Been there, done that. 64bit kernels bring me nothing I need, as long as I have PAE.
As for "there is no excuse for code that isn't 64bit clean", that may be true in your mom's basement but for a company that needs to turn out a profit supporting an additional platform is a huge cost. We don't have any customer asking for 64bits versions of our software, so why bother ?
Besides, the first affordable 64bit processors weren't available until the early 2000s and they weren't that much of a success (remember itanium ?).
Each process addresses at most 4GB of data (or is it limited by most OSes to 2GB ?), but the whole OS can address more (with the proper hardware support, which has been standard since... long ago, I don't remember).
Most of my company's code is not 64-bits clean, so it's easier for me to run a 32bits OS (Linux) to run 32bits processes, even though I have 8GB of RAM. I usually load 6 to 8 processes simultaneously, as I work on very splittable data sets.
Besides, I expect fewer problems with proprietary software (nvidia drivers, flash) on 32bits Linux.
I guess that when they say "their completion times was below average" means that they took longer which is considered bad (wtf, how about appreciating the design&graphics ?), so the "completion time grade" was below average. Still, it's a pretty messed-up sentence.
Oh and by the way, there is still a possibility that the original sentence is correct if we assume abysmal results by the Solvers. I prefer my explanation, thoough.
Say what you want about the glacial speed with which GNOME progresses. Their developers don't rip out 2/3 of the features of their applications, and call it a " major upgrade."
AFAIK threads and processes are almost as cheap under Linux. However, under Windows, a process is much much heavier and costly to create than a thread.
evil adj. As used by hackers, implies that some system, program, person, or institution is sufficiently maldesigned as to be not worth the bother of dealing with. Unlike the adjectives in the cretinous/losing/brain-damaged series, `evil' does not imply incompetence or bad design, but rather a set of goals or design criteria fatally incompatible with the speaker's. This usage is more an esthetic and engineering judgment than a moral one in the mainstream sense. "We thought about adding a Blue Glue interface but decided it was too evil to deal with." "TECO is neat, but it can be pretty evil if you're prone to typos." Often pronounced with the first syllable lengthened, as/eeee'vil/. Compare evil and rude.
You *do* realize there were lots of radionavigation aids before GPS ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LORAN
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decca_Navigator_System
They have been/are being shut down but the time of sextant-only navigation is long past.
Besides, there is always the possibility of using radar to map the coastline (if you're close enough).
I remember being *glad* to switch away from NS4 *to* IE5 ! And telling everybody about it...
Oh the irony...
" a struct which contains pointers to its state and all of the functions related to actions the scheduler needs to take."
Hmmm. Looks like the usual implementation of polymorphism common to mere mortals coding in object-oriented languages (like C++ and vtables).
Or is there something more to it ?
Yep, too obtuse for me. But with your (+1 informative) comment and link, it's a lot clearer.
And funny.
Thanks.
Been there, done that. 64bit kernels bring me nothing I need, as long as I have PAE.
As for "there is no excuse for code that isn't 64bit clean", that may be true in your mom's basement but for a company that needs to turn out a profit supporting an additional platform is a huge cost. We don't have any customer asking for 64bits versions of our software, so why bother ?
Besides, the first affordable 64bit processors weren't available until the early 2000s and they weren't that much of a success (remember itanium ?).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_Address_Extension
Each process addresses at most 4GB of data (or is it limited by most OSes to 2GB ?), but the whole OS can address more (with the proper hardware support, which has been standard since ... long ago, I don't remember).
I do.
Most of my company's code is not 64-bits clean, so it's easier for me to run a 32bits OS (Linux) to run 32bits processes, even though I have 8GB of RAM. I usually load 6 to 8 processes simultaneously, as I work on very splittable data sets.
Besides, I expect fewer problems with proprietary software (nvidia drivers, flash) on 32bits Linux.
Your mileage may vary.
Heh. Statistics... :)
I guess that when they say "their completion times was below average" means that they took longer which is considered bad (wtf, how about appreciating the design&graphics ?), so the "completion time grade" was below average. Still, it's a pretty messed-up sentence.
Oh and by the way, there is still a possibility that the original sentence is correct if we assume abysmal results by the Solvers. I prefer my explanation, thoough.
Nice explanation, especially the "OOP in C" analogy. Thanks.
there's a little perl app called apt-show-versions:
There is also apt-cache policy *packagename* which is mighty useful when tracking several Debian branches (e.g. unstable+experimental).
A good system is indeed one that can evolve and adapt to shifting requirements.
A good product/project manager is one that can say "NO" and prevent feature creep. But you need some backbone to say no to the boss/client.
No mention of TeX version numbering? (Asymptotically approaching pi?)
Err.... You *did* realize there were three pages in the article ? TeX is at the bottom of page 2.
Don't let the fact that DB2 is an IBM product restrain you from mocking Oracle.
Say what you want about the glacial speed with which GNOME progresses. Their developers don't rip out 2/3 of the features of their applications, and call it a " major upgrade."
You obviously don't remember gnome 2.0
Perhaps now he won't be modded Offtopic :)
Well, perhaps having having written his post in latin instead of italian would have helped ?
WTF are you smoking ? Of course it's not "part of either language", it's part of the POSIX C API.
It's a system-level library, if you prefer.
AFAIK threads and processes are almost as cheap under Linux. However, under Windows, a process is much much heavier and costly to create than a thread.
Well, how about "Whine Hardly Is Not an Emulator" ?
Hmm.... "In Soviet Russia double negations proves you" ?
No, doesn't sound right either.
OK, forget it !
Too bad there's nothing above +5 funny, that really made my day. ;)
Priceless.
It would seem a bit of an overkill to run all /. posts through pylint, though.
(Score:5, Informative)
Only on slashdot...
Indeed...
Diverting the moderation process for some deep humor: priceless.
This is how QAction is used to implement what lies behind the menu, the toolbar icons and the shortcuts in Qt applications.
One action, three triggers.
AppleScript doesn't work on a purely SSH connection.
From the Hacker's Jargon
/eeee'vil/. Compare evil and rude.
evil adj. As used by hackers, implies that some system, program, person, or institution is sufficiently maldesigned as to be not worth the bother of dealing with. Unlike the adjectives in the cretinous/losing/brain-damaged series, `evil' does not imply incompetence or bad design, but rather a set of goals or design criteria fatally incompatible with the speaker's. This usage is more an esthetic and engineering judgment than a moral one in the mainstream sense. "We thought about adding a Blue Glue interface but decided it was too evil to deal with." "TECO is neat, but it can be pretty evil if you're prone to typos." Often pronounced with the first syllable lengthened, as