of mathematics where 4 times 365 comes out to one million. Maybe I can get my bank to use the same system.
Well hopefully the starter kit doesn't include a few kilograms of weapons grade plutonium.
Although that paper even made it to PRL. I guess I should have written up some similar nonsense and sent it to PRL, might have improved my career chances.
> However, "macros" are a disaster to debug in every language that they appear. I have only used proper macros in Common Lisp, but at least there they are developed and debugged just like any other function. You call…
As far as I know, optimization levels higher than -O0 work fine with SpillPointers. But at least in a cursory first look I had a while ago, the optimizations made things slower overall. I guess they might lead actually…
Apart from the restriction to bytecode interpretation already mentioned, one reason for the slowness is that the sort of C with garbage collection that ECL needs is quite difficult to do in Webassembly. There is no way…
In lisp, macros are just ordinary functions whose input and output is an AST. So you can debug them as you would any other function, by tracing, print debugging, unit tests or even stepping through them in a debugger.
Or perhaps the republican party has developed such an astonishing anti-science attitude that hardly any reasonable scientist can support them? Imagine doing research on vaccines and hearing the soon to be secretary of…
> For one thing, just admitting more people almost certainly decreases the access to quality education overall Why would that be the case? There are many much larger universities all around the globe and also in the US…
Coming from a country where the sort of super selective universities like Caltech don't exist, the fierce debates about equality of admissions to these sort of places never made sense to me. If Caltech, Harvard, MIT or…
Thermodynamics is usually (and rightfully so) taught together with statistical physics for which quantum mechanics is essential, so the order does make sense.
> cut all funding, regularly jail them, condemn them to obscurity I can't even begin to describe how overjoyed I am to finally have found a fellow campaigner for implementing the glorious techniques of Maoist China in…
The wormhole in this paper is actually in flat space. The geometry only approximates to an AdS geometry times a sphere close to the event horizons.
> Unless of course by "quantum theory" Maldacena actually means "string theory" or "AdS/CFT" – which wouldn't surprise me at all. The wormhole solutions from the paper are semi-classical: they are obtained by taking the…
Your comment calling political measures which are universally accepted across the entire range of politics in Europe (state healthcare, universal education, ...) authoritarian marxist is a hilarious example of what the…
Electric semi trucks have appeared from all major European manufacturers in the last years and I expect them to become dominant even quicker than electric cars on simple cost grounds. Electricity is cheaper than diesel…
You can find the whole integration routine here https://github.com/ad-si/Woxi/blob/36343ab2cbc97e5081f7c811e.... It's essentially a test mock-up (not even trying partial fraction decomposition for rational functions).
Fully agreed. I have never seen a programming language which is so badly designed as Wolfram. I really wish there was another way to access all of Mathematica's functionality with a more sane interface.
Did you really just attribute the deaths from a bombing raid on a dam during WW2 to a hydropower incident?
TeX is written in a literate programming style which is more akin to a math textbook than ordinary computer code, except with code blocks instead of equations. The actual programming language in the code blocks and the…
Yeah, I'm not saying it's a good idea. But you could do it if you wanted to.
A 1 MWh battery isn't actually that big. There's electric trucks on the market right now with 600 kWh batteries sitting on the frame between the front and rear axle. That would easily fit into a basement room.
They are cheaper to run almost everywhere (depending on the cost of electricity versus gas of course). No breakthrough in battery technology needed for that.
I have never seen a conductor on a metro/subway system in Europe. Mainline trains often have one, but not always. I've ridden trains on small branch lines in Germany which were operated by a driver only.
Range is somewhere between 350 and 600 km depending on conditions. Aerodynamics, weight, weather all have an influence as well as the battery size and efficiency of the specific model of truck. The guy on the youtube…
I'd love to see the system of mathematics where 4 times 365 comes out to one million. Maybe I can get my bank to use the same system.
Well hopefully the starter kit doesn't include a few kilograms of weapons grade plutonium.
Although that paper even made it to PRL. I guess I should have written up some similar nonsense and sent it to PRL, might have improved my career chances.
> However, "macros" are a disaster to debug in every language that they appear. I have only used proper macros in Common Lisp, but at least there they are developed and debugged just like any other function. You call…
As far as I know, optimization levels higher than -O0 work fine with SpillPointers. But at least in a cursory first look I had a while ago, the optimizations made things slower overall. I guess they might lead actually…
Apart from the restriction to bytecode interpretation already mentioned, one reason for the slowness is that the sort of C with garbage collection that ECL needs is quite difficult to do in Webassembly. There is no way…
In lisp, macros are just ordinary functions whose input and output is an AST. So you can debug them as you would any other function, by tracing, print debugging, unit tests or even stepping through them in a debugger.
Or perhaps the republican party has developed such an astonishing anti-science attitude that hardly any reasonable scientist can support them? Imagine doing research on vaccines and hearing the soon to be secretary of…
> For one thing, just admitting more people almost certainly decreases the access to quality education overall Why would that be the case? There are many much larger universities all around the globe and also in the US…
Coming from a country where the sort of super selective universities like Caltech don't exist, the fierce debates about equality of admissions to these sort of places never made sense to me. If Caltech, Harvard, MIT or…
Thermodynamics is usually (and rightfully so) taught together with statistical physics for which quantum mechanics is essential, so the order does make sense.
> cut all funding, regularly jail them, condemn them to obscurity I can't even begin to describe how overjoyed I am to finally have found a fellow campaigner for implementing the glorious techniques of Maoist China in…
The wormhole in this paper is actually in flat space. The geometry only approximates to an AdS geometry times a sphere close to the event horizons.
> Unless of course by "quantum theory" Maldacena actually means "string theory" or "AdS/CFT" – which wouldn't surprise me at all. The wormhole solutions from the paper are semi-classical: they are obtained by taking the…
Your comment calling political measures which are universally accepted across the entire range of politics in Europe (state healthcare, universal education, ...) authoritarian marxist is a hilarious example of what the…