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fiforpg commented on 2026 will be my year of the Linux desktop   xeiaso.net/notes/2026/yea... · Posted by u/todsacerdoti
roryrjb · a month ago
I see this contradiction all the time. Windows is a mess but there are lots of examples of rock solid, performant applications that have been developed and maintained over decades. Everything is one, also one that springs to mind which is much more performant compared to Linux alternatives is WinMerge.
fiforpg · a month ago
> much more performant compared to Linux alternatives is WinMerge

I have found Beyond Compare to be very good on Linux, even on large files/directories.

fiforpg commented on US High school students' scores fall in reading and math   apnews.com/article/naep-r... · Posted by u/bikenaga
Der_Einzige · 5 months ago
The quality of most text msgs is higher than what passes for “quality literature” in many lit classrooms.

Texting is unironically a better use of time than reading infinite jest, or gravities rainbow, etc.

fiforpg · 5 months ago
While you can certainly argue that some texts have more substance to them than these literary works, you cannot deny that most texts have worse prose than the books.
fiforpg commented on The Grammar According to West   dwest.web.illinois.edu/gr... · Posted by u/surprisetalk
zero-sharp · 6 months ago
You encounter abusive language/notation basically everywhere in math. Open up a calculus/real analysis textbook. A lot of the old ones write sequences in the curly brace/set {x_n} notation:

"let {x_n} be a sequence"

As the author points out, a sequence is a function. The statement {x_n} is the set of terms of the sequence, its range. A function and its range are two different things. And also sets have no ordering. It might seem like a minor thing, but I thought we were trying to be precise?

A second example: at the high school level, I'm pretty sure a lot of textbooks don't carefully distinguish between a function and the formula defining the function very well.

The author of this web page has a section on what he calls "double duty definitions". Personally, I don't find anything wrong with the language "let G=(V,E) be a graph". G is the graph and we're simultaneously defining/naming its structure. So, some of this is a matter of taste. And, to some extent, you just have to get used to the way mathematicians write.

fiforpg · 6 months ago
> abusive language/notation basically everywhere in math

In most cases it is not as much abusing notation as overloading it. If you think of the context of a formula (say, adjacent paragraphs) as its implicit arguments (think lambda captures in c++), then it is natural that curly braces can denote both a set and a sequence, depending on this implicit input.

Such context dependent use of symbols is actually rather convenient with a little practice.

fiforpg commented on Myths About Floating-Point Numbers (2021)   asawicki.info/news_1741_m... · Posted by u/Bogdanp
pclmulqdq · 6 months ago
There's an implied one bit, so you actually have a 53 bit significand (and 53-bit precision) given only a 52 bit mantissa.
fiforpg · 6 months ago
Right, I did realize after posting that close to numbers of the form

1{hidden bit} + (1-2^-52){mantissa with all ones}

the relative accuracy — corresponding to the absolute accuracy of a single bit in mantissa — is about 2^-53. The hidden bit is easy to forget about...

fiforpg commented on Myths About Floating-Point Numbers (2021)   asawicki.info/news_1741_m... · Posted by u/Bogdanp
fiforpg · 6 months ago
In the context of double precision the article says

> the largest integer value that can be represented exactly is 2^53

— I am confused as to why it not 2^52, given that there are 52 bits of mantissa, so relative accuracy is 2^-52, which translates to absolute accuracy larger than 1 after 2^52. Compare this to the table there saying "Next value after 1 = 1 + 2^-52".

fiforpg commented on Random selection is necessary to create stable meritocratic institutions   assemblingamerica.substac... · Posted by u/namlem
fiforpg · 7 months ago
While the idea — of shuffling a societal system a little bit to prevent it from going stale — sounds important, I'm not convinced. Random shuffling leads to good results only when it is combined with a good fitness estimate (see: natural selection). And establishing a fitness test for a societal order seems to be a much harder issue than than that of an organized randomization.
fiforpg commented on New sphere-packing record stems from an unexpected source   quantamagazine.org/new-sp... · Posted by u/pseudolus
theteapot · 7 months ago
Noob question: Is the optimal sphere packing correlated with a regular lattice? I.e. that's the case for 2D,3D right? If so does this extend to ND?
fiforpg · 7 months ago
Not necessarily—in 3d there are uncountably many non-lattice packings. They all have the same density as the FCC lattice though. To construct these packings, shift horizontal layers of FCC horizontally with respect to each other.

It is conjectured that in higher dimensions, the densest packing is always non-lattice. The rationale being that there is just not enough symmetry in such spaces.

fiforpg commented on Chasing Lost Languages   nautil.us/chasing-lost-la... · Posted by u/dnetesn
Levitz · 7 months ago
I'm probably in the minority around here if I state I'm sorta fine with a whole lot of languages being lost to time.

Are there things we could have learned from them that are lost to time? Well, yeah, and that itself is bad, but preservation is simply not feasible, same as we don't store every single piece of information nowadays, we can't store all of language for the same reason it's interesting in the first place: It's alive.

It's also worth noting, there's a whole, whole lot that is bound to be uninteresting beyond historical knowledge and that deserves no more respect than, say, food.

fiforpg · 7 months ago
That's true — time is a big place, and a lot of things are lost in it. I for one am rather more pained over disappearing of physical objects — genomes, books, art.

Plus, it is all the more exciting to think about what caused some languages to exist and thrive for so long, and the information about the past they retained.

fiforpg commented on Chasing Lost Languages   nautil.us/chasing-lost-la... · Posted by u/dnetesn
fiforpg · 7 months ago
If you like this kind of language archeology, check out David Anthony's The Horse, the Wheel, and Language — for how the people that spoke the Proto Indo-European language were located in time and space.
fiforpg commented on The unreasonable effectiveness of fuzzing for porting programs   rjp.io/blog/2025-06-17-un... · Posted by u/Bogdanp
fiforpg · 8 months ago
That paper by Wigner about mathematics really did originate an entire naming scheme for such texts, didn't it.

u/fiforpg

KarmaCake day342May 6, 2023View Original