search for: harvests

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 268 matches for "harvests".

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2010 Jan 26
2
[LLVMdev] some llvm/clang missed optimizations
A few random observations: 1. Clang could do better with large but boring switches like this: http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/jan_10/harvest/source/E8/E88C5111.shtml Performance of clang's output will be fine but this is a major code size lose. 2. Destruction of stupid loops is incomplete, sometimes due to phase ordering problems:
2005 Feb 09
12
Harvesting and Dictionary attacks
Is there a way to listen on port 25 for repeated dictionary attacks to harvest email address and blacklist that Ip with shorewall? Thanks, Mike
2005 Aug 15
2
warning: dovecot list is being harvested
Just a warning to dovecot listmembers. The list is being harvested. test3943395 is a unique address I created only for communication to the dovecot list. The following spam came from: Received: from dial-dynamic-62-69-52-187.surfdial.murphx.net (dial-dynamic-62-69-52-187.surfdial.murphx.net [62.69.52.187]) by sasami.anime.net (8.11.6/8.11.6) with SMTP id j7FLxtv03775 for
2002 Aug 06
3
hard to believe speed difference
First, I love R and am grateful to be using this free and extremely high quality software. Recently I have been comparing two algorithms and naturally I programmed in R first. It is so slow that I can almost feel its pain. So I decided to do a comparison with Java. To draw 500,0000 truncated normal, Java program takes 2 second and R takes 72 seconds. Not a computer science major, I find it hard
2010 Jan 27
2
[LLVMdev] some llvm/clang missed optimizations
>> Repetitive code with lots of bitwise operations is compiled by LLVM into >> much larger code than the other compilers: >> >> http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/jan_10/harvest/source/ED/ED37DAF5.shtml >> http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/jan_10/harvest/source/1F/1F4003C7.shtml >> >> Note that this is straight-line code, so LLVM's output will
2010 Jan 27
2
[LLVMdev] some llvm/clang missed optimizations
> Umm, can you find one that isn't a popcount implementation? Ok. MMX psadbw instruction: http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/jan_10/harvest/source/CE/CE3DA132.shtml Position of first set bit: http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/jan_10/harvest/source/1F/1F4003C7.shtml Log2 floor: http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/jan_10/harvest/source/83/837A80E9.shtml Pixel format
2010 Jan 26
0
[LLVMdev] some llvm/clang missed optimizations
On Tue, Jan 26, 2010 at 12:36 PM, John Regehr <regehr at cs.utah.edu> wrote: > 2. > Sometimes not: > > http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/jan_10/harvest/source/EC/ECC74C0C.shtml The primary issue here is that scalar evolution doesn't know how to deal with loops using "sle" for the exit condition. Shouldn't be too hard to fix now that we have overflow flags
2002 Jul 09
0
Offtopic: Mailing List was harvested
Just a quick note to those who care, I received a UCE this morning addressed to samba-337@ccp.com.au, the only place this was used was when emailing to this list. I can only conclude that either the list itself was harvested or someone has gone through the archive and harvested that. The Email actually came from 200.171.136.80 which has an abuse email address of abuse@telesp.net.br The Email
2012 May 17
1
BEWARE: This list is being harvested for leads
A spammer claiming to be '"Tim Saarela" <tim.saarela at dovecot.fi>' is sending out a pitch for "Enterprise Level Support" for Dovecot. The address of mine which he hit is only ever used for this mailing list, so it is clear that whatever the mechanism, this list is being harvested for commercial leads.
