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WildParser

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WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
https://www.omniglot.com/conscripts/engul.htm
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Are you an Engul user? Syllabic scripts for English are rare. Usually people use letters.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Well, I haven't made that up myself - I got the idea from linguistics books - and from people that lived there for a long time. And those linguists were very clear that the language came first and then syllable script was bolted on.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
When learning a bit of Japanese to me it was quite obvious that the script was most likely intentionally left (or made) complicated. By using a normal alphabet that actually fits to the structure of Japanese language it would be just another ordinary language to learn.

Using a syllables-script for an ending grammar just doesn't make sense. Using 2 syllable scripts is just strange.

It most likely helped the leaders there to stay in control. Without native Japanese translators foreigners are unable to get very far.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Yes it does. In some distributions receiving calls was a problem (they slept too deep and woke up too slow).

With Mobian for me it now works stable enough to be used as a daily driver.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Well, it works fine as a phone. With Mobian it is stable enough for me to be a daily driver.

When I need performance I usually turn to real computers or specialized gadgets.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
I'm on Windows. Other OS may differ. I experimented a lot with load times - and compared HDD, SSD, RAM-Disk.

I wrote a small program that loads everything from a big code-repository into RAM. The first time HDD and SSD and RAM-Disk make a big difference, when reading files a second time the lag of HDD (50s?) almost disappeared completely. Caching kicked in.

The RAM-Disk has less initial lag, but also it has to be filled first, so instead of moving everything to RAM-Disk just touching everything so the OS-Caching kicks in is just faster and more convenient.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Improvements in build-time are very valuable to me. But I'm not sure if a cloud would help me much. Synching can easily eat up 10s. Also my tools are very unique (including a parser that I wrote myself).

To be faster than local a cloud would have to be massively overclocked - and I can already reach good results locally.

For actual improvements I need a massive improvement in compiler technology (last time I looked there were just too many single-threaded bottlenecks in my build process). Nothing a cloud can solve for me.

Security is one issue - but hackers will most likely only get confused when they try to understand what is going on - also costs I usually don't like...
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
I recently experimented with a ram disk. Practically it didn't change anything.

OS-caching seems to already be clever enough and once the OS has figured out that some directories are important anything in there seemed to get done in RAM anyway.

A RAM-disk will make this less black box and more deterministic regarding guaranteed access times, but in daily use the RAM-disk just didn't make a difference.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Great news... Compile time or a clean build? I use similar tooling (older version... :-)). And I'm starting to evaluate what's going on with those new versions.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Comparing compile times is done rarely. I sometimes tried to google some comparisons, but didn't find much.

For a typical 1,5 MLOC project my clean build times are sitting around 40 seconds.

I think that's pretty good, but I don't think I have a way to improve it much. Without writing a compiler from scratch I think 10 seconds are out of reach for me...
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
I don't know about China, but the whole science around COVID seems to have a really strong cultural component that before was totally unfamiliar to me.

When looking at some German Epidemiologist blog I found something like: "Next thing on the list is to proof that government measures worked"

I would have expected something like: "I'm looking at data - and want to find out what helps"
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
That keyboard was fantastic. I hope the PinePhone Keyboard will be able to reach this level.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
I once took one of these online-tests for spotting deep fakes. By marking anything that has reflections in the eyes as fake I got only 1 answer wrong (the real guy there looked really strange).
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
And still nobody bothered to check what kind of trend-changes are visible in the epidemiological curves around the time of masking.

People never look at "date of death" or "infection date" all they care about is "reporting date" - and every newspaper out there will show you the effects of government measures on "reporting".
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
I use Mobian on the Pinephone as a daily driver. Other distributions I tried were not stable.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
I don't really know what those people in physics do, but as a mathematician my definition of a time-crystal would be a 4-dimensional discrete structure. You have some 4-dimensional symmetries.

Just rotating in 3D is a bit boring. Interesting symmetries would be where you get the time-axis involved.

4D is most likely a bit boring - having more dimensions and more time-dimensions helps greatly to get more symmetries to work with...
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
I'm not very optimistic about avoiding a "Dark Age".

Rational thinking and the idea to look at data seems to be completely foreign to most people I know. Higher educated people seem to absorb and repeat dogmas and propaganda unfiltered even faster.

Some patterns I have come across:

Alpha-Rational: Claiming that ideas that come from authority (dogma) or self (narcissism) are rational - rejecting to look at any data.

Anti-Rational: Reject the idea to look at data "life is uncertain", "data is garbage", "it's immoral to look at data" - although there is a lot of good data and drawing conclusions is not even difficult.

Malicious rational: Know your science and cherry-pick data for profit to support the highest bidder.
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
1:1 is also nice. https://www.eizo.com/products/flexscan/ev2730q/
WildParser
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
A few patterns about rationality I have seen a lot recently:

False rationality - People claim to be rational while touting some dogma they learned somewhere. Not even looking at any data. And when given data or counter-examples they just ignore it.

Anti-Rational - People claim that life is uncertain and data is garbage - while in fact there is a lot of good data available - and drawing conclusions is not even difficult.

I don't think the problem is with rationality. It feels more like rationality is going down because psychological pathologies (narcissm, cargo-cults, dogmas) are taking over.