search for: correctnes

Displaying 6 results from an estimated 6 matches for "correctnes".

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2013 Sep 21
2
9.2-PRE: switch off that stupid "Nakatomi Socrates"
Hello, I'd like to switch off this silly "Nakatomi Socrates" message which reminds me on Linux and their childish naming schemes. It is only cosmetics, but it bothers me whenever I switch on the laptop. I guess there is a switch already prsent to have in the bootloader config? Thanks, oh -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name:
2005 Jan 07
1
135 GB ext3 on broken drive -- other possibilities than "e2fsck -y"?
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 No-one out there who can give me any tips for this? (Then the space to do experiments will finally be used in other ways. And I hope this mail won't be consired to impolite...) On Mon, 6 Dec 2004 15:23:15 +0100 Milan Holz?pfel <lists at mjh.name> wrote: > Hello, > > I got an IDE-drive which decided to get broken. Part of
2013 Oct 23
1
[LLVMdev] Contribute a new precise pointer analysis to LLVM
On 10/23/2013 7:52 AM, lian li wrote: > According to our experiments with SPEC, we haven't observed > significant impact in terms of execution performance. In our > experiments, we run a list of 8 optimizations that require alias > analysis (including -licm, -gvn, -bb-vectorize,...), and for each > optimization we rerun our analysis so that its result can be used by >
2013 Oct 01
1
9.2-PRE: switch off that stupid "Nakatomi Socrates"
...see some humor once in a while. >>>>>> >>>>>> To the offended poster: read the last line of tunefs(8) - there's probably >>>>>> many more places you could use serious time looking for deviations from >>>>>> corporate correctnes. >>>>> Humor can even be etched in silicon, like e.g. on an IC created by Siemens: >>>>> >>>>> http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/creatures/pages/bunny.html >>>> Cisco too, besides weird Star Wars ROM messages, you have stuff like the >>>&g...
2002 Oct 09
19
high frequencies response
Hi there In the past, i have used lame to encode high quality mp3-files (vbr 1, bitrate ~ 192kbit). I tend to switch to ogg with Quality 4 or 5, but i noticed, that many ogg-files tend to produce too much high frequencies response. In many cases, this is very noticeable. For my opinion, i cannot accept this worse frequence reponse. I have used latest version of ogg (OggEnc v1.0, precompiled
2002 Oct 09
19
high frequencies response
Hi there In the past, i have used lame to encode high quality mp3-files (vbr 1, bitrate ~ 192kbit). I tend to switch to ogg with Quality 4 or 5, but i noticed, that many ogg-files tend to produce too much high frequencies response. In many cases, this is very noticeable. For my opinion, i cannot accept this worse frequence reponse. I have used latest version of ogg (OggEnc v1.0, precompiled