And don't forget to verify what compiler settings are used when you check the compiled software,so you don't incorrectly mistake compiler optimizations for malicious code and vice versa.
And, in the end, it all hinges on your intimate knowledge of the code and the architecture in question, compared to the knowledge of the attacker.
Yes, the contempt for ordinary users is a massive factor in why Windows is still in a dominant position for desktop use. Just look at how people contemptuously assume that noone other than computer geeks need powerful CPU's, GPU's or lots of RAM. How flight sims, those doing 3D(both VFX and CAD), music creation, video compositing/effects etc are all brushed off, despite those being far more common now. Part of that contempt is also displayed in the whole "you should learn to code" sentiment many voice, because that's the only way your opinions etc will be considered without any contempt.
In fact, with many of the Linux proponents on this site and others, I feel sorry for their relatives, when the one who could really show them what they could do with a computer, instead decides for them that "you only need to watch youtube and read mail" when setting up a computer for them.
Heh, yeah, it's always fun to see some of the morons who claim that nobody needs cards like these, just because all they do is tool around with email etc.
I spent the weekend at the WEC 6 Hours of Spa. I filled 4 128GiB cards with photos and videos, and was also well into the 5th card.
Something I'm hoping for is smoother offloading of physics between multiple GPU's/cards, such that using 1 GPU for graphics, and the other card, not connected to a display, can be used for physics with less clunkiness than what is currently in use. Would be nice for various simulators for example.
I see that you, in your attempt to set up a strawman, conveniently edited out the part where I specified that I was talking about my neighbourhood and the house my apartment is in.
"There can be no "unlimited" plans period. They don't work. All you can eat may work for Golden Corral, not so much for an ISP."
You mean, they can't work over there in the Corporatist States of America, right? Because it clearly works here in Sweden, with plenty of ISP's competing. Right now, it's saturday prime time, and I still get my full capacity, despite living in a neighbourhood where my ISP alone has over 400 households as customers, and 80 in my house alone.
So, working in C/C++, interfacing directly with graphics API's, drivers and the renderer, programming complex shaders to simulate physical attributes in the fastest way possible, is not programming? Just because they work together with the art director and the animators?
That's not quite true: Sure there are fewer programmers working on adapting the actual engine, since few game studios create their own engines now. But, you have more programmers in the art department instead, programming/optimizing shaders, particle systems etc
Unity still has a way to go to catch up with Unreal Engine in terms of impressive demos. That real-time mo-cap fed straight into real-time rendering live on stage at GDC was bloody impressive in several technical areas.
On a lot of motherboards you can get around it by enabling both PCI-E and iGPU in BIOS or EFI/UEFI, and then in your OS you add another, virtual, display that is linked to the Intel GPU. Even works with some of the cheaper Sandy Bridge era mobos(and pretty much all the expensive ones from the time) running Windows 7.
Depends on the game, doesn't it? With X-Plane and other sims, the answer is: ALL OF THEM! since you can make the flight models far more advanced, and also include more advanced radar simulation etc.
Or you could use it to poison food or water sources etc. Only retarded geeks think nuclear bombs is the only thing that counts when it comes to radioactive materials.
An interesting thing in the race: She had a crash in a downhill section, and her comment about it was that she just couldn't stop. So possibly the motor got stuck in the On position
Yeah, a better example of highly suspicious and quite likely to be motor assisted cheating is Fabian Cancellara in Roubaix-Vlaanderen in the second part of this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
One system mentioned has an effect of about 110W, with either 60 or 90 minute battery, total package weight with 60 minute battery is 1,8kg, with battery and motor all hidden away, wireless activation button etc.And yes, it can be disengaged.
Ironically, it's on the mountain stages it'd really help. 0.148hp for a total of 60 minutes during a stage can help you build a massive lead spread over a few climbs.
Also, look at some suspected motorized cheating like Fabian Cancellara in Roubaix-Flaanderen for example.
