Maybe A Deepness in the sky, from this author? The hero saves the day by hacking old routines lying in the depth of the ship systems.
I think you simply missed my point twice. >> "Some external circumstances could change reducing them to a pile of oxides" (or some other transformations I guess in case of fire.) That was precisely not what I was…
For the majority of life existence as we know it (meaning, a proton gradient separated by a membrane), living systems were immortal. Some external circumstances could change reducing them to a pile of oxides, but the…
Sure, it's definitely not the same. I would not think of someone not believing the most extreme predictions to be a skeptic. What I call climate change skeptics are people playing into the well-known playbook of…
This website is a pathetic example of cherry-picked and misrepresented data. No surprise coming from climate change deniers. Hacker News always had a pretty high number of such people (and an even higher number of…
I mean yes that's a weird take, why would MacOS be considered first? I have a Mac provided by my company. None of my development tools are available there, profiling, debugging is a hassle. The only way I can work on it…
Entropy does not drive the creation of life. Life appears in spite of the 2nd law. The context in which it appears means that life orders its context, so 'feeds off' low entropy. But low entropy environment is not…
I would tend to agree. This article conveniently designs its benchmark to be exactly when open addressing would work. In almost all of the maps implementations I have used so far, chaining was necessary and intrusive…
> The only art in that room was watching that crowd accept that wretched noise as performance, simply because the person making it happened to be on stage. You cannot fathom that other people might have different…
> Will you call all of those people myopic for pursuing a richer life, as well? Definitely. People living in the US are not the most happy on Earth. Life is not the easiest there. Granted, there is a very successful…
> And I think they have a point. They may have a point, that won't change the reality of the situation: letting them do exactly what the developed countries did, will kill them. That's not fair, that's life. > So yes,…
> As a commenter put it so eloquently elsewhere, how do we ensure that Bangladeshis and Pakistanis can live like Texans? Because relieving human suffering is my goal. Are you prepared to hear that it is simply not…
We are supposed to stop designing cities around cars, yes.
> Second, no conspiracy would be needed, just hypocrisy of individuals. To quote your first sentence: > It's interesting to me how much people are trained to reflex against this possibility. Which is definitely…
Networking stacks are used in two ways: endpoints and forwarders. Forwarders are usually not doing much with packets, just reading a few fields and choosing an output port. These are very common function in network…
FPGAs are falling out of favor, ASICs are sufficient to implement most network processing. Funnily, one of the biggest DPDK feature is an API to program smartNICs exactly in that way.
An encoding which varies over time, dependent on previous states does not seem impossible. I don't think this is disqualifying to say that a sufficiently complex system cannot then simulate an abstract machine. It does…
'General consensus' does not exist. Take the Covid vaccine: it is clearly shown to reduce the risks compared to getting Covid without it, and still there is no consensus about getting vaccinated, and there never will…
> I imagine that 200 years from now we might look back at using all these substances as something as dumb as drawing blood with leeches for a migraine or something. The reason to take those substance is to get a…
Indeed! I was working with false assumptions, thanks for correcting them.
When you buy an ISO standard, it is marked by the buyer ID. To make it publicly available, you need to strip it. That means the file must be modified, and the tampered copy must be stored somewhere. Sci-hub has a…
You are talking of "leftist tropes" such as the "right wing"? I mean, that's just the pot calling the kettle black, at a minimum right? There are climate derniers. There is a right political wing in America. There is an…
> Is that the thanks we get for trying to save their lives? What kind of 'thanks' would you expect exactly? They have lived the year at higher risk of contracting dangerous symptom, while you were safer in comparison.…
You're right to nit-pick! It is rather embarassingly wrong (10G -> 100G should be a pretty obvious 14.88Mpps -> 148.8Mpps...). Unfortunately it seems I cannot edit the comment so I'll leave the error for posterity ^^.…
This patch brings XDP RX to 4.2Mpps which is nice. In 2015 high-speed networking was targeting 10G line rate, i.e. 14.8Mpps. Today the NICs are 100G (42Mpps), next year it will be 400G. I'm not sure how the kernel is…
Maybe A Deepness in the sky, from this author? The hero saves the day by hacking old routines lying in the depth of the ship systems.
