It’s surprisingly calming to listen to Patrick cathartically vent, after what must’ve been a stressful education and career in finance.
It’s surprisingly calming to listen to Patrick cathartically vent, after what must’ve been a stressful education and career in finance.
Keep Lemmy small. Make the influence of conversation here uninteresting.
I’m doing my part!
I’m pretty sure that’s not how it works on Lemmy. For some reason “block” here is really what “mute” is everywhere else on fedi.
Guess I won’t meet the minimum requirements then. Oh well. Plenty of other games on my backlog.
Pretty much anything from the Hitman games sountracks. Mostly Contracts or Blood Money.
It’s basically corporate anti-virus software. Intended to detect and prevent malware.
Most large instances have a support community. That seems like the suitable place to raise a moderation issue with specific a community on the instance.
From the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic: Týr - Regin Smiður
Hollow Knight 112% completion is what I’m most proud of. It was hard!
1995 by Kewlers & mfx
Killer Bean? What year is it!?
Do you do poison?
According to the article this system also detects power outages and shuts off when they happen. Just like full-scale solar power systems. But yeah, no physical kill switch.
I enjoy opamps. Texas Instruments LME49723 is one of my favorites :P
By asking this question you’re already ahead.
Be your genuine self. Share your wisdom. Love your child.
I’m guessing regular non-LP DDR works fine socketed in desktops because power is nearly a non-issue. Need to burn a few watts to guarantee signal integrity? We’ve got a chonky PSU, so no problem. On mobile devices however every watt matters…
I doubt doing it in software like that outperforms sqrtss/sqrtsd. Modern CPUs can do the conversions and the floating point sqrt in approximately 20-30 cycles total. That’s comparable to one integer division. But I wouldn’t mind being proven wrong.
Well, yeah, but you asked why they didn’t use integer sqrt. It’s something many programming languages just don’t have. Or if they do, it’s internally implemented as a sqrt(f64) anyway, like C++ does.
Most CPUs AFAIK don’t have integer sqrt instructions so you either do it manually in some kind of loop, or you use floating point…
Who considers Patrick a trusted source of information? He’s basically doing comedy news with a focus on finance. Entertaining, interesting, but not like a full-on serious reporter.