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xxgreg

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xxgreg
·2 jaar geleden·discuss
Don't use floats if you're trying to represent an exact value, i.e. someones bank account. But in financial modelling you're generally dealing in probabilistic "expected values", it's common and fine to use floats.

Having said that, half the world seems to run on Excel spreadsheets, which are full of money values, and Excel is basically all floats (with some funky precision logic to make it deterministic - would be curious to know more).

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2815407/can-someone-conf...
xxgreg
·4 jaar geleden·discuss
If given a question about reversing a string, it lets you ask the interviewer questions like:

* Do you want to do it in-place or as a copy?

* Is it an ASCII or Unicode string? If using Unicode, I assume you want to reverse on grapheme cluster boundaries?

Asking these questions let you as a candidate demonstrate your knowledge.

If the candidate doesn't ask these questions, the interviewer can ask follow up questions like.

* What is the time/space complexity of the algorithm? (Easy answer!)

* How does this work with UTF strings?

I don't particularly like the question, but have been in interviews where this exact question was used. From the discussion with the candidate it did very quickly weed out inexperienced developers. I was amazed at how many people applied for roles and had no knowledge of these concepts.

> Do you actually reverse strings here?

We've also tried doing more in-depth code exercises, which are more applicable to our business domain. That didn't work much better, and required upfront work from the candidate, which isn't always fair on them.

Anyways - happily not involved in the recruiting process any more.
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
Thanks for taking the time to write these comments.

In my opinion, existing tech is able to solve the climate crisis. Breakthroughs can make the solution cheaper and sooner.

In my view the main problem is the attitude of doom amongst the general population. If people felt there was a solution, and were excited and energised by the challenge, they'd be more willing to support political changes. I.e. pushing back against entrenched obstructionist industries, pricing externalities, and investing in infrastructure.
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
The cause is a political battle with Putin over gas. Russia has traditionally used gas contracts with individual countries to buy political influence.

Now the EU has a single gas market, and had upgraded pipelines to be used in reverse directions. For example, recently since gas transport from Russia to Poland was reduced, Germany has been exporting gas to Poland.

Putin is testing Germany's new government and the EU leadership.

More renewables, and using gas more efficiently, i.e better insulated buildings throughout the EU will solve this.

New nuclear isn't going to happen much in the EU, and existing nuclear is only a small part of EU wide generation, and becoming increasingly unreliable. France has even higher electricity prices ATM due to nuclear outages.

https://www.spglobal.com/platts/en/market-insights/latest-ne...
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
Primary energy consumption isn't a great metric for comparing with renewable electricity, since for conventional plants it includes the unused energy lost as heat.

A fossil power plant wastes ~60% of the energy, a nuclear plant ~75%, a small petrol engine ~75%. Once you take this into account, the stats look a little better.
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
There's also ongoing work to build a dependency vulnerability database. This is proposed to be surfaced via a built in `go audit` command.

https://go.googlesource.com/proposal/+/master/design/draft-v...
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
hmmm interesting - here's an article.

https://qz.com/2004569/the-global-chip-shortage-can-be-expla...
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
All of the car companies, dialed down orders at the start of the pandemic. Now they are all trying to stockpile chips, due to not enough supply. I imagine (no data to support) the increased size stockpiles are a large part of what makes the problem worse. Kinda like TP really.

Also, Toyota is now cutting 40 percent of global production due to chip shortage.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-58266794
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
Travel was open with Australia until the recent outbreak there. Using virus genome sequencing, this outbreak has been traced to a New Zealander who caught the virus in Sydney, and spent 2 weeks in a quarantine centre in Auckland.

It's not yet known how the virus escaped the quarantine centre. None of the quarantine centre staff have tested positive, despite being tested multiple times.

It's suspected that the transmission occurred by somebody walking near the hotel while the initial case was arriving, or in a fenced off outdoor exercise area.

6 people walked by on CCTV at this point. 4 have been contacted, but 2 haven't been identified.

Also worth noting, the border isn't completely closed. There is a steady stream of returning New Zealanders, and also exceptions for some workers. Everyone does a 2 week quarantine stay on entering the country. Some of these people test positive for Corona, but so far it hasn't escaped a quarantine centre. Looks like Delta is harder to contain.
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
There's also ongoing development on "starnix" which aims to run unmodified Linux binaries.
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
I hope France finds a path forward. Last I read it's sitting on an aging fleet of reactors, and failing to build new ones in a timely manner.

The big German power companies definitely have a lot to answer for. At least there is now an agreed timeline to shut off all the coal plants.
xxgreg
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
Where is the big increase in coal? If you look at the stats coal use is down.

https://www.cleanenergywire.org/sites/default/files/styles/g...

What is not well known in the Anglosphere is that the German nuclear phase-out was actually legislated around 2000, and not in 2011 after Fukushima.

In 2011 Merkel extended the phase-out end date by ~10 years, which was democratically very unpopular. 3-months later Fukushima happened, and the phase-out went back to an end-date similar to the original.

More charts here: https://www.cleanenergywire.org/factsheets/germanys-energy-c...