I think you simply missed my point twice. >> "Some external circumstances could change reducing them to a pile of oxides" (or some other transformations I guess in case of fire.) That was precisely not what I was…
For the majority of life existence as we know it (meaning, a proton gradient separated by a membrane), living systems were immortal. Some external circumstances could change reducing them to a pile of oxides, but the…
Sure, it's definitely not the same. I would not think of someone not believing the most extreme predictions to be a skeptic. What I call climate change skeptics are people playing into the well-known playbook of…
This website is a pathetic example of cherry-picked and misrepresented data. No surprise coming from climate change deniers. Hacker News always had a pretty high number of such people (and an even higher number of…
I mean yes that's a weird take, why would MacOS be considered first? I have a Mac provided by my company. None of my development tools are available there, profiling, debugging is a hassle. The only way I can work on it…
Entropy does not drive the creation of life. Life appears in spite of the 2nd law. The context in which it appears means that life orders its context, so 'feeds off' low entropy. But low entropy environment is not…
I would tend to agree. This article conveniently designs its benchmark to be exactly when open addressing would work. In almost all of the maps implementations I have used so far, chaining was necessary and intrusive…
> The only art in that room was watching that crowd accept that wretched noise as performance, simply because the person making it happened to be on stage. You cannot fathom that other people might have different…
> Will you call all of those people myopic for pursuing a richer life, as well? Definitely. People living in the US are not the most happy on Earth. Life is not the easiest there. Granted, there is a very successful…
> And I think they have a point. They may have a point, that won't change the reality of the situation: letting them do exactly what the developed countries did, will kill them. That's not fair, that's life. > So yes,…
> As a commenter put it so eloquently elsewhere, how do we ensure that Bangladeshis and Pakistanis can live like Texans? Because relieving human suffering is my goal. Are you prepared to hear that it is simply not…
We are supposed to stop designing cities around cars, yes.
> Second, no conspiracy would be needed, just hypocrisy of individuals. To quote your first sentence: > It's interesting to me how much people are trained to reflex against this possibility. Which is definitely…
Networking stacks are used in two ways: endpoints and forwarders. Forwarders are usually not doing much with packets, just reading a few fields and choosing an output port. These are very common function in network…
FPGAs are falling out of favor, ASICs are sufficient to implement most network processing. Funnily, one of the biggest DPDK feature is an API to program smartNICs exactly in that way.
An encoding which varies over time, dependent on previous states does not seem impossible. I don't think this is disqualifying to say that a sufficiently complex system cannot then simulate an abstract machine. It does…
'General consensus' does not exist. Take the Covid vaccine: it is clearly shown to reduce the risks compared to getting Covid without it, and still there is no consensus about getting vaccinated, and there never will…
> I imagine that 200 years from now we might look back at using all these substances as something as dumb as drawing blood with leeches for a migraine or something. The reason to take those substance is to get a…
Indeed! I was working with false assumptions, thanks for correcting them.
When you buy an ISO standard, it is marked by the buyer ID. To make it publicly available, you need to strip it. That means the file must be modified, and the tampered copy must be stored somewhere. Sci-hub has a…
You are talking of "leftist tropes" such as the "right wing"? I mean, that's just the pot calling the kettle black, at a minimum right? There are climate derniers. There is a right political wing in America. There is an…
> Is that the thanks we get for trying to save their lives? What kind of 'thanks' would you expect exactly? They have lived the year at higher risk of contracting dangerous symptom, while you were safer in comparison.…
You're right to nit-pick! It is rather embarassingly wrong (10G -> 100G should be a pretty obvious 14.88Mpps -> 148.8Mpps...). Unfortunately it seems I cannot edit the comment so I'll leave the error for posterity ^^.…
This patch brings XDP RX to 4.2Mpps which is nice. In 2015 high-speed networking was targeting 10G line rate, i.e. 14.8Mpps. Today the NICs are 100G (42Mpps), next year it will be 400G. I'm not sure how the kernel is…