It's been one of the biggest productivity improvements since moving from 640x480 to 1024x768.
The 1440p is now only used for minor stuff like email and not really necessary anymore.
I soon moved to a 32" 4K at home as well, because I just couldn't stand just 1440 anymore.
One of the interesting parts is that I don't use 4K fully: it's too much surface are and your head tilts too much to see everything at once. But what's great is that I can put a background process as full screen in the background and have a 3500x1800 window in front in which I do my real work. So I can observe the proceedings of the background talks without having to toggle windows all the time.
It's been one of the biggest productivity improvements since moving from 640x480 to 1024x768.
The 1440p is now only used for minor stuff like email and not really necessary anymore.
I soon moved to a 32" 4K at home as well, because I just couldn't stand just 1440 anymore.
One of the interesting parts is that I don't use 4K fully: it's too much surface are and your head tilts too much to see everything at once. But what's great is that I can put a background process as full screen in the background and have a 3500x1800 window in front in which I do my real work. So I can observe the proceedings of the background talks without having to toggle windows all the time.
Work: a metric ton of #defines that are generated by our hardware register addressmap generator, as well as a very particular file naming convention, which has a heavy mix of uppercase.
While, over time, a lot of today's annoyances with the new Macabook's will fade away, the lack of ESC key is a deal breaker for me.
I tried it at the Apple Store and it's pretty much unusable. (It had the seen issue as the writer, apparently relying on the physical click to know whether or not I had pressed it. In addition, I also mistyped it a lot. Maybe hack to replace the whole touch bar as one single ESC key will do it...)
I've been told to remap the ESC to CAPS LOCK to vim usage, but I seem to be one of a rare breed who uses the latter the way it was intended to be, so that's a no go for me.
That's a rather narrow minded way to thinking about the issue.
I've accepted a counter offer twice, and both times I was glad that I did.
There could be many other reasons for a company not paying what you can get somewhere else. A very trivial one is the yearly update cycle: that may happen in January whereas you get an offer in June. Companies that hire don't align to the schedule of your current one.
And hiring companies inherently know asking somebody to quit and somewhere else carries a risk that needs some amount of kind of reward.
Hell, how can one personally even know what he/she is worth? There are so many factors at play. It'd be narrow minded to expect pricing perfection on something nobody really can get right.
Yes. And far more than hanging chads, that election was primarily decided by thousands of potential voters being incorrectly purged from the voting lists.
Depends what you mean by electoral fraud. In the US, the only electoral fraud that has a significant impact is one where groups of voters are prohibited/prevented from voting. Pennsylvania is particularly vulnerable to that one due to very broad rules that allow people to question the legality of other people to vote. It's why Trump has been calling PA supports to do exactly that.
Other types of fraud (ballot stuffing, voting multiple times, voting when you're not allowed to etc.) are exceedingly rare, and it would have to happen at a massive scale for it to make an actual impact.
That's just not going to happen, especially with it being a felony.
Gimping, in this case, is actually: adding hardware, that costs quite a bit of silicon area, on one chip that will probably never be sold as a consumer GPU.
I don't see the issue with a company making a very high-end product, adding stuff that doesn't have good use for consumers, and asking extra money for their effort.
AMD doesn't have double speed FP16 on its current FPUs either. The latest version has FP16 at the same speed as FP32, but if you're doing that you might as well use FP32 always.
And let's not forget: the Nvidia consumer GPU have deep learning quad int8 operations enabled at all time. They didn't need to do that and could have reserved it for their Tesla product line only.