Eh, at least for people consuming .NET apps compiled with NativeAOT, the experience is similar. Applications can be compiled as a single file with no dependancies. A hello world in .NET is half the size of one in Go:
FYI you can just write a quick script to replace that with http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIDEO_ID and it works, at least on a desktop firefox browser with an adblocker on it. Weirdly, it seems to explicitly not work in Discord?
Discord has special handling for certain websites' embeds, including YouTube. Maybe because they already have to pull other video information by ID, they determine whether to use the shorts player based on YouTube's API rather than the URL used.
Assuming, of course, that one's body _does_ naturally produce insulin. I'm glad it and other artificial sweeteners exist and are as prevalent as they are.
Now we are talking! This one, in addition to all the other alternatives out there, makes the new Pebble dead on arrival. At least at the current price point.
AI-written or not, I think this is a great article. One thing is the use of AI, but the other thing, the thing about how stupid mainstream education has become, is very real and in my opinion, a much bigger threat than AI.
She probably is already stinking rich, or at least rich enough. Beyond certain point, though, research and knowledge seems more interesting than riches, and particularly if you feel yourself a researcher. Otherwise, perhaps, she be doing the same to business and be Ellona or something. Thank God she does not, but the contrary - is an inspiration to so many people - young and adult. Kudos!
For an HFT firm, RAM cost is a non-issue. Even the tiniest improvement in latency can result in millions of dollars of extra profit. They can octuple their RAM usage and still make a killing.
I bet Citadel already has reached out to Laurie :)
This is not a problem which needed to be fixed, it's an improvement in efficiency - though a costly one. We are talking about a company which do make their own custom microchips so you could very well be right, but it may also be that they weren't even aware this was possible.
Citadel executes trades in about 10 microseconds, so a 500 nanosecond reduced execution time is a 5% improvement. For a company which executes trades for hundreds of billions a day, this translates to real money.
Your sarcasm indicates that you have no clue as to how important such an improvement can be for some actors. Some do though; the repo has almost 100 forks and 2K stars after just two days.
I saw a few years ago one group buying spools of fiber just to 'slow down' the trades. As they were submitting them to different datacenters across the country. They wanted everything to show up at the exact same time so no one would front run their trades on different datacenters. They are willing spend millions on HW if it gives them an edge in the market. They would buy bespoke boards that could hold 16x the RAM if it gave them a 50ns edge.
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