Apparently, I'm not supposed to call SWR a "toy"; it's all grown up. SWR really shines through in terms of performance due to its (nearly) linear scaling on cores. When other rasterizers begin to suffer from communication overhead, SWR keeps going. Thus, if you've only got a few threads, you're not going to see really seriously awesome number—if you've got 16+ threads, that's where SWR is going to shine.
One of the original authors, here: this is exactly correct. This thing was a toy that we wrote for our own entertainment that grew rapidly out of scale. As a joke, we'd implemented display-lists on OpenGL 1.2 and began playing Quake III. (This required monstrous multi-socket Xeon workstations, with all the fans going flat-out.) It just happens to turn out that (at the time) regular old top-of-the-line GPUs were crashing under the TACC workloads. Weirdly, our rasterizer was both faster than the GPUs (even the high-end ones) [1], and didn't crash. That's where SWR came from. OpenSWR is the natural outgrowth of dealing with academics.
My interest was in the compiler, the implementation of an "old skool" high performance GL driver, and the texture-unit. The other two guys wanted to write an interpolator, and a threading/caching model—the stuff we never got to do on the old Larrabee projects.
[1] The workloads didn't fit into the on-card video-ram, so the GPUs were strongly bandwidth bound—maybe 5GB/s; we had >70GB/s of bandwidth at our disposal.
So the article was devoid of anything of particular interest other than some jargon. The jargon, on the other hand, led to fascinating little technique about reconstructing the color of the grayscale image from "chroma dots". The actual method was discovered by a BBC engineer, and you can read more about it here: colour-recovery.wikispaces.com.
I've trained all three of my cats. They can and do respond very well to positive feedback (usually a small treat or being petted). As opposed to a dog which you can "handle", i.e., by pushing down on their hindquarters, lifting a paw, etc., with a cat you have to wait for them to perform some part of the trick you want. Then you reinforce that behavior. After they learn the "partial trick" you keep adding on until they have the entire thing down. It takes a lot more patience and a lot longer. Also, cats will "revert" and decide to do some simpler thing, which forces you to start all over.
I'd have to say, that while there are some smart cats, dogs are definitely better learners and much more engaging. In my experience, dogs pick up & retain new behaviors a lot better than cats (given that I've only had three dogs & three cats, take this as the anecdotal evidence it is). I don't really know what you mean by "communicate with them on a fairly deep level"... sounds a little... mystical to me. My cats love attention, love food, and love to be "trained" (which is a combination of the previous two).
Hey, just to put everyone on the same page, Disney is most interested in protecting "Winnie the Pooh" and to a much lesser extent (from a commercial viewpoint) the mouse.
My problem with "religion in school" is the same problem I had with the "partial course on religion" taught in during the "world history segment" in a public Texas school I went to: ~6 weeks of Christianity, one lecture on Judaism, and one lecture "on the rest of the pagan world" with commentary like "and the crazy Hindus believe that you are reincarnated as a cow." I guarantee you that a mandatory religious course will look like this very soon after it is instituted. So I think your "teach a religion course" is a total BS idea and I don't want to pay for it.
It works; a bit of a PITA, but it works. Basically, you have to log out of Facebook (everywhere); also clear all your cookies. This keeps affiliated sites from logging you in. Then you have to stay out of Facebook for >2 weeks. I haven't logged in in 20-or-so days; just went to just it out and I got a "your email doesn't appear to be in our system" message.
The upper bound average on costs are, respectively, 157.895 and 161.616. However, the rate of risk of the second option is 4% lower; for a 2.36% increase in upper bound average cost I can reduce my risk 4%? That seems like a good trade to me!
I don't mean to call you out, but I just looked up a couple of state constitutions, and I couldn't find a reference to what you're talking about. Could you provide some pointers?
I've never bothered to read the FQA; however, this time, I decided to jump in. It certainly is a lot of vitriol and hyperbole, isn't it? I'm not exactly sure what the author(s?) want, but just from the "summary" it sounds like he would like to use a strongly, statically-typed, garbage-collected language (with "management") that has a number of "high level, built in" types with a reflection system and a module system, etc. I'm certain there are many (supposedly well-implemented; btw, unless it is machine verified C, OCaml, or SML, the language implementation has bugs) languages with those properties; why doesn't he use one of those?
The weird part of the FQA is the feeling I get that he thinks C++ is somehow flawed as a language due to its cruft. However, from a type-system or systems-programming point-of-view it doesn't seem to have an practical (or theoretical) problems. Is he claiming that C++ is not turing complete? That it doesn't compile to efficient code? That it is impossible to write large applications in the language?
I would go further and say that any agent (this means the person and their management chain) directly or indirectly representing the government (in any capacity; I'm thinking of "bad legislation" and "bad interpretation of law" as well) should be a felony with minimum imprisonment of, say, 5 years and a 10% fine of total gross assets+income for each violation.
A graduated punishment mechanism is more reasonable, but the basic idea is that it is a *crime* not a civil-infraction to violate my rights.
