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msgilligan

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msgilligan
·15 日前·議論
Java threads including Virtual Threads (JDK 21+) are preemptive.
msgilligan
·3 か月前·議論
But this seems like a reasonable approach for reverse-engineering, and it seems the bug they found is real.
msgilligan
·3 か月前·議論
I don't think comparing new Pis to used micro pcs is fair. Compare a _used_ Pi with a used micro pc. If you have any geek friends, it's probably not hard to find a used Pi for free.
msgilligan
·7 か月前·議論
I was in the ballpark!
msgilligan
·7 か月前·議論
POJO is one of my favorite acronyms. Along with POTS and COTS.

POTS = Plain Old Telephony System COTS = Commercial Off-The-Shelf
msgilligan
·8 か月前·議論
And I think he's also acknowledging that not everybody has an application that needs these performance optimizations.
msgilligan
·8 か月前·議論
What are the most recent and/or highest performance of these?

Update: And mainline support and lack of proprietary boot blobs are two separate criteria. I've heard that NXP offers the former but not the latter.
msgilligan
·8 か月前·議論
Well, a 5-year-old chip may not count as "recent" but the RK-3588 boot chain is "almost fully open-source" [1]. And it seems like it took a major amount of effort (from Collabora, others) to get it this far. I don't know of any equivalent or newer chips that are "more" open, but would love to hear if there are.

[1] https://www.collabora.com/news-and-blog/blog/2024/02/21/almo...
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
The "seated" option adds the feet and helps make it more recognizable.
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
Although that date should really only apply to the `m6502.asm` file. I think for a historical archive accuracy should be important. For example when was it licensed under the MIT license, I assume fairly recently. The file date should reflect that.
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
The wikipedia definition is here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_share

There are multiple methods of measuring multiple (related) things. What you are describing sounds more like the share of the installed base, which only works for certain types of products. (i.e. it doesn't work for consumables like apples or electricity)
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
Sounds depressing (i.e. ~5000 in a typical US election)
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
I have diligently searched for this article online and have been unable to find it. (It might be on microfiche somewhere...)

I did however, find this humorous anecdote:

> A Lotus executive later joked, "The first month we shipped 62,000 copies, and the following month we got 64,000 copies back. It was such a failure they sent us the bootlegged copies back."

https://www.forbes.com/2003/12/16/cx_el_macslide.html
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
I've heard of companies doing things like this to "cook the books" for a quarterly report.
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
There are multiple ways of calculating market share (e.g. units vs dollars or for different time periods) but assuming it is measured in dollars for a quarterly time period, how would you calculate the market share based upon my sample data above?
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
That is how it was calculated in a published trade magazine (either Infoworld or MacWeek, I think) I'm not sure if the the analysis was done by a market research firm or the magazine.
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
> The only way that makes any sense is if you subtract returns for sales made in a different period to the sales period you are considering

Exactly. That's the way accounting works. They did not know in the previous quarter that the product would be returned in the following quarter, so they end up having negative sales in the current quarter.

Yes it produces "garbage output", which I find amusing.
msgilligan
·10 か月前·議論
TIL about the Herfindahl–Hirschman Index and I wanted to test it with a weird corner-case that I remember.

At one point in the late 1980's Microsoft had a GREATER than 100% market share of the Macintosh spreadsheet market.

How is this possible?

Market share (for a given period) is the participant's sales in the market divided by total sales. It just so happened that Lotus had more returns than sales of their failed spreadsheet, Lotus Jazz. So Lotus, had a negative market share and Microsoft had more sales of Excel than total sales in the market, resulting in a greater than 100% market share.

I don't remember the exact numbers and I believe there was at least one other competitor in the study. But let's just say the numbers were:

Microsoft: 102% Lotus: -2%

In that case the Herfindahl–Hirschman Index would be 102^2 + (-2)^2 = 10404 + 4 = 10408.

So, in this pathological case it is possible for the HHI to exceed 10,000.

Edited: Added (for a given period) above, for clarity.