World Domination 201 by Ers and Rl
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World Domination 201 by Ers and Rl
what does anyone think?
i like his writing style, i don't agree with all his ideas though, who does?
i like his writing style, i don't agree with all his ideas though, who does?
Арте́льный горшо́к гу́ще кипи́т
Working as a team produces better results
Russian Proverb
Working as a team produces better results
Russian Proverb
Re: World Domination 201 by Ers and Rl
I wish I had some idea what you're talking about.allix wrote:what does anyone think?
i like his writing style, i don't agree with all his ideas though, who does?
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brakthepoet
- Posts: 39
- Joined: Wed Sep 14, 2005 2:48 pm
I think he's referring to this:
World Domination 201
World Domination 201
Re: World Domination 201 by Ers and Rl
sorry, brakthepoet mentioned the linkGomer_X wrote: I wish I had some idea what you're talking about.
Арте́льный горшо́к гу́ще кипи́т
Working as a team produces better results
Russian Proverb
Working as a team produces better results
Russian Proverb
- TankCatNinjaFish
- Posts: 110
- Joined: Wed Aug 09, 2006 4:29 am
ESR shows once again he does not know what he is talking about. The magic today is in the software, not the hardware. I can port most all of software I have written in high-level languages and port it over to 64 bit with a simple recompile. The increased address space simply is not that big a deal. The real challenge is going to be programming for multicore/processor desktops, which actually does present a shift in the way we program. But even that is overhyped.
I don't get it. If I'm reading it correctly, they're suggesting that somehow the switch from 32 to 64 bit will somehow allow linux to overtake windows and/or apple as a desktop. I just don't see it happening that way.
Shared pain is lessened, shared joy is increased; thus do we refute entropy.
--Spider Robinson
--Spider Robinson
- CptnObvious999
- Posts: 798
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Yeah. Although Linux does have much better 64bit support currently not many people _need_ to switch to 64bit since they can just use 32bit on a new CPU so Microsoft can take their time getting everything to support it well. The switch from Mac to Windows at that time was way different because the two platforms were incompatible and the hardware Windows was using costed less.Snarkout wrote:I don't get it. If I'm reading it correctly, they're suggesting that somehow the switch from 32 to 64 bit will somehow allow linux to overtake windows and/or apple as a desktop. I just don't see it happening that way.
The 64bit switch might help Linux but I don't think it will make everyone switch.
TankCatNinjaFish wrote:ESR shows once again he does not know what he is talking about. The magic today is in the software, not the hardware. I can port most all of software I have written in high-level languages and port it over to 64 bit with a simple recompile. The increased address space simply is not that big a deal. The real challenge is going to be programming for multicore/processor desktops, which actually does present a shift in the way we program. But even that is overhyped.
Stuff like video encoding is alot quicker on a 64 bit machine with over 4 gig of ram which a normal user would benifit, Any multimedia and games would surely benifit it.
Are you talking about multi-threading in regard to "multicore/processor desktops" ?
A lot of apps are being rewritten or new apps coded with that in mind, lots of scripting languages like perl,ruby,python etc have multi-threading libaries as standard.
Арте́льный горшо́к гу́ще кипи́т
Working as a team produces better results
Russian Proverb
Working as a team produces better results
Russian Proverb