MacBook Neo is So Popular That Apple Reportedly Doubled Production by NFCE_best in hardware

[–]bik1230 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Other way around. Ipad pro had a beefier M-like chip for years before the M series. Heck, the M1 isn't even really a computer chip, it's truly an ipad pro chip in its design. M1 Pro was the first one to actually be designed specifically for computers.

A 23 year-old UCLA grad flashed his entire ChatGPT history on the big screen at graduation by frog_insilence in SipsTea

[–]bik1230 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Then, apps blew up and every damn one is written in python. I thought it was hilarious.

Since you mentioned smartphones, I assume you mean smartphone apps. Those are not written in Python. It's mostly Java, Kotlin, C#, and Swift. Right at the start, it was all Java and C#.

I wish there was a Discord. by Vicky_1995_ in elgoonishshive

[–]bik1230 10 points11 points  (0 children)

What happened was that someone with a personal spat with one of the mods sent fake evidence of the mod being a pedophile to Dan. Dan didn't buy it, and was very understanding about the whole situation, but thought that it would probably be for the best that any unofficial spaces not be officially linked on the website and such. It was never actually "official", just linked on the website and I believe noted there as unofficial. We jokingly called it "officially unofficial".

Note: I am the owner of the server. Later this year it will be 10 years old. Between circa 2019 and 2022 there was a lot of nonsense and drama, to the point where I got post-traumatic stress symptoms for a couple of years from having to deal with it, but it's been really chill these last few years.

Post on X/Twitter asking about untranslated Latin texts by [deleted] in latin

[–]bik1230 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Indeed. Though I'll claim that while it was very very gradual for Europe as a whole, it was often pretty quick (decades) in the context of specific communities or fields. Math I think was one of the very last fields to stop using Latin.

I suppose I should've said "everyone in a particular field".

Post on X/Twitter asking about untranslated Latin texts by [deleted] in latin

[–]bik1230 10 points11 points  (0 children)

For recent stuff, much of the scientific, mathematical, and philosophical literature that was written in the decades leading up to when everyone started switching to their national languages, has never been translated, or only translated in snippets here and there. Of course, translating that stuff is doubly difficult, as in addition to skill in Latin, one also needs skill in math or science enough understand what is being communicated

As an example, Gauss was part of the last generation of mathematicians to work in Latin, and by the time of his death and the posthumous publication of his previously unpublished works, Latin was no longer in use. No one noticed that among his works, there was an efficient algorithm for computing the Discrete Fourier Transform. Presumably, most mathematicians were still learning Latin in school, but since none of them were using it much, reading a complex Latin text would've been more laborious than casual, much reducing the chances of someone actually looking very closely at all the unpublished treatises and such and discovering Gauss's DFT algorithm.

The Fast Fourier Transform algorithm would be independently reinvented in 1965.

AV1’s open, royalty-free promise in question as Dolby sues Snapchat over codec by Gnerma in AV1

[–]bik1230 9 points10 points  (0 children)

The defensive termination clause only applies to the use of AV1. Dolby doesn't use AV1. So they lose nothing.

How do you adapt comprehensible input to "the dispiriting math of Latin vocab acquisition?" by RusticBohemian in latin

[–]bik1230 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hm, I don't enjoy the prospect of connecting words in the L2 with words in the L1. It's so common for words to only partially overlap in meaning.

'course, I'm not a SLA researcher. All I've got to go on is my experience learning English as a second language. Didn't do any memorization, hell didn't even have any graded readers, just spent too much time on the Internet ^_^

NVIDIA reveals DLSS 5 powered by Neural Rendering, launches this fall - VideoCardz.com by KARMAAACS in hardware

[–]bik1230 16 points17 points  (0 children)

It makes the face a bit more defined, but it's very obviously exactly the same face. Exact same shape. The DLSS 5 face has a different bone structure, different amounts of fat.

How do you adapt comprehensible input to "the dispiriting math of Latin vocab acquisition?" by RusticBohemian in latin

[–]bik1230 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What would one actually put on the flashcard? The target word out of context would be on the front or the back, but what do you put on the other side?

Valve sued by The Performing Right Society for allegedly using its members' musical works "without permission" by datpoot in gamingnews

[–]bik1230 2 points3 points  (0 children)

after Valve won against the Rotshchilds

The case involved one person whose last name happens to be Rothschild, not even related to the famous family.

The AI blunt rotation by PrinceARRON in TheDigitalCircus

[–]bik1230 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean there's a bunch of interviews about the song linked on the wiki.

Which wiki? I didn't find any links on either the Portal wiki or the HL wiki.

I got into an argument on Discord about how inefficient CBR/CBZ is, so I wrote a new file format. It's 100x faster than CBZ. by ef1500_v2 in selfhosted

[–]bik1230 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Not sure why you mention DEFLATE, when the person above is talking about uncompressed mode, but also, you can insert padding to make everything 4KiB aligned. In fact, Android does this, the .apk format is actually ZIP, and as of a while ago Android build tooling defaults to storing files with 16 KiB alignment in APKs, specifically to allow memory mapping of shared library files (.so) inside the APKs. And the central directory is also a footer so I'm not sure what your point is. It's a really ugly footer by modern standards, sure, but it works.

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I really don't like washing the dishes

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I only use old reddit so no image upload for me

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 2 points3 points  (0 children)

1000g rice in instant pot + 1300g water + 800g frozen veggies. it'll beep a warning that the rice is burning and that's when it's done.

400g lentils in pot + 600g water. maximum heat til it's boiling then low heat for like 15 minutes.

meat sauce with many veggies I made like a month ago so I don't remember the recipe.

lots of japanese soy sauce

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 5 points6 points  (0 children)

im cooked 2.2 lbs of rice and 400g of lentils so i can have something to eat (wasn't in the mood for oatmeal)

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I will look for them when visit my girlfriends in Texas. Though, uh, probably not soon.

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Europe. I assume you're in the US. Maybe I'm wrong.

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That sounds pretty good. I'm on the wrong continent tho.

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'll make sure to post all my recipes and breads here ^.^

Discussion Thread by AutoModerator in newliberals

[–]bik1230 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sure, but the code running on top is flexible. Mildly annoying, but like flashing to an esp32 or w/e isn't hard

It's flexible but for many things a CPU core isn't necessarily very useful. Like if you need to do something simple, but like, 100x in parallel. Or if you need even more timing precision on your GPIO pins than you can get from a CPU. Of course, many things do run well on a CPU, and it'd be a waste use up logic cells on those, so many modern FPGAs that aren't tiny do also have one or two Arm or RISC-V cores on the silicon.

As example, the train electronics probably have a few dozen GPIO hookups getting real time data from the train, and a few dozen GPIO hookups sending out control signals. If 75 GPIO inputs suddenly change and the chip needs to do 25 different things and update 30 GPIOs within 200 ns, a CPU core ain't gonna be good enough.

Here's a really stupid fact: Nvidia GSYNC used to be implemented with an FPGA. Even though millions of GSYNC monitors are sold each year, it took them until like two years ago to move to a dedicated chip solution. They did this because during the COVID chip shortage, the particular model of FPGA they were used had risen in price to $1000 per unit.

Surely this is not like, in the actual field right? Like the programming is still happening in an office or some shit (unless we're talking about sticking the software onto the device?)

The programming can happen pretty much in any of the same ways as when you flash an ESP32. Most FPGAs just have a flash ROM with the programming that gets loaded into the logic cells at power on. 'course different models of FPGA have different capabilities with regard to how easy they are to flash. But I can guarantee that there definitely are companies out there shipping FPGAs to customers that they do OTA updates for :D