aditya mishra

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aditya mishra

aditya mishra

@siighduuck

If you use pounds instead of kilograms, I will hit you.

India Katılım Kasım 2019
235 Takip Edilen68 Takipçiler
aditya mishra
aditya mishra@siighduuck·
I miss Twitter the brand.
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McWar | Minecraft Server
McWar | Minecraft Server@McWar_Official·
After over a year in the making, the video is complete. Mojang has been caught breaking several European consumer protection laws & contract law that has resulted in thousands to suffer damages. youtu.be/C5RvoPQZQeM
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McWar | Minecraft Server tweet media
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Marques Brownlee
Marques Brownlee@MKBHD·
Annual free idea reminder for @YouTube: YouTube WRAPPED. I want to see what channels I watched the most. How many YouTube shorts I scrolled. All the stats. You could even brand it "Rewind" 🤓
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Zatakster
Zatakster@zatakster·
@MKBHD Crazy to think they’re rolling it out in three stages. Hopefully they don’t do this ever again
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aditya mishra
aditya mishra@siighduuck·
Minimalist logo designs claimed their next target.
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Autumn Blair 
Autumn Blair @AutumnBlair_xo·
@MKBHD Imagine a tiny internal storage you can remove and replace…. Like the size of a fingernail
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Marques Brownlee
Marques Brownlee@MKBHD·
Petition for all cameras to have an internal storage option
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aditya mishra
aditya mishra@siighduuck·
@code Can we just have the feature to see file size within the application without an extension please?
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aditya mishra
aditya mishra@siighduuck·
@MKBHD If there ever was a product that had everything right, no one would talk about it. Think about it.
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Ben 🤖
Ben 🤖@benfryc·
context switching
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Shaun Maguire
Shaun Maguire@shaunmmaguire·
POV @SpaceX catching a rocket
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aditya mishra
aditya mishra@siighduuck·
@CNviolations It's hilarious but I feel the note falls short on the 'unbiased language' part.
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ksi
ksi@KSI·
These stupid fans leave “trash” comments on my new song think they’re getting to me. You’re not. It’s not funny. It’s boring. You’re wasting your time.
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aditya mishra
aditya mishra@siighduuck·
Why did this appear on my feed RIGHT AFTER I'm finished watching the Three Body Problem...
Peter Kraft@petereliaskraft

What happens if your CPU gets something wrong? If it wakes up one day and decides 2+2=5? Well, most of us will never have to worry about that. But if you work at a company the size of Google, you do, which is why this paper on "mercurial cores" is so fascinating. What the authors report--and supposedly this is common knowledge at the hyperscalers--is that a couple cores per several thousand machines are "mercurial." Due to subtle manufacturing defects or old age, they give wrong answers for certain instructions. These can cause all sorts of impossible-to-diagnose issues. Some rare problems at Google that were traced back to bad CPUs include: - Mutexes not working, causing application crashes - Silent data corruption - Garbage collectors targeting live memory, causing application crashes - Kernel state corruption causing kernel panics What makes CPUs go bad? It's very hard to tell. The authors posit that issues are becoming more frequent as CPUs get more complex, but there aren't solid numbers behind that. There are certainly strong relationships between frequency, temperature, voltage, and bad CPU behavior--most mercurial CPUs only cause problems under very specific conditions, but those conditions vary from CPU to CPU. Age is another source of problems, as older CPUs are more likely to exhibit problems. Bad CPUs are an especially serious problem because they're very hard to detect. If cosmic rays flip bits in storage or on the network, that can be detected through error coding. But there's no analogy for a CPU that allows cheap online verification of its correctness. Instead, the best detection techniques involve monitoring for symptoms. If a core exhibits exceptionally high rates of process crashes or kernel panics relative to its fellows, that's a strong indication something is wrong with it. For the most critical applications, the authors propose triple modular redundancy--redoing each of its computations on three cores and majority-voting a reliable result. More than anything, this paper is a call to action--letting everyone know that CPUs can fail. So now, if you ever find a bug you can't diagnose, you can blame the CPU! 🙂

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