I drop in occasionally out of habit, only to find that most of the noise is Vrock and Waco arguing in the back of the room. Sometimes I read it. Sometimes I just leave.
You can certainly get the basics in 5-6 hours, but as Waco says, it will take months to become "good", and years to become an expert. Mind you, that isn't to discourage you -- simply to set expectations. C++ is, IMHO, the best mix of all the languages for highly performant or technical cod...
It wasn't just Mahomes. He was doing everything he could to extend plays. Frankly, his O-Line was trash in this game. He was running for his life almost the entire game, trying to make something work. They had one guy out with an injury, but that shouldn't have resulted in that big a collapse. They ...
Rambus the product was just overpriced. Rambus the company were some underhanded scum-sucking patent trolls. Like Netburst (turn bandwidth up to 11; completely ignore IPC), it was the wrong solution to the market problem trying to be solved. It was a marketing solution to a technical problem. It wo...
Nice win by a severely beat up Seahawks. Kyler Murray was clearly hurting. He's an immensely talented quarterback, but that shoulder injury was bugging him. He's going to make some noise in coming years. Russel Wilson, on the other hand, delivered a typically Russel Wilson performance. How does he c...
This will allow high densities and user-upgradability with industry standard parts. Is there any evidence Apple wants users to be able to upgrade with industry standard parts? Their business model these days seems to be to make everything proprietary and have enforced obsolescence. Why allow users ...
I predict a different direction. Really friggin huge L3 (or is it L4 -- haven't looked at the cache architecture of the M1 that closely) off-die caches on the CPU package, with relatively conventional RAM on a wide, relatively typical bus. This will allow high densities and user-upgradability with i...
It seems to me that they're going to have to decouple the RAM from the CPU package to attain "Pro" levels of memory density. There is simply no way they're going to solder 256GB of RAM onto a CPU package with current RAM densities. That may not mean DIMMs, still, but I can't see a Mac Pro ...
I'm remembering, with the help of the google, that Itanium started out 6-wide and ultimately reached 12-wide. Apple's latest big core is 8-wide. I wonder -- how are they making such a wide architecture work? Certainly they have a huge instruction cache and other OOO capes. But I wonder -- is their ...
I'm remembering, with the help of the google, that Itanium started out 6-wide and ultimately reached 12-wide. Apple's latest big core is 8-wide. I wonder -- how are they making such a wide architecture work? Certainly they have a huge instruction cache and other OOO capes. But I wonder -- is their ...
There are so many it really depends on how you're planning to use it. I would immediately throw anything that starts with a base in C and extends from there in the garbage pile. C++ has moved away from C-style programming a long time ago. It is even evolving away from pure OOP in the last few years ...
I am so loving Allen Lazard's story at Green Bay. The kid was a fantastic receiver at Iowa State, statistically and eyeball-test, one of the best, all time. Yet he went undrafted, because... Iowa State, I guess. Nobody could really figure it out. He made the practice squad at Green Bay last season, ...
You might have to wait for the next version of iOS, which will allow you to put live widgets on your apps screen. One of those widgets can be battery percentage. With the newer "notch" phones, there really isn't as much room in the indicator area at the top, so % isn't offered as an option.
The devil is in the details. I can imagine Apple’s price points will remain the same, but there might be a big uplift in performance and performance/ watt. The question is — how big is that uplift? Given the process advantage and apples excellent design team, it could be big. Apple does not manufac...
Microsoft might have the resources to do this, though it's not something have expertise with (they've only done small silicon, not full-blow processors). Being Microsoft, they'll probably throw money and engineers at it, but it may take them some time to get it right. Well, that's what Apple did. T...
Now when Apple starts making chips for its competitors THEN start to worry about x86 being at the beginning of the end. Would apple ever make chips for other people? I highly doubt it. I don't think they have ever made technology of any type for anyone but themselves. They don't have to. ARM is an ...
Apparently at least one industry "export" believes Microsoft will have to seriously consider making the same switch: https://9to5mac.com/2020/07/13/switch-to-arm/ On the other hand, he has legacy Apple ties, so he might be a bit biased. Still it's one insightful glimpse into the industry. ...
I guess being a 1.5 trillion dollar company makes it slightly easier to make a consumer product that's really just for software development on their own platform. :lol: I dunno though, the macbooks seem to fill that role pretty well already. Given what I see at conferences (well what I saw at confe...
Yeah that's true. I've heard video editing on the ipad actually works pretty well assuming you're using a codec that's supported in hardware. Obviously the hardware has to be good before choice of codec can make a difference. I'm not sure how much of a priority macOS really is for Apple in general,...
That's actually the thing I like about this the most. Apple has some fantastic GPU acceleration in hardware which the iPhone and iPad use to get decent video performance on their low-power chips. I don't know this for a fact, but I have a hard time believing otherwise: I believe Apple's integrated G...
Enermax is a name I've forgotten about. I never see anything offered by them anymore. I remember when they were the top choice for power supplies around 1999-2000. They made a 300W unit that was awesome. I went through a time when I bought a lot of Antec units, but they were not that reliable. Lot ...
Fridges aren't rocket science -- don't over-analyze it. I doubt there's much of a difference between different models, other than features. It requires a minimal amount of energy to keep things cold, no matter who makes it, and you can't usurp the laws of physics. Most appliances these days have to ...
Sad. I really liked some of their innovations, like the totally transparent reviews, where you could hear the refs and reviewers talking to each other.