• 4 Posts
  • 22 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 15th, 2023

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  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldunnecessary expense
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    12 days ago

    Ah yeah the standard low effort copypasta canned arguments.

    Go learn to write more than a copy/paste and try to understand topics moving forward yo. Pretending to be an uncaring sociopath online is like Twitter / X shit. This is Lemmy, I presume you are here because you actually give a shit about these discussions.


  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldunnecessary expense
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    12 days ago

    Lulz. If you can’t spar with me, you will get eaten up by the actual far right / mainstream Americans out there.

    Be happy I’m willing to come over here and push back against your bubble. You guys obviously need it if you’re upvoting shitty misinformation memes like this.


    The best part of this entire discussion? Elon Musk is part of the $1/year salary club. Your entire fucking meme doesn’t even apply to the most corrupt of CEOs.

    Your argument sucks and you should make a new one. Sorry I’m the bearer of bad news but that’s better than y’all idiots going out to the real world and having a far right goon own you in a debate.


  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldunnecessary expense
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    12 days ago

    The board of directors removes the obvious corruption argument.

    And shareholders select the board of directors anyway, so if shareholders agree to new terms of values then CEOs can and will be fired.

    I’m looking at Intel for example and how they mistreated Pat Gelsinger and fired him despite being a technical leader. And the new incoming CEO is Lip-Bu Tan, who is a non-technical finance bro who is worse. Why did the shareholders (and board of directors) prefer Lip-Bu Tan?

    There is a large scale hero worship bro culture that’s at the root of all the problems here, a culture that millions of shareholders have which is then passed to the Board of Directors and finally the C-suite that the Board hires.

    But no. Let make shitty memes that misunderstand the power dynamics and perpetuates misinformation. That will help your argument lol.


    EDIT and that doesn’t even get to say, all the CEOs who take a $1/year paycheck just to prove you wrong. The problem here is hero worship cult culture. The pay and salaries are a distraction and easily avoided with various simple political / Public Relations moves.


  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldunnecessary expense
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    12 days ago

    Because today’s hero worship culture makes the mass of shareholders believe that these CEOs have skills that cannot be replicated by cheaper labor.

    But that’s not quite as simple a problem. The issue is that you are up against literally millions of shareholders who have different values than you.

    Go talk to a Tesla shareholder. They pretty much think Elon is a god. So no amount of salary is too much as long as they get Elon leading those companies. (But Elon also only takes a $1/year salary anyway to prove how awesome he is, so this entire discussion train is immediately derailed if you actually start trying to apply it in practice).

    This entire meme just fundamentally misses the entire fucking problem and is nothing more than a distraction.


  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldunnecessary expense
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    12 days ago

    Exactly, except in reverse.

    If you want to attract the talent of someone who has networth in the millions+++, you need to pay them more.

    The form of your argument and where you are going with the discussion is very short sighted. This isn’t a path to any actual winning argument. I suggest you start elsewhere.

    This is the problem with shitty memes. They poison your brain and make you dumb. If you actually want to make a reasonable argument throw this topic away and start anew.

    It’s not you who is wrong. It’s this meme. It’s just a terrible starting place for discussion and is innately to your disadvantage.



  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldunnecessary expense
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    12 days ago

    Non sequitur and you know it. Hopeless blathering hoping to find some way to make this meme correct.

    Just rewrite the meme correctly from the start so that it’s actually a reflection of reality rather than a reflection of ignorance.

    These low effort memes are just that. Low effort communication. Misinformation is bad in all regards and if shitty incorrect arguments are all that is needed to convince you of … whatever this is… then you’re an ignorant uneducated fucked citizen. Surely you see the problem here?


  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldunnecessary expense
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    12 days ago

    It’s not about better or worse. It’s about being correct and understanding the people and societal structures at work here

    If you aren’t interested in knowing how and why CEOs get paid, maybe don’t make dumbass memes about this subject.