Texas is net-negative to the Fed in terms of income taxes (of course, so are most states). It has the 2nd largest GDP of any state (behind California). On a personal note, the public high school I went to was one of the finest schools in the country (public or private): almost all of my teachers had masters or doctoral degrees. Also, for some reason "South == racist" even though the most prevalent (and strongly racist) individuals I know come from the Midwest and the Northeast. Perhaps the few hundred/thousand people I know in Texas/Oklahoma/Louisiana are exceptional.
Little known fact: Texas was a Democratic state from the 1870s until the 1990 census (by then only 40% of Texans were Democratic, but the Democrats had been gerrymandering the voting districts; although... the Republicans aren't any better on this score, either).
There were two *great* comments prior to mine: (1) Have rock-solid algebraic (symbolic) manipulation skills; (2) Really know your trigonometry.
My family has been using Sylvanus P. Thompson's "Calculus Made Easy" for several generations (the book was first published in 1910). It really is a wonderful introduction to Calculus (targeted at high-school students). There are two versions: (1) The classic text, search for "Sylvanus P. Thompson" and "Calculus Made Easy"; (2) The updated text co-authored by "Martin Gardner".
Yes. There is a large focus on two different aspects in a lab I used to work with a few years ago: (1) Retinopathies (problems of the eye); (2) Preventative treatments for cancer.
As someone who knows plenty of people in the "7 digit income class" I can guarantee you that they consider themselves upper-middle class. I think you should probably start at the 8-digit range, i.e., large companies.
So... wait. You're claiming every Texan is responsible for a few judges, probably locally elected? This sounds like gross generalization of guilt, to me. How about I turn around and make a responsible demand: since you demanded punitive action against every person in the state of Texas regardless of guilt, how about having your personal citizenship revoked?
Also, having lived/stayed in a number of states now, I can say that racism and other breeds of bigotry are universal (or not), and that none of the states I've been to have I met people more/less bigoted than anywhere else [mostly not bigoted]. Well, except upstate New York and northern California; some of the people I met up never got past the 1950s.
Apparently, I'm not supposed to call SWR a "toy"; it's all grown up. SWR really shines through in terms of performance due to its (nearly) linear scaling on cores. When other rasterizers begin to suffer from communication overhead, SWR keeps going. Thus, if you've only got a few threads, you're not going to see really seriously awesome number—if you've got 16+ threads, that's where SWR is going to shine.
One of the original authors, here: this is exactly correct. This thing was a toy that we wrote for our own entertainment that grew rapidly out of scale. As a joke, we'd implemented display-lists on OpenGL 1.2 and began playing Quake III. (This required monstrous multi-socket Xeon workstations, with all the fans going flat-out.) It just happens to turn out that (at the time) regular old top-of-the-line GPUs were crashing under the TACC workloads. Weirdly, our rasterizer was both faster than the GPUs (even the high-end ones) [1], and didn't crash. That's where SWR came from. OpenSWR is the natural outgrowth of dealing with academics.
My interest was in the compiler, the implementation of an "old skool" high performance GL driver, and the texture-unit. The other two guys wanted to write an interpolator, and a threading/caching model—the stuff we never got to do on the old Larrabee projects.
[1] The workloads didn't fit into the on-card video-ram, so the GPUs were strongly bandwidth bound—maybe 5GB/s; we had >70GB/s of bandwidth at our disposal.
So the article was devoid of anything of particular interest other than some jargon. The jargon, on the other hand, led to fascinating little technique about reconstructing the color of the grayscale image from "chroma dots". The actual method was discovered by a BBC engineer, and you can read more about it here: colour-recovery.wikispaces.com.
I've trained all three of my cats. They can and do respond very well to positive feedback (usually a small treat or being petted). As opposed to a dog which you can "handle", i.e., by pushing down on their hindquarters, lifting a paw, etc., with a cat you have to wait for them to perform some part of the trick you want. Then you reinforce that behavior. After they learn the "partial trick" you keep adding on until they have the entire thing down. It takes a lot more patience and a lot longer. Also, cats will "revert" and decide to do some simpler thing, which forces you to start all over.
I'd have to say, that while there are some smart cats, dogs are definitely better learners and much more engaging. In my experience, dogs pick up & retain new behaviors a lot better than cats (given that I've only had three dogs & three cats, take this as the anecdotal evidence it is). I don't really know what you mean by "communicate with them on a fairly deep level" ... sounds a little ... mystical to me. My cats love attention, love food, and love to be "trained" (which is a combination of the previous two).
Hey, just to put everyone on the same page, Disney is most interested in protecting "Winnie the Pooh" and to a much lesser extent (from a commercial viewpoint) the mouse.
My problem with "religion in school" is the same problem I had with the "partial course on religion" taught in during the "world history segment" in a public Texas school I went to: ~6 weeks of Christianity, one lecture on Judaism, and one lecture "on the rest of the pagan world" with commentary like "and the crazy Hindus believe that you are reincarnated as a cow." I guarantee you that a mandatory religious course will look like this very soon after it is instituted. So I think your "teach a religion course" is a total BS idea and I don't want to pay for it.
