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testdelacc1

1,016 karmajoined 7 yıl önce

Submissions

Integrating no-as-a-service in Linux kernel code

github.com
2 points·by testdelacc1·2 ay önce·0 comments

How to Solve the Tenor Shortage

economist.com
2 points·by testdelacc1·5 ay önce·2 comments

Dutch govt takes control of Chinese-owned chipmaker Nexperia

reuters.com
27 points·by testdelacc1·9 ay önce·1 comments

Why Arabs Lose Wars (1999)

meforum.org
16 points·by testdelacc1·10 ay önce·6 comments

comments

testdelacc1
·evvelsi gün·discuss
> I can understand when you need the absolute best performance and you decide to drop to down to C++

Could you help me understand with an example or two? My understanding is that well written Rust and C++ are often identical in performance thanks to relying on the same compiler backend (both clang and rustc use LLVM).
testdelacc1
·6 gün önce·discuss
You’ve misread what I wrote. I wasn’t explaining why there are no bylines. I was saying that when there are no bylines, any mistake reflects poorly on the newspaper as a whole. It wasn’t Shashank Joshi who got it wrong, it was the Economist.
testdelacc1
·6 gün önce·discuss
I don’t see any other publication doing this kind of analysis of themselves, pointing out the mistakes they’ve made in the past.

Even in this article they mention “The Economist was convinced by the false claim that Saddam Hussein was hiding weapons of mass destruction”, something they remind the reader of each time the Iraq War is discussed. I remember an article from 2017 that said the Economist got it wrong, while a less honest publication wouldn’t have.

It’s more remarkable considering that the economist’s articles and opinions are published without the authors details. So when an article gets it wrong, it reflects poorly on the economist as a whole. They can’t simply blame the previous guy, it’s their fault.

They’ll be talking about how they got the Iraq War wrong as long as someone mentions it even in passing 50 years from now. That’s candour I appreciate.
testdelacc1
·8 gün önce·discuss
Being fabulously wealthy his whole adult life he doesn’t know what it’s like to struggle to make rent, or have to take your kids out of school and leave the country in 60 days. Those are things that happen to plebs far away and far beneath his concern.
testdelacc1
·8 gün önce·discuss
CEOs are so afraid of being Innovators Dilemma’d that they make rash moves before they have any data.
testdelacc1
·12 gün önce·discuss
I get that it’s fun to dunk on Rust when a Rust bug surfaces. But is it a bit petty to bring this out when there’s any type of bug of any severity in any Rust software?

In this case a small minority of requests were getting truncated responses.

No one said Rust software is bug free. If someone thinks that they’ve been seriously misled.
testdelacc1
·24 gün önce·discuss
This comment needs to be higher up. The author styles themselves as a cybersecurity expert, but makes the fundamental mistake of assuming that they’re trustworthy and we’d trust them no questions asked. Software security isn’t based on blind trust like this. I’m surprised an expert can’t see that.

The other reason I don’t trust them is because this repo is 100% AI slop, even for crypto code. He posted it on /r/rust where every comment was highly negative - https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/s/4I4Xc7x7ec. The thread was removed by a moderator with the note:

Please, stop posting articles from kerkour.com.

The blog has been on a downward spiral for years, it's doomed, let it go.
testdelacc1
·24 gün önce·discuss
The likely source for Lore - https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Lore
testdelacc1
·geçen ay·discuss
Look at the beauty of an interactive visualisation of an internal combustion engine made by a human being - https://ciechanow.ski/internal-combustion-engine/

It’s possible to actually learn something from this, whereas the one fable created is just slop with pretty colours.
testdelacc1
·geçen ay·discuss
> reducing the need for cooling by half

But the motor is not the only thing that needs to be cooled. It’s mainly the battery, which has a narrow operating range. The power electronics that convert AC to DC also need to be cooled.

So you’re halving the cooling needs of the motor, which is nice but small compared to the other two. And even then, total cooling doesn’t impact range that much compared to warming the battery in cold climates.

I think you’ve overstated your case.
testdelacc1
·geçen ay·discuss
There was this video which showed film directors doing something similar. They film their scene with “filler” music previously used in some other film. Then they hand the scene to the music director and ask a score for it, which forces the director to make something very similar to the filler music. It then makes all film music sound similar.

This was only possible due to the “productivity boost” of digital editing pipelines, which allowed directors to edit immediately after filming.

https://youtu.be/7vfqkvwW2fs from 5:50 on but the whole video is a masterpiece.
testdelacc1
·geçen ay·discuss
Per token costs will fall, but the harnesses will get more token hungry. Instead of just centering the div it’ll spin up a battery of agents to architect, critique, advise, code, review, refactor and so on.
testdelacc1
·geçen ay·discuss
A fair question is why this fork of coreutils is required when the original Rust rewrite (https://github.com/uutils/coreutils/) supports Windows, in addition to Linux, macOS and wasm.

The reason seems to be a few windows specific fixes (https://github.com/uutils/coreutils/compare/main...microsoft...) which can probably be upstreamed into the main repo.
testdelacc1
·2 ay önce·discuss
While taking no stance on your statement, I think “fewer” works better in this context than “less”.
testdelacc1
·2 ay önce·discuss
I’m using the correct terminology.

Google controls 90% of the search market and the browser market. There is nothing preventing anyone from searching on Bing. Yet, the correct terminology is control of the market.

Google has a monopoly on search. Have they abused that monopoly? That’s a legal question that’s currently in court.

Steams share is somewhere in the 70s and it is far stickier than Google. A gamer can’t abandon their steam library easily. Have they abused this monopoly position? IMO no, but my knowledge is limited.
testdelacc1
·2 ay önce·discuss
I think you’re confusing

1. Being a monopoly

2. Abusing monopoly status.

Steam does control the vast share of desktop gaming. But has no influence on console (Xbox, playstation, switch) or mobile (android, ios). They are a monopoly.

But they don’t abuse their monopoly so they haven’t broken any laws.
testdelacc1
·2 ay önce·discuss
In what world is Banksy supposed to be subtle?

Did you look at his artwork of a judge hitting a protestor with a gavel while the protestor was bleeding on the ground and think “huh, I wonder what this means” (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cm2z30p033ro).

By those standards a man wrapped in the flag walking off the edge is the height of subtlety. I guarantee you this - none of the people it should be offending will realise he’s talking about them.
testdelacc1
·2 ay önce·discuss
First time I’m seeing AI;DR. I think I’m going to be using that a lot.
testdelacc1
·2 ay önce·discuss
Who are these people? Care to share examples?

Because all I see are examples of people claiming it happens all the time. Not the examples of it actually happening.
testdelacc1
·2 ay önce·discuss
Perfect. Because that’s exactly what I’m saying.

The comment you linked says something specific about a specific kind of bug being eliminated - memory safety bugs. And they’re not making a claim, they’re repeating the evidence gathered from the Android codebase. So that’s a fact, memory safety bugs truly did not appear in the Rust parts of Android.

The comment you linked is not claiming Rust code is bug-free. That’s a strawman I’ve seen many, many times. Haters will claim that this happens all the time, but all I see are examples of the haters claiming this. You had to go back 5 months and still couldn’t find anything similar to the strawman.

> This one probably covers it

No, probably not.