Scheme and many others. And lots of libraries for C and others.
It’s called bignum, or Arbitrary-precision arithmetic.
Scheme and many others. And lots of libraries for C and others.
It’s called bignum, or Arbitrary-precision arithmetic.
Hokei, so. Usb “packets” are 12 bytes or something, and it’s not good for performance to stop the flow. The solution is, as always, to have a buffer. Problem is that some kernel geniuses decided that GIGABYTES is a good buffer size. This was all when spinning hdds were the standard and new fast usbs were comming, but still.
Oh, and for some reason the transfer bar sometimes works fine for me.
It’s standard practice for ram, at least it was. I remember companies being busted with warehouses of ram sticks.
I feel like you are making up words
Microwaves are ~2.4GHz, same as wifi. That is the resonant freq of water. They don’t go deep, not even close to a milimeter. And it all converts to heat.
The sun is more damageing then microwaves of same power. And ionizing radiation is the really harmful one.
Uhmm… It was always possible to make an “app” that works on all linuxes the same.
The tip heats up enough to melt solder.
Twitch promoted gambling for children.
Same in Croatia for ovens. Usually 3 phase.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LklUVkMPl8g
He goes on about the bigger picture, while I was thinking about just manufacturing and maintenance. That graph cost going down could be due to manufacturing ramping up. You need big machines to make big machines.
It’s interesting how fast the price per kWh went down. I’m glad.
AFAIK wind hasn’t changed much in a long time. Not much to improve really. Cost is materials and labour, both going up. Probably still cheaper then coal.
Can link a video about how they work, and the chalenges tomorow if you want.
Missing “;” on line 148.
It’s actually micromachines, son
Unix domain sockets, shared memory (classic and/or over anonymous file descriptors), file system in userspace, the (ms) ini format.
Was going to sleep when i wrote that.
Uds, shm, fuse for ipc. Ini for configs.
I was gonna go with the other guys sensible answer, but i like yours more.
Having a company behind software means you can pay to have your bugs fixed. Big distros want that stability for their corporate customers. It’s no secret or anything. KDE has sponsors, but doesn’t have a direct relationship with a huge contractor like RH. Same reasoning for systemd.
Politics, basically.
I once wrote a bc script that calculated parameters for the Blackman window for a FIR filter. (Had formulas already so not that impressive) Upped the precision until it needed like 30 sec to calculate, completely unnecessarely :).