Slashdot Mirror


User: Khyber

Khyber's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
13,671
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 13,671

  1. Re:Of course it has the most ugly hacks on C Code On GitHub Has the Most "Ugly Hacks" · · Score: 1

    "Of course, you didn't look into the nature of any of these ugly hacks "

    I don't need to - most of the ugly hacks I've seen deal explicitly with the poor garbage collection that is built into C. Near infinite loops of del src() for shit like account logouts.

  2. Of course it has the most ugly hacks on C Code On GitHub Has the Most "Ugly Hacks" · · Score: 1

    And it has them for the same reason it has beautiful hacks:

    The complete and utter lack of fucking memory management, forcing the development of such hacks.

  3. Re:Holy shit AMD does something right on AMD Outlines Plans For Zen-Based Processors, First Due In 2016 · · Score: 1

    "What is the use case for a high end integrated APU? The current use case is for systems that need modern GPU capabilities, but not high graphics performance."

    The reality of the situation is that right now, even at current tech, if AMD used a bit more actual die space, and embedded a couple gigs of eDRAM for the CPU/GPU to share apart from main system memory, the performance increase would be quite huge.

  4. Re:Daikatana for GBC on GOG Announces Open Beta For New Game Distribution Platform · · Score: 1

    Bah, you had to mention tiles and tile sizes. Now I'm looking back at this project I abandoned because I couldn't find a pixel artist to help me get tiles and avatars made (I was able to fix the engines inherent timing/movement problems,) and still kicking myself.

  5. Re:The appeal of GoG for me on GOG Announces Open Beta For New Game Distribution Platform · · Score: 1

    Daikatana needed repackaging?

    Seems to work fine over here, Windows 7, original install CD.

    What got fucked up that it needed a repackage (besides the entire game being a nerfed piece of shit?)

  6. Re:iPad 1 anyone? on Google Can't Ignore the Android Update Problem Any Longer · · Score: 1

    Yup, as my fiance's 4S is dog fucking slow with iOS8 compared to being ultra-snappy with iOS6.

  7. Re:Seems to still be architecturaly-gimped on Intel Launches Xeon E7-8800 and E7-4800 V3 Processor Families · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Quick clarification: Not the memory controller was gimped, but how processors communicated and shared stuff out of their memory to other processors was gimped. And the E7 v3 looks to have the same limitation. Pumping up QPI speed might help alleviate that SOME but nowhere near what's needed for multiple socket multiple GPU configs in a single non-nodal system.

  8. Seems to still be architecturaly-gimped on Intel Launches Xeon E7-8800 and E7-4800 V3 Processor Families · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It appears that they didn't do much to the QPI besides boost the speed a bit. That's not going to fare well in HPC stuff. The reason I didn't use the V2 E7-8*** line was because due to how gimped the memory architecture was, you could run 2 socket 4 GPU, 4 socket 2 GPU, but not 4/4.

    It was cheaper, and just as effective, to go with the E5 instead, and make multiple node systems into a single box, instead. 8 socket, 12 GPU. Fuck yea.

  9. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 1

    No lasers. LED light penetration through various plant canopies, materials of varying thickness, etc.

    Gotta make that soon-to-be-legal weed grow the best it possibly can. ;)

  10. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 1

    " Because of that, the emerging technologies in this field won't target your requirements for a very long time."

    My requirements have been able to be met since the 80s.

    If these emerging technologies can't reach that level of 'advancement' they're doomed to failure in the first place.

  11. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 1

    Or, I'm using those GRID cards for something else, entirely. It's still supporting everything else out there. Massive simulations for photons, that is what I'm doing. Well, with ONE of those full systems, anyways. I've got a couple more on the way.

    I spit loads of data, rapidly. I need those SSDs.

  12. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 1

    "Why does every solution need to fulfill oddball out of the way requirements?"

    My oddball requirements would pretty much guarantee full energy independence for 99% of the general population and for 99% of the other 1%, with a proper solar panel array and one of those batteries + inverters per room. Even apartment complexes could utilize this, and so could many businesses. The benefit is expandability and over-storage so you're essentially guaranteed to not run out of power, ever. Modularity means instead of the whole house dying when your single-battery/inverter setup fails (in case your tie-in is faulty, some how,) the rest of the place can actually continue to operate.

    Sure it'll be somewhat expensive, but the reduced strain on the battery packs by distributing it across many batteries and inverters will improve the lifespan of those components and reduce the lifetime maintenance costs. Those batteries might last well beyond their warranty period and still maintain a reasonable amount of charge level. The inverters are hopefully still good if they're of any quality.

    MESSENGER was over-engineered with the expectation of one year of usefulness. We got more than that, way more. The Rovers were designed for what, six months? We got how long out of them?

    Over-engineering is the way to go if you want something to last. Sure, it's expensive, but those savings will become quite apparent in the long run. The way technology is advancing, it's going to become an economic no-brainer soon enough.

  13. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 1

    "Your insane waste of electricity"

    You don't even know what it's being used for, so how can you call it a waste?

