« first day (3151 days earlier)      last day (1874 days later) » 

12:05 AM
@XKCD that is the pan-america
you need to find a solution to the gap in columbia
 
Hey, Darién is a tricky place
It bankrupted Scotland, dontcha know?
 
yes, your welcome on bailing you out btw....
 
No problem, we took yer crown so it's all good
 
:)
 
 
13 hours later…
12:57 PM
13 hours later...
 
 
4 hours later…
5:04 PM
Argh I've had a headache for five days now
I should see a doctor
 
5:15 PM
@rahuldottech Sounds like a good idea to me ...
 
5:29 PM
it's likely stress or you not wearing your glasses, but yes
see a odcotor
 
@djsmiley2k I always wear my glasses
 
k, and is the prescription still correct?
are you dehydrated?
 
It started after most of my exams ended. I figured it was due to months of fatigue due to exams, but it hasn't gone away after days of sleeping for 12+ hours
@djsmiley2k Yep, checked a few months ago
 
maybe caffine widrawal
ur sleeping 12+ hrs a day?
 
@djsmiley2k I don't think so. I make sure that I drink sufficient amounts of water
 
5:38 PM
that's not normal and might be the cause.
 
@djsmiley2k This seems most likely tbh
@djsmiley2k I know. But I was sleeping for like three or four hours per day for weeks previously, so I figured my body was "catching up"?
I was also consuming lots of caffeine but am not anymore so caffeine withdrawal is definitely possible
 
you want to try and stick to a healthy sleep schedule
you can't really 'catch up'
but deffo get checked it out.
 
@djsmiley2k Ay, I've been trying, but I feel really tired all the time
@djsmiley2k I will, within the next few days
ooooh php exceptions seem neat
I've never used 'em before
 
5:57 PM
roar
 
 
2 hours later…
7:33 PM
Folks, should I migrate this question to SuperUser?
0
Q: Can I recharge an SRAM's internal battery with only power pins?

chrisdrhjhI was wondering if it was possible to recharge PCMCIA SRAM Card (with an internal rechargeable battery) using just the Vcc and Ground pins. A little background info: A piece of medical equipment from the early 90's uses an SRAM card, with some data files / executables on it. We tried replacing t...

 
@NickAlexeev seems on-topic for SU to me, as it's about computer hardware, but dunno
 
whistles
Amazon are doing an 860 EVO 1TB for 115 quid; seems.... quite reasonable
This time last year it was around £315
Welp
 
OH DON'T
i have far too many things to pay off.
 
7:49 PM
Tell me about it
I just bought an SSD a few months ago too
But not this SSD
 
8:06 PM
(removed)
I can't find a single affordable ergonomic keyboard on Amazon India
Can't on aliexpress either
 
so far.... not needed one
a good desk and chair is all i've needed
 
8:24 PM
I don't need another SSD. I've already got way too many.
 
Do you guys know how a computer manages to refill a screen so fast?
for example, if you have a vector in c++ and you want to change all the values to 0 then that takes linear time right?
so how does a computer manage to do it so fast
 
It's not infinitely fast tho
it's only.... 50/60/120/240 times a second
 
8:40 PM
but there are 1080*1920 pixels
so 1080*1920*60 operations a second
oh ok I guess that checks out
 
no no
each pixel is written to a frame buffer
the framebuffer is pushed to the monitor at the monitor refresh rate
this is all very generic explanation, partially because I don't know (care?) how it actually happens.
 
what is the framebuffer?
a 2d array?
 
/me shrugs
 
8:56 PM
A framebuffer (frame buffer, or sometimes framestore) is a portion of RAM containing a bitmap that drives a video display. It is a memory buffer containing a complete frame of data. Modern video cards contain framebuffer circuitry in their cores. This circuitry converts an in-memory bitmap into a video signal that can be displayed on a computer monitor. In computing, a screen buffer is a part of computer memory used by a computer application for the representation of the content to be shown on the computer display. The screen buffer may also be called the video buffer, the regeneration buffer,...
 
so this buffer is inside the intel integrated graphics thingy?
 
in a graphics card, yeah usually
 
@JorgeFernándezHidalgo Have you read the link? See the 3rd sentence.
 
