He is such an interesting character to me. I've read a few of his books and some principles he brings up are super interesting and overlooked imo, while majority of the stuff he writes about uses the most handwave-y explanations.
Yes, breaking it up would work, but that is not a solution for streams.
The regex is dead simple: /Authorization: Basic (.*)\ngrant_type=refresh_token/
"." does not match newline, so I'm basically looking two lines that conform to a template.
Specific cases can be transformed with some grep/awk magic, but IMO the concept of pattern matching against a stream is interesting regardless.
There are generic integration algorithms that would try pretty much every known technique, so I would wager to say yes (though looking forward to a counterexample proving me wrong)
Bandwidth increases nearly linearly with adding dimms until you get to 1 dimm per memory channel. After that there's very small improvements related to more open pages. More open pages doesn't help with pure bandwidth benchmarks though.
Can somebody eli5 how this works, or point me to some description? Let's say I'm pip installing it. How does the rust code turn into something that python can call?
As an engineer, saying that $20k, the price of a cheap car, is 1/1000th of a GDP of a whole country does not pass the smell test. Google says that Yemen's GDP is $21.61b, so a drone is 0.0000925% of the GDP. In other words it's about a million drones per year for Yemen, and about 7.7 million interceptors per year for the US.
> I'd rather see van der Poel do inhuman things. Cadel Evans era was boring
How does doping make cycling a more interesting sport? I'm a mediocre fan, but Armstrong winning every year was boring. I would think that most fans like to see battles on climbs, attacks, etc... Doping makes you fastre, but whether it takes 45 or 42 minutes to do a certain climbs doesn't matter.
I think the answer there doesn't have much to do with doping, but rather super-teams. Especially teams focused on a single event like US Postal was. Reduce the size of each team to 7 or 5 and chaos would ensue (for good or bad). Do you want F1 or NASCAR?