    Or do. I don’t give a shit. But good luck having people believe you if you can’t even get the basics correct. Or otherwise feel good that your online culture got infiltrated by blatant misinformation.



  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldunnecessary expense
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    12 days ago

    Depends on the company.

    Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, owns 0.02% of Apple for example. This is #1 largest company in the world.

    Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, owns 0.01% of Microsoft. This is the 2nd largest company in the world.

    Jensen Huang is 3.5% of NVidia a serious level of ownership but a far cry from controlling the board. 3rd largest company but the biggest shareholder is Vanguard group at over 8%.

    Institutional banks have the largest leeway, by far, in all of these companies. Understanding the voting structure of these companies is important if you don’t want to sound like an ignorant dumbass.

    Yeah, there’s your Elon Musks and whatnot as exceptions. But they’re really rare even in the scope of top companies of the SP500 and whatnot.




  • Great answer!!

    After thinking about all this for a while, I’ve gone with the basic binary tree (leaning towards AVL tree as I expect my use case to be read heavy).

    In my use case, multiple ‘intervals’ can merge together without major penalty (and should be merged together). It looks like a lot of these interval trees (including ph trees) are best when the intervals need to be kept separate.

    There is a part of my algorithm where ph trees might be useful though. I’ll have to give it some though.


    I’m kind of shocked that a basic binary tree ended up being so usable. Its a classic for a reason, lol. I guess I saw the intervals and got confused and overcomplicated things…



  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoAsk Lemmy@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    23 days ago

    Not: Gilgamesh is the oldest still surviving written story.

    There was writing older than Gilgamesh. There were cities and culture before 2000BCE. Its just so old that nothing at all survived beyond that time period.

    There’s the Bronze Age Collapse, Burning of the Great Library, and many other events that destroyed history in the 1000BCE period. Those old people may have had older records than Gilgamesh, but all we have today is Gilgamesh if that makes any sense.



  • dragontamer@lemmy.worldtoAsk Lemmy@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    23 days ago

    King Arthur isn’t “one story” though. King Arthur is closer to 1100s-era fanart / fanfiction culture.

    EVERYONE was making King Arthur stories back then. And guess what? They contradicted. That’s why we have Excalibur vs Sword in the Stone (sometimes they’re the same sword. Sometimes they aren’t. Its a big contradiction because there’s no singular author).

    The Chinese Great Novel “Journey to the West” is truly one story by one author with multiple millennia of copycats. Meanwhile, King Author is basically a millennia of copycats without anyone knowing who the original was to begin with. Very different fundamentally.




  • And typical RAM speeds are 100GB/second for CPUs and 500GB/second on GPUs, meaning 512MB operations are literally on the order of 5 miliseconds for CPU and 1ms on GPU.

    Below certain sizes, the ‘billions of intervals’ is larger than the damn Bitmask. Seriously, 8 bytes per interval (aka one pointer and 0 data) and that’s 8GB for the data structure.

    Instead of a billion 32-bit intervals to store (4GB of RAM at the minimum) it’s obviously a better move to store 500-million byte Bitmasks. And modern GPUs can crush that in parallel with like 3 lines of CUDA anyway.


  • Because CUDA and ROCm/HIP are far easier to program.

    The Khronos competitor to CUDA/ROCm is SYCL not OpenCL.


    SYCL vs these other options is a fun theoretical problem, but only Intel seems to be pushing SYCL at all. OpenCL got stuck in OCL1.2 (the 2.0 release was dead. 3.0+ OpenCL ignores OCL2.0 but it’s too late, OpenCL is seen as a dead end tech these days).

    The biggest issue is that OpenCL is a different language, while CUDA/HIP/SYCL are ‘just’ C++ extensions. This means that if you ever shared data between CPU and GPU in OpenCL (or DirectX or Vulkan for that matter), you have to carefully write and rewrite structs{} to line up between the two languages.

    Meanwhile, CUDA/HIP support passing structs, classes and more between CPU and GPU (subject to conditions of course. GPUs can’t do function pointers or vtables for example, but cpu-only classes can have vtables)