  14. Re:So far...close on Ubuntu 15.04 Received Well By Linux Community · · Score: 1

    " it sped up video playback to what I would expect (no stuttering on HD)."

    How old is your hardware? I've been doing HD 1080p video on Pentium 4s for a LONG time, under Linux and Windows.

  15. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 1

    "Actually, I think you overestimate the amount of power used in many circumstances."

    Actually, I think you're speaking for yourself when you don't have a clue what I have running in my home.

    8 kWh computer (just mine, not including the other laptops and my SO's own computer.)
    3 kWh in LED grow lights.
    7.2 kWh A/C (this is California.)

    And so on...

  16. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 1

    "Most rooms shouldn't chew anywhere close to a kilowatt of power. What are you idiots DOING"

    My computer alone uses almost 8kWh. I can eat that power pack for lunch.

    When I cook, I use at minimum three stovetop elements simultaneously. The Tesla battery pack would DIE under just my normal cooking conditions.

  17. Re:Not Actually $3500 on Tesla's Household Battery: Costs, Prices, and Tradeoffs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Plus inverters? No. Plus inverter. That pack, if you look at the specs and do some math, is good for a single ~20A 120V circuit, given that it's sustained discharge is ~2kWh and peak is 3kWh. Reality is more like 15A. I wouldn't trust that pack for more than one room of my home. One for each room and multiple for the kitchen given the power drain an electric stove does per burner, be it element, induction, or IR, microwaves, dishwasher, refrigerator...

  18. Re:CareerBuilder AND Monster are Job Spammers on Want 30 Job Offers a Month? It's Not As Great As You Think · · Score: 1

    "You forgot the people who actually drive trains. An old friend of mine is that kind of engineer. "

    That still requires primarily math and a license requirement by the state, though.

  19. Re:Detector, please on Unnoticed For Years, Malware Turned Linux Servers Into Spamming Machines · · Score: 1

    Google's "This site may be hacked' is a long-known false flag that they refuse to remove from MenuetOS (because MenuetOS is beating their ass hands-down when it comes to making a REAL OS from scratch.)

  20. Re: I must be old on Square Enix Witch Chapter Real-Time CG DX12 Demo Impresses At Microsoft BUILD · · Score: 1

    "I'm pretty confident the winners of the competitions for the last few years (a) don't have the same flexibility for artists working with their demo engines as Square-Enix does and (b) would never be able to assemble enough assets and people to do the facial expression stuff with anywhere near the same quality (an area in which, AFAIK, Nvidia has been almost entirely pioneering.)"

    Actually, they've had the assets and more for a LONG time. Procedural generation eliminates the need for a LOT of work, can be done with a HUGE degree of detail, takes up ungodly tiny amounts of space, and yes, we've had facial emotional animation in demoscene projects well matching up with stuff like LA Noire.

  21. So not only is CB Spamming Morons on CareerBuilder Cyberattack Delivers Malware Straight To Employers · · Score: 1

    CB also appears to be very insecure spamming morons.

    Good Job, CareerBuilder. Do you ever wonder why I tell people to avoid you like the plague?

  22. Re:Shadows still not solved on Square Enix Witch Chapter Real-Time CG DX12 Demo Impresses At Microsoft BUILD · · Score: 1

    "Still saddens me that one company that made a raytracer accelerator chip just sort of vanished."

    That was Intel's Knights Landing coprocessor. I don't think Intel vanished. :)

  23. Re:I must be old on Square Enix Witch Chapter Real-Time CG DX12 Demo Impresses At Microsoft BUILD · · Score: 1

    Sorry, we've had graphics like this well before now in the Demoscene. At least since the 8*** series of nVidia GPUs - NINE GENERATIONS AGO.

  24. Re:Detector, please on Unnoticed For Years, Malware Turned Linux Servers Into Spamming Machines · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Drop Linux, learn MenuetOS, don't worry about getting infected by this kind of crap, and enjoy INSTANT boot-up/reboot/shut down and about a 400% speed improvement over current Linux.

    Sure, it's proprietary, but as long as you understand ASM, you can do anything you want, more than Linux can.

  25. Re:Detector, please on Unnoticed For Years, Malware Turned Linux Servers Into Spamming Machines · · Score: -1, Troll

    "Just for reference, just because you have some raspberry pi's running Linux, doesn't really mean you should be saying you run some servers."

    Just like you can't say you run servers, because your shit 1P hardware doesn't even come close to my system.

    "Second, if you don't know how to detect this, you shouldn't be running servers."

    No, they shouldn't be running LINUX. Not that I'd recommend Linux to anyone anyways, given the attitude like yours that's given when people ASK A FUCKING QUESTION.

    "Third, if you don't know how to prevent this from being useful, OR you don't take those actions be default, you shouldn't be running anything other than Windows."

    If you can't provide an immediate answer to the person's question (How is this detected) then you're just as fucking useless. By the way, since the paper doesn't explain detection methods, only that this was discovered after someone had their server blackholed and was ASKING FOR ASSISTANCE, you can't run to your shit default "RTFA/M" meme, now.

    So, start talking, or admit YOU DON'T EVEN KNOW THE ANSWER YOURSELF.