First they have to hire a developer with knowledge of how to do this right, as they might not even have one. Which could easily eat 10k+ of dev time as hiring good people takes a lot of time.
You could probably take any user at random from this discussion alone and they'd have the knowledge needed to make the switch from http to https. I'm certain that AMD has all the knowledge they need right now, but even more certain that it wouldn't be hard to hire someone new who does as well
Ok, but this ultimately just comes down to a debate over the amount of the cost. The principle is the same. Even if we double or triple the cost, it's a drop in the ocean for a company like AMD.
Radiative cooling is the only option, and it basically sucks vs any option you could use on earth.
Second, ai chips have a fixed economic life beyond which you want to replace them with better chips because the cost of running them starts to outpaxe the profit they can generate. This is probably like 2-3 years but the math of doing this in space may be very different. But you can't upgrade space based data centers nearly as easily as a terrestrial data center.
I built something like this that we use both for migrations and disallowing new instances of bad patterns for my mid sized tech company and maintain it. Ours is basically a configuration layer, a metrics script which primarily uses ripgrep to search for matches of configured regexes, a linter that uses the same configuration and shows any configured lint messages on the matches, a CI job that asserts that the matches found are only in the allowlisted files for each metric, and a website that displays the latest data, shows graphs of the metrics over time, and integrates with our ownership system to show reports for each team & the breakdown across teams. The website also has the ability to send emails and slack messages to teams involved in each migration, and when the configuration for a migration includes a prompt, can start a job for an agent to attempt to fix the problem and create a pr.
Negative temperature happens in physical systems when there's a constrained state space and energy in the system comes near the maximum - as then adding energy reduces the number of possible states the molecules are in. Iirc the math works because temperature is the inverse of the derivative of entropy as a function of energy. So you need a system where entropy (number of possible states) decreases with more energy.
Wouldn't surprise me either. I know a guy who worked at Apple on iOS perf and the one time he was telling me about it years ago, it was "camera app doesn't start fast enough, so we reworked memory management". Apple really cares about the camera.
Yeah ... If true, that's almost enough to identify them. Probably 5 people max at each food delivery company that could be, and their supposed role would be enough to single them out if the company can correctly guess it's talking about them
I think the underlying protocol would have to guarantee in order delivery - either via tcp (for http1, 2, or spdy), or in http3, within a single stream.
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