Thanks, fixed!
Has Bryan done any more recent recorded talks?
The only experience I have with working with Fortran would be setting up gfortran
when building SciPy from source, and perusing its codebase to see how it's FFT functions were so optimized. Not enough to diligently mod I'm afraid.
That's would be one long commute to the job site. Likely only a one way trip. I guess if cryostasis every becomes viable for human space flight, you'd have a better chance living long enough to catch up to the craft, but then you'd probably have the hassle of getting reassigned to a new office team, given all your old colleagues would have long retired, and who would really want to start patching hardware in production with a support crew you only just met after waking up. Sounds like a tough remote working environment, with all the cons in a aynchronous workplace, but with none of the perk in working from home.
I was thinking of cross posting this to a Fortran community, but it looks like we don't yet have one.
Similarly reported (in more detail) by TechCrunch:
I'm not sure why, but GitHub's search engine, Blackbird, seems to be returning some erroneous results for this query:
/tnt_select\(.*2\^32/ language:C++ OR language:C
- https://github.com/search?q=%2Ftnt_select%5C%28.*2%5C%5E32%2F+language%3AC%2B%2B+OR+language%3AC+&type=code&ref=advsearch
Any chance you could narrow down your search to a list of repose that use the library that pulls in tnt_select()
function, then clone and manually grep just those, or is it's use too common to index by?
Real funny that even narrowing down GitHub search to just the same repo doesn't help the query results:
repo:ocelot-inc/ocelotgui ldbms_tnt_select
Ah, I've got a old android phone that could be perfect for this. Thanks for the heads up about Macro Deck!
By the way, does Macro Deck utilize multi touch support? That could enable the use of modifier keys to expand the button functionality, without having the add so many dedicated buttons. For example, the video makes use of modifier for individually switching the keyboard and mouse without changing the video, in case using a multi screen KVM setup.
That was really cool and got me inspired! Thanks for cross posting.
Is this like multi window support, or just floating panels within the VS code window's canvas?
For dual screen setups, sometimes I end up opening two instances of VS code for the same workspace, which seems a bit overkill.
I think you need two spaces before a line break, or double carriage returns, before starting a bullet list. That's the original markdown spec anyways. Other markdown flavors, like what GitHub uses are a little more forgiving with that but are then non standard.