Read the fucking article he linked. It's clearly stated. As for the worth of it, that would depend on the stage. 110W, as referenced in that article, equates to about 0.148 horsepower and would definitely make up for the addition of a bit of extra weight on a stage with a lot of climbing.
Huh? Cristopher Lee as Rochefort is the best portrayal of a villain in a big screen movie. For overall best portrayal of a villain(AND the best villain ever), I'd expand over to TV series, and then it's Walter Koenig's portrayal of Alfred Bester in Babylon 5
A place I did a contract job for had an asshole who absolutely had to use a Model M, instead of a decent Cherry keyboard with good but QUIET switches. Finally, his co-workers and his boss had had enough of him being an asshole, so they retaliated by buying typewriters from thrift stores, flea markets etc, and then they spent an entire day doing occasional paperwork on the typewriters, in his vicinity.
The overlap in viewership is pretty large. Hell, Team Liquid had to split Dota2 coverage over to a website of its own, because it overshaded the SC2 coverage on the main Team Liquid site.
Totalbiscuit, as a team sponsor and a professional SC2 caster seriously watched TI3 when his own players didn't play matches in the WCS regional finals. That tells you about the overlap.
The question isn't what I would do, it's what I COULD do to turn it around. But I'd start by adding a system similar to Dota 2's Compendium. Cynical marketing move, sure, but it does evidently help to get people interested. More timely responese to balance issues also.
Not really, they just wanted the WCS to be the central point. However, it was not competently managed. And you can sort of see the after-effects nowadays. Homestory Cup finals ran just after Legacy of the Void was released, and the finals had less viewers than the random streaming from CSGO players had in aggregate, and Homestory Cup isn't exactly a small no-name tournament. In fact, I think they may have attracted more viewers than WCS did this year.
And don't forget to verify what compiler settings are used when you check the compiled software ,so you don't incorrectly mistake compiler optimizations for malicious code and vice versa.
And, in the end, it all hinges on your intimate knowledge of the code and the architecture in question, compared to the knowledge of the attacker.
Yes, the contempt for ordinary users is a massive factor in why Windows is still in a dominant position for desktop use. Just look at how people contemptuously assume that noone other than computer geeks need powerful CPU's, GPU's or lots of RAM. How flight sims, those doing 3D(both VFX and CAD), music creation, video compositing/effects etc are all brushed off, despite those being far more common now. Part of that contempt is also displayed in the whole "you should learn to code" sentiment many voice, because that's the only way your opinions etc will be considered without any contempt.
In fact, with many of the Linux proponents on this site and others, I feel sorry for their relatives, when the one who could really show them what they could do with a computer, instead decides for them that "you only need to watch youtube and read mail" when setting up a computer for them.
Heh, yeah, it's always fun to see some of the morons who claim that nobody needs cards like these, just because all they do is tool around with email etc.
I spent the weekend at the WEC 6 Hours of Spa. I filled 4 128GiB cards with photos and videos, and was also well into the 5th card.
Yeah, but it's still clunky, and doesn't always synch with the graphics properly
Something I'm hoping for is smoother offloading of physics between multiple GPU's/cards, such that using 1 GPU for graphics, and the other card, not connected to a display, can be used for physics with less clunkiness than what is currently in use. Would be nice for various simulators for example.
I see that you, in your attempt to set up a strawman, conveniently edited out the part where I specified that I was talking about my neighbourhood and the house my apartment is in.
"There can be no "unlimited" plans period. They don't work. All you can eat may work for Golden Corral, not so much for an ISP."
You mean, they can't work over there in the Corporatist States of America, right? Because it clearly works here in Sweden, with plenty of ISP's competing. Right now, it's saturday prime time, and I still get my full capacity, despite living in a neighbourhood where my ISP alone has over 400 households as customers, and 80 in my house alone.
Except that the Unity demo is not cutting edge in any way.
