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pwr-electronics

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pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
I think your examples agree with my point: You found minimal-time solutions that haven't caused continuous suffering afterwards, and can be easily removed when the root cause is fixed. That's a good result.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
I'm still trying to challenge your assumptions. Why does a different solution necessarily require expanding the scope of work? Like you said, that's where experience helps to have those skills in your toolbox. Doing things better doesn't have to be harder.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Try nomograms instead - you can print them on paper, and they have one for just about everything. https://youtube.com/channel/UCOLYtsL4ge6QfaAvBDeG1IA
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Maybe pdf numbers are sightly annoying in the modern age of writing.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
My whole point is that you don't, because there aren't always just two options. That's the false dilemma logical fallacy.

I'm saying you can fix problems without dropping everything and redoing work. You're allowed to problem solve and work with people to create a third option. And you can prevent new ones by learning and strategizing.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
The choice between refactoring and money-generating work is a false dilemma. There are other options, and the developer doesn't have to make that decision or carry out the work all on their own.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
As the article below explains, it's a combination of structured qualitative analysis and a review process. That process builds on top of all the other application-specific or discipline-specific processes, like a hierarchy. The higher up you go, the more generic it gets. The lower down you go, the more you critique the exact math or test or whatever.

https://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1996ESASP.377...83F
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Does the company have any in-house guidance on the application domain? Or is it all external feedback so far?
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Riveting
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
The business opportunity is in software that's inseparable from the hardware. Academics won't work on that because they don't do product development.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Of course there are contradictions. I'm talking about journalistic style in magazines. You're talking about something else.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
I'm running out of ways to explain myself, so I'll just reword and summarize this thread from my perspective:

OC: Is it broken?

Me: No, they make generous interpretations to claim that it's broken.

You: With a generous interpretation, they can be said to break ...

Like I said, we're not having the same conversation.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Ok, so you're confirming that you're doing exactly what I said popular science articles often do.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
> With a generous interpretation, they can be said to break classical thermodynamics

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31008263
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
I'm trying to explain how articles often conflate "intuition" with "breaking physics", and you're making your argument by conflating them. We're having different conversations.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Why would you use a classical model to describe a quantum system? That's the kind of wordplay that those articles do, and almost identical to my example about materials. It's entertaining, but meaningless.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Nothing breaks the laws of thermodynamics, ever.

I assume you're referring to how some popular science articles report things. That's just wordplay. Nothing is being bent, broken, or bypassed.

Usually it just means they did something an ordinary homogeneous material couldn't do, for example. Which is genuinely interesting, even if it's not actually breaking physics.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
For graphical computation, I recommend Nomographer's YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOLYtsL4ge6QfaAvBDeG1IA
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
> It should catch the issue and exit cleanly with an error message.

Probably not. As the author describes, LLVM has to tool to check for invalid IR, which they used to investigate the issue and generate an explanatory error message.
pwr-electronics
·4 years ago·discuss
Somebody needs a nap.