Internet Explorer 9 Caught Cheating In SunSpider
dkd903 writes "A Mozilla engineer has uncovered something embarrassing for Microsoft – Internet Explorer is cheating in the SunSpider Benchmark. The SunSpider, although developed by Apple, has nowadays become a very popular choice of benchmark for the JavaScript engines of browsers."
The article clearly states:
There are three possible explanation for this weird result from Internet Explorer:
1. Microsoft cheated by optimizing Internet Explorer 9 solely to ace the SunSpider Bechmark. To me, this seems like the best explanation.
2. Microsoft engineers working on Internet Explorer 9 could have been using the SunSpider Benchmark and unintentionally over-optimized the JavaScript engine for the SunSpider Benchmark. This seems very unlikely to me.
3. A third option (suggested in Hacker News) might be that this is an actual bug and adding these trivial codes disaligns cache tables and such throwing off the performance entirely. If this is the reason, it raises a serious question about the robustness of the engine.
So, what proof do we have that Microsoft actually cheated?
He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
So, instead the blogger should declare that MS cheated at the benchmarks with nothing more than his results for which he admits that there are at least three plausible explanations?
And, then Taco should treat the author's biased opinion as fact? Remember, the title of this post is "Internet Explorer 9 Caught Cheating in SunSpider."
I don't think so.
And, where is the response from MS? Did anyone ask MS, or did someone find this and go "MS is CHEATING!!11!!one!" without actually investigating or even asking MS? Because, it really looks like the latter, which would make this just more MS bashing blogspam.
First of all, I (and I'll not speak for all left libertarians here, as there is some debate on the matter, but I think I'm expressing the majority opinion) distinguish "personal property" (that is, what you own and use) from "private property" (that is, property owned privately, usually by an organization, but not owned or used by an individual, and leveraged to extract profit). This distinction is important before any discussion of any wealth-distribution theory.
Personal property is personal property. I can think of scarce few real leftists (which is to say, true socialists, communists, anarcho-communists, left-libertarians, etc) who include personal property when they say "property is theft". Private property, on the other hand, being the spoils of a great and sustained theft from the public, belong to the public and should be returned to the public.
Note here that I do not mean the state when I say public. Which is to say that I'm not an advocate for systems like the Soviet Union, but I am an advocate for movements like the worker takeover of factories we see in some Latin American countries.
In short, I advocate taking back what was stolen from us.