So, working in C/C++, interfacing directly with graphics API's, drivers and the renderer, programming complex shaders to simulate physical attributes in the fastest way possible, is not programming? Just because they work together with the art director and the animators?
That's not quite true: Sure there are fewer programmers working on adapting the actual engine, since few game studios create their own engines now. But, you have more programmers in the art department instead, programming/optimizing shaders, particle systems etc
Unity still has a way to go to catch up with Unreal Engine in terms of impressive demos. That real-time mo-cap fed straight into real-time rendering live on stage at GDC was bloody impressive in several technical areas.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
On a lot of motherboards you can get around it by enabling both PCI-E and iGPU in BIOS or EFI/UEFI, and then in your OS you add another, virtual, display that is linked to the Intel GPU. Even works with some of the cheaper Sandy Bridge era mobos(and pretty much all the expensive ones from the time) running Windows 7.
Correction, for some scientific computing needs, double precision is a must. There are other fields where single precision is perfectly fine.
Depends on the game, doesn't it? With X-Plane and other sims, the answer is: ALL OF THEM! since you can make the flight models far more advanced, and also include more advanced radar simulation etc.
Or you could use it to poison food or water sources etc. Only retarded geeks think nuclear bombs is the only thing that counts when it comes to radioactive materials.
An interesting thing in the race: She had a crash in a downhill section, and her comment about it was that she just couldn't stop. So possibly the motor got stuck in the On position
Yeah, a better example of highly suspicious and quite likely to be motor assisted cheating is Fabian Cancellara in Roubaix-Vlaanderen in the second part of this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Yeah, the benefit is huge.
Cassani stated, after testing a bike kitted out with a motor like that , that even at age 50, he could win a Giro stage with it.
One system mentioned has an effect of about 110W, with either 60 or 90 minute battery, total package weight with 60 minute battery is 1,8kg, with battery and motor all hidden away, wireless activation button etc.And yes, it can be disengaged.
Ironically, it's on the mountain stages it'd really help. 0.148hp for a total of 60 minutes during a stage can help you build a massive lead spread over a few climbs.
Also, look at some suspected motorized cheating like Fabian Cancellara in Roubaix-Flaanderen for example.
Links:
http://cyclingtips.com/2015/04...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Read the fucking article he linked. It's clearly stated. As for the worth of it, that would depend on the stage. 110W, as referenced in that article, equates to about 0.148 horsepower and would definitely make up for the addition of a bit of extra weight on a stage with a lot of climbing.
Huh? Cristopher Lee as Rochefort is the best portrayal of a villain in a big screen movie. For overall best portrayal of a villain(AND the best villain ever), I'd expand over to TV series, and then it's Walter Koenig's portrayal of Alfred Bester in Babylon 5
A place I did a contract job for had an asshole who absolutely had to use a Model M, instead of a decent Cherry keyboard with good but QUIET switches. Finally, his co-workers and his boss had had enough of him being an asshole, so they retaliated by buying typewriters from thrift stores, flea markets etc, and then they spent an entire day doing occasional paperwork on the typewriters, in his vicinity.
The overlap in viewership is pretty large. Hell, Team Liquid had to split Dota2 coverage over to a website of its own, because it overshaded the SC2 coverage on the main Team Liquid site.
Totalbiscuit, as a team sponsor and a professional SC2 caster seriously watched TI3 when his own players didn't play matches in the WCS regional finals. That tells you about the overlap.
The question isn't what I would do, it's what I COULD do to turn it around. But I'd start by adding a system similar to Dota 2's Compendium. Cynical marketing move, sure, but it does evidently help to get people interested. More timely responese to balance issues also.
Not really, they just wanted the WCS to be the central point. However, it was not competently managed. And you can sort of see the after-effects nowadays. Homestory Cup finals ran just after Legacy of the Void was released, and the finals had less viewers than the random streaming from CSGO players had in aggregate, and Homestory Cup isn't exactly a small no-name tournament. In fact, I think they may have attracted more viewers than WCS did this year.