It works; a bit of a PITA, but it works. Basically, you have to log out of Facebook (everywhere); also clear all your cookies. This keeps affiliated sites from logging you in. Then you have to stay out of Facebook for >2 weeks. I haven't logged in in 20-or-so days; just went to just it out and I got a "your email doesn't appear to be in our system" message.
The upper bound average on costs are, respectively, 157.895 and 161.616. However, the rate of risk of the second option is 4% lower; for a 2.36% increase in upper bound average cost I can reduce my risk 4%? That seems like a good trade to me!
That sucks, since, depending upon the year what they did was absolutely illegal (assuming the US): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygraph#United_States
I don't mean to call you out, but I just looked up a couple of state constitutions, and I couldn't find a reference to what you're talking about. Could you provide some pointers?
I've never bothered to read the FQA; however, this time, I decided to jump in. It certainly is a lot of vitriol and hyperbole, isn't it? I'm not exactly sure what the author(s?) want, but just from the "summary" it sounds like he would like to use a strongly, statically-typed, garbage-collected language (with "management") that has a number of "high level, built in" types with a reflection system and a module system, etc. I'm certain there are many (supposedly well-implemented; btw, unless it is machine verified C, OCaml, or SML, the language implementation has bugs) languages with those properties; why doesn't he use one of those?
The weird part of the FQA is the feeling I get that he thinks C++ is somehow flawed as a language due to its cruft. However, from a type-system or systems-programming point-of-view it doesn't seem to have an practical (or theoretical) problems. Is he claiming that C++ is not turing complete? That it doesn't compile to efficient code? That it is impossible to write large applications in the language?
I would go further and say that any agent (this means the person and their management chain) directly or indirectly representing the government (in any capacity; I'm thinking of "bad legislation" and "bad interpretation of law" as well) should be a felony with minimum imprisonment of, say, 5 years and a 10% fine of total gross assets+income for each violation.
A graduated punishment mechanism is more reasonable, but the basic idea is that it is a *crime* not a civil-infraction to violate my rights.
Which is irritating because the *opposite* should be the case: it should surprise Americans when the military has *any* rights while in the US.
Texas is net-negative to the Fed in terms of income taxes (of course, so are most states). It has the 2nd largest GDP of any state (behind California). On a personal note, the public high school I went to was one of the finest schools in the country (public or private): almost all of my teachers had masters or doctoral degrees. Also, for some reason "South == racist" even though the most prevalent (and strongly racist) individuals I know come from the Midwest and the Northeast. Perhaps the few hundred/thousand people I know in Texas/Oklahoma/Louisiana are exceptional.
Little known fact: Texas was a Democratic state from the 1870s until the 1990 census (by then only 40% of Texans were Democratic, but the Democrats had been gerrymandering the voting districts; although ... the Republicans aren't any better on this score, either).
Big Government did it.
Base two? What's going on here?
cmholm please meet anon.
I prefer between -20 and 20% faster.
There were two *great* comments prior to mine:
(1) Have rock-solid algebraic (symbolic) manipulation skills;
(2) Really know your trigonometry.
My family has been using Sylvanus P. Thompson's "Calculus Made Easy" for several generations (the book was first published in 1910). It really is a wonderful introduction to Calculus (targeted at high-school students). There are two versions:
(1) The classic text, search for "Sylvanus P. Thompson" and "Calculus Made Easy";
(2) The updated text co-authored by "Martin Gardner".
The only reason Scheme or Lisp can do so much is because they were originally written in Emacs.
Yes. There is a large focus on two different aspects in a lab I used to work with a few years ago:
(1) Retinopathies (problems of the eye);
(2) Preventative treatments for cancer.
Here are some links:
[1] http://inbt.jhu.edu/biosensor-targets-retina-cells/2006/11/15 -- a multilayer "machine" which executes a biochemical program;
[2] http://nanohub.org/resources/3541/download/2007.10.15-leary-nt501.pdf -- lecture notes on the state-of-the-art nano- magneto- and silicon particle drug delivery as of late 2007.
I was about to call BS on this; however, after reading the links it me want to read "Hamlet" in the original Klingon.
As someone who knows plenty of people in the "7 digit income class" I can guarantee you that they consider themselves upper-middle class. I think you should probably start at the 8-digit range, i.e., large companies.
I spent years in Texas schools, and we were always told it was a giant brass armature. When did God put in the bling?
So ... wait. You're claiming every Texan is responsible for a few judges, probably locally elected? This sounds like gross generalization of guilt, to me. How about I turn around and make a responsible demand: since you demanded punitive action against every person in the state of Texas regardless of guilt, how about having your personal citizenship revoked?
Also, having lived/stayed in a number of states now, I can say that racism and other breeds of bigotry are universal (or not), and that none of the states I've been to have I met people more/less bigoted than anywhere else [mostly not bigoted]. Well, except upstate New York and northern California; some of the people I met up never got past the 1950s.