9:11 PM
@JorgeFernándezHidalgo It's a memory space where rendered video frames are stored prior to their being sent to the video output. The framebuffer is typically also used to hold intermediate graphical data such as textures.
We sometimes call the dedicated memory on a graphics card "framebuffer" for this reason.
For processor (integrated) graphics, a certain amount of system memory is typically reserved for graphics, including for use as a framebuffer.
 
so the system memory is usually in the main ram?
liek the ram stick I bought?
 
The system reserves a chunk of memory (defined in the system firmware) that is not available for use by the operating system and is instead used exclusively by the processor graphics.
 
Bleh... I forgot the password I set on my pfsense box last week. :|
 
ooh
that is super interesting
so that is part of the reason why gtop says I only have 7.66 of ram?
 
@JorgeFernándezHidalgo Most likely. You can often (but not always) change this in the BIOS or UEFI setup.
 
9:22 PM
but then I wouldn't have a frame buffer?
 
Most of that missing memory is instead used by the processor graphics, including as a framebuffer.
 
oh ok
how does someone know so much about these things?
 
@JorgeFernándezHidalgo The graphics processor contains a large number of dedicated cores designed specifically for rendering graphics and performing related computations. Even the most basic processor graphics solutions contain at least a few dozen of these cores, along with other components like render output units which convert the processed, but still raw, graphics data into image data that can be sent to the display.
 
ooh
but intel graphics does not contain any cores does it?
 
@JorgeFernándezHidalgo Go read online articles/tutorials
 
9:25 PM
Gaming graphics cards will often have thousands of these cores.
 
it only uses the same cores?
@DavidPostill but people have to search for each one seperately?
 
@JorgeFernándezHidalgo It does, but they're special-purpose cores. Intel calls them execution units (EUs).
 
NVIDIA calls them CUDA cores.
 
I didn't know that
wait, so then I can use these EU's to run my own code?
 
9:27 PM
AMD calls them stream processors (SPs), but usually refers to compute units each containing 64 SPs.
 
like with opencl or something?
 
@JorgeFernándezHidalgo That's one way to learn. When we are not here for you to pick our brains ...
 
@JorgeFernándezHidalgo Exactly. Read up on GPGPU technology.
 
Oh that sounds super cool
 
These terms are specific to each GPU architecture.
 
9:30 PM
is there a way to use htop to see what is going on with the EU's or somethign?
 
(NB: Intel's execution units each contain eight ALUs, so a fairer comparison of GPU core counts with other brands can be performed by multiplying the EU count by eight.)
60
Q: How to measure GPU usage?

xxjjnnUsing the top command in the terminal lists processes, sorted by their CPU usage (and you can change it to sort by another parameter) Is there an equivalent for the GPU? This fellow is asking about RAM used by GPU

 
Oh ok, thank you very much
This was very fun for me
 
If you'd like to learn more about how GPUs work, start here:
A graphics processing unit (GPU) is a specialized electronic circuit designed to rapidly manipulate and alter memory to accelerate the creation of images in a frame buffer intended for output to a display device. GPUs are used in embedded systems, mobile phones, personal computers, workstations, and game consoles. Modern GPUs are very efficient at manipulating computer graphics and image processing. Their highly parallel structure makes them more efficient than general-purpose CPUs for algorithms that process large blocks of data in parallel. In a personal computer, a GPU can be present on a video...
 
9:46 PM
thank you very much
 
10:38 PM
guys...
40 ft by 2ft by 2ft is.... 80cubic feet?
 
11:00 PM
eeeeeh
that's even worse D:
 
11:12 PM
blarugh
Anyone know the names of various connections for guttering and such?
I'm thinking for this drainage leading away from the house, half way down I want some kind of access / air hole
I guess I could use something like this, on its side
or even this ... diy.com/departments/…
 

« first day (3151 days earlier)      last day (1874 days later) »