+1 for the lockbox idea. with appropriate selection it could also provide (varying degrees of) electromagnetic shielding. useful in general, and increasingly as the line for actual device shutdown becomes more and more blurry.
no doubt ushered in under some notion of "protecting" us from well funded groups, yet mysteriously didn't include a minimum threshold so poor folks with $4.25 in their account are still included in these broad sweeping laws.
you are basically correct, and i believe these concerns were raised when that apple patent hit the news.
essentially it boils down to the unpleasant fact that it's simply currently not required.
recording & sharing recordings of such activities has already been outlawed in certain jurisdictions.
media & public narrative is already tightly controlled.
they already routinely get away with worse crimes against the public for the above reasons.
even if a handful of individuals face some vague justice, the public foots the bill with tax payer funded settlements.
one day something similar to that apple patent probably will happen though, especially as corporations merge further with our legal systems, and it'll be labelled a breach of copyright because their uniforms have sony logos or some such
seems like i'm mostly telling people in this thread not to feel bad about their prior cringe...
i really didn't follow this closely AT ALL. but i feel like back in the day libertarian ideas were much more left of center than they are now. to my inexpert perception, it feels like libertarianism (and alot of other things) have been co-opted by conservatism over the years.
which version of the hollow earth are we talking? if you mean a giant hollow shell, then yeh i'm not sure how well supported that is.
if you mean the honeycomb earth idea, where there could be myriad of huge deep caverns. then i'm kinda open to that possibility.
(not that my geoscience knowledge extends beyond highschool geography and the odd wikipedia article - so would welcome an opportunity to discuss with someone adept.)
from the article it’s not clear what the performance boost is relative to intrinsics
(they don't make that comparison in the article)
so its not clear exactly how handwritten asm compares to intrinsics in this specific comparison. we can't assume their handwritten AVX-512 asm and instrinics AVX-512 will perform identically here, it may be better, or worse.
also worth noting they're discussing benchmarking of a specific function, so overall performance on executing a given set of commands may be quite different depending what can and can't be unrolled and in which order for different dependencies.
from the article it's not clear what the performance boost is relative to intrinsics (its extremely unlikely to be anything close to 94x lol), its not even clear from the article if the avx2 implementation they benchmarked against was instrinsics or handwritten either. in some cases avx2 seems to slightly outperform avx-512 in their implementation
there's also so many different ways to break a problem down that i'm not sure this is an ideal showcase, at least without more information.
to be fair to the presenters they may not be the ones making the specific flavour of hype that the article writers are.
hey man, i think you may have misinterpreted who i was replying to /what i was saying, or perhaps i didn't communicate perfectly.
i am 10,000% on your side with this, and very much appreciate your post and appreciate your support in this thread/community on this topic. it's actually giving me a tiny bit of hope that this community isn't entirely lost.
i've really grown absolutely weary of the ridiculous denialism in society and especially in so-called tech communities on this topic.
the kindest thing i think you could say about the rampant denialism is they emotionally do not want to believe it could be happening, and therefore all rationality has gone out the window.
these threads are always a circle jerk of denialists repeating popular media headlines which say "its not happening", and then if you read the article IT DOESN'T SAY THAT AT ALL. and these denialists WON'T EVEN FUCKING READ THE ARTICLES THEY POST.
apart from the emotional cope, perhaps also partial exposure to eg. basic consumer stuff like installing steam or downloading a movie, so they assume the bandwidth is too high to exfiltrate audio cos their music/game/movie audio files are big, completely ignoring the fact that the telecomms industry has put many decades and $ into producing efficient voice codecs for around 50 years now. they probably think nyquist is a brand of cough medicine
same goes for all the other erroneous 'consumer tech' false facts they parrot back and forth.
eg. the lunacy of saying the tired old statement "if they were listening ALL THE TIME, we'd know" completely ignoring threshold based noise gates have been a thing for well over half a century.
these self-proclaimed know-it-alls can't even put in 10 minutes reading BASIC topics in an encylopedia to realise this shit was solved over half a century ago. (actually you don't even need tech knowledge or an encylopedia to imagine such a fundamental thing as...i don't know...not recording when nothings happening 🤯). they can't put in even BASIC effort, yet are SOOO smug in not only telling us "its absolutely not happening", but they actually can't wait to be rude and ridicule randoms for even asking the question.
+1 for the lockbox idea. with appropriate selection it could also provide (varying degrees of) electromagnetic shielding. useful in general, and increasingly as the line for actual device shutdown becomes more and more blurry.