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Frugality is the mental approach we each take when considering our resource allocations. It includes time, money, convenience, and many other factors.
Frugality is the mental approach we each take when considering our resource allocations. It includes time, money, convenience, and many other factors.
Spending more every time you start to earn more, just because you earn more, isn't frugal.
Spending it on a car shows IMO a lack of creativity. Get a fun hobby or go on a unique trip. Everyone has a car and every car gets crushed into a cube soon.
Anyway. I bet an older Civic with a manual is a hoot. It's old enough that it's not full of computer nannies. And I'd like to feel like a kid again -- why is that a bad thing?
• audio·phile: a person with love for, affinity towards or obsession with high-quality playback of sound and music. r/audiophile is a subreddit for the pursuit of quality audio reproduction of all forms, budgets, and sizes of speakers. Our primary goal is insightful discussion of home audio equipment, sources, music, and concepts.
• audio·phile: a person with love for, affinity towards or obsession with high-quality playback of sound and music. r/audiophile is a subreddit for the pursuit of quality audio reproduction of all forms, budgets, and sizes of speakers. Our primary goal is insightful discussion of home audio equipment, sources, music, and concepts.
No.
And I'm not saying it sounds bad. If the distortion is mostly 2nd and 3rd order it may sound alright, like many tube amps.
• audio·phile: a person with love for, affinity towards or obsession with high-quality playback of sound and music. r/audiophile is a subreddit for the pursuit of quality audio reproduction of all forms, budgets, and sizes of speakers. Our primary goal is insightful discussion of home audio equipment, sources, music, and concepts.
• audio·phile: a person with love for, affinity towards or obsession with high-quality playback of sound and music. r/audiophile is a subreddit for the pursuit of quality audio reproduction of all forms, budgets, and sizes of speakers. Our primary goal is insightful discussion of home audio equipment, sources, music, and concepts.
The spec of 0.5% total harmonic distortion on the B1 is worse than even most vintage gear. By the late '70s most integrated amps would produce less than 0.1% THD, many below 0.04%.
0.5% is a lot. That's 5000ppm! There are better amps, sorry to say.
Welcome to /r/AMD — the subreddit for all things AMD; come talk about Ryzen, Radeon, Zen3, RDNA3, EPYC, Threadripper, rumors, reviews, news and more. /r/AMD is community run and does not represent AMD in any capacity unless specified.
Welcome to /r/AMD — the subreddit for all things AMD; come talk about Ryzen, Radeon, Zen3, RDNA3, EPYC, Threadripper, rumors, reviews, news and more. /r/AMD is community run and does not represent AMD in any capacity unless specified.
omg we have to make this a thing.
c'mon AMD, it's not formally announced, there's still time to make this change!
If true, the new Paul is way more accomplished by now than the original.
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.
Not specific to alcoholism, but, I've often been asked to handhold devs who underperform for whatever reason. To the point where I'd internalized that this was correct and necessary...
Then got a surprising piece of advice: "focus on your high performers." Really flips things around don't it?
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.
I encountered many real computer science problems in my old role as an infrastructure developer to support computer hardware engineering.
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We had a custom build system, since normal build systems don't deal well with Verilog. Build systems are all about graph traversal, and distributed/parallel execution, and you can cache the outputs of nodes that are (logically) purely functional. Hardcore stuff.
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Unlike a big-N tech company, this was a medium size semiconductor company with no strong software organization. So if it wasn't available as open source, or as a vendor tool, we were building it ourselves.
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There was also a fair amount of reverse engineering. Not of competitors' products, but of the shitty vendor tools we had to use for some tasks. We had to sniff out bugs and identify workarounds from strace or gdb. Not that I ever want to do that again... it's an art and definitely not a science.
So I got pretty good at algorithms, aced a FAANG interview a few years back and (drum roll...) have been plugging existing modules together ever since.