2018 Dec 01
3
Mailing list address harvested for spamming
Not to stir the pot, but I notice my email address has recently been harvested from this list for spamming purposes. This email address is unique and not used for anything else. I'd distinguish this from spam sent to the mailing list itself, which is obviously different. Is there anything further that could be done to prevent this? -- Dave
2005 Apr 12
1
Cumulative Points and Confidence Interval Manipulation in barplot2
R-Users, I am working with gplots (in gregmisc bundle) plotting some posterior probabilities (using barplot2) of harvest bag limits for discrete data (x-axis from 0 to 12, data is counts) and I ran into a couple of questions whose solutions have evaded me. 1) When I create and include the confidence intervals, the lower bound of the confidence intervals for several of the posterior probabilities
2010 Feb 12
1
using mle2 for multinomial model optimization
Hi there I'm trying to find the mle fo a multinomial model ->*L(N,h,S?x)*. There is only *N* I want to estimate, which is used in the number of successes for the last cell probability. These successes are given by: p^(N-x1-x2-...xi) All the other parameters (i.e. h and S) I know from somewhere else. Here is what I've tried to do so far for a imaginary data set:
2010 Jan 27
0
[LLVMdev] some llvm/clang missed optimizations
On Tue, Jan 26, 2010 at 5:55 PM, John Regehr <regehr at cs.utah.edu> wrote: >>> Repetitive code with lots of bitwise operations is compiled by LLVM into >>> much larger code than the other compilers: >>> >>> >>> http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/jan_10/harvest/source/ED/ED37DAF5.shtml >>> >>>
2018 Dec 01
0
Mailing list address harvested for spamming
Quoting dovecot-e51 at deemzed.uk: > Not to stir the pot, but I notice my email address has recently been > harvested from this list for spamming purposes. This email address is > unique and not used for anything else. > > I'd distinguish this from spam sent to the mailing list itself, which is > obviously different. > > Is there anything further that could be done
2010 Nov 22
0
Using AMI to harvest / record HOLD time - Using FreePBX
Hi Everyone, I am looking into AMI (using PHP) to record every instance of HOLD that is generated by putting a caller on HOLD (press hold button on the phone set). There is no HOLD in Asterisk but the event Music on Hold is generated when HOLD is pressed. The complexity is that all of the the calls are handled by FreePBX so I don't have the channel IDs etc... Can someone please point out how
2002 Jun 01
0
ADV: Harvest lots of Target Email addresses quickly,/
...;Target </FONT>Email Addresses In A Very Short Time?</FONT> <B><FONT face=Arial size=4></FONT><FONT color=#ff00ff face=Arial size=4><FONT color=#0000ff>Target Email Extractor </FONT>is a powerful Email Software that harvests Target Email Addresses from search engines, any specified starting URLs , including cgi , asp pages etc.</FONT></B></P> <FONT color=#000000 face=???? size=2> It Quickly and automatically search and spider from search engine, any specified startin...
2002 Apr 27
2
S & R list virus warning
It appears that someone has harvested email addresses from the S-news or one of the R lists and is sending out viruses. The mail does not come from the lists, but appears to come from people on these lists. (Closer examination of the headers indicates that it does not really come from the person indicated in the "from" field.) The mail is probably directed to people on these lists as
2011 Jan 20
1
[LLVMdev] [llvm-commits] [llvm] r123754 - in /llvm/trunk: lib/Analysis/InstructionSimplify.cpp test/Transforms/InstSimplify/2010-12-20-Distribute.ll
There's some interest in my "auto-simplifier", which is nice :), so let me explain a bit about it. On 19/01/11 19:35, Sandeep Patel wrote: > You've mentioned your auto-simplifier a few times now and curiosity is > getting the better of me. Can you explain it a bit more? On 20/01/11 00:32, Nuno Lopes wrote: > Just out of curiosity, what's this auto-simplifier?
2008 Aug 17
1
before-after control-impact analysis with R
Hello everybody, In am trying to analyse a BACI experiment and I really want to do it with R (which I find really exciting). So, before moving on I though it would be a good idea to repeat some known experiments which are quite similar to my own. I tried to reproduce 2 published examples but without much success. The first one in particular is a published dataset analysed with SAS by
2010 Jan 20
5
[LLVMdev] updated code size comparison
Hi folks, I've posted an updated code size comparison between LLVM, GCC, and others here: http://embed.cs.utah.edu/embarrassing/ New in this version: - much larger collection of harvested functions: more than 360,000 - bug fixes and UI improvements - added the x86 Open64 compiler John