Displaying 20 results from an estimated 114 matches for "lifespans".
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lifespan
2005 Mar 21
2
NaN
Dear R
What does NaN mean?
I recently did a correlation on a batch of data for some reason it didn't
like one column
cor(sleep,use="complete.obs")
BodyWt BrainWt SlowSleep ParaSleep TotalSleep
BodyWt 1.00000000 0.95584875 -0.3936373 -0.07488845 -0.3428373
BrainWt 0.95584875 1.00000000 -0.3867947 -0.07427740 -0.3370815
SlowSleep -0.39363729
2007 May 04
1
fedora lifespan
Fyi, re: fedora lifespan
http://www.linuxlookup.com/2007/may/03/fedora_core_5_end_of_life
- rh
--
Abba Communications
Spokane, WA
www.abbacomm.net
2005 Mar 03
6
CentOS Release Lifespan
I''ve just started using CentOS as an alternative OS for some servers
for a project. At the time 3.4 was the release of choice. I''m curious
how long the CentOS project will release fixes and patched rpms for
3.4 before it would be necessary to migrate these machines to 4.x. I
rather know in advance so I can plan accordingly and slowly migrate
these over time. I do realize that 4.x
2004 Dec 01
1
prediction
Hi!
I have a dataset of the lifespans (birth/death date) of about 100,000
people. I also have the birth dates of about 1,000,000 people who are
still alive. I also have other information for each of these people
including faculty,state,year graduated etc. I would like to do some
statistical analysis but since the data is factored i'...
2007 Sep 12
1
enquiry
Dear R-help,
I am trying to estimate a Cox model with nested effects basing on the
minimization of the overall AIC; I have two frailties terms, both gamma
distributed. There is a error message (theta2 argument misses) and I
don?t understand why. I would like to know what I have wrong. Thank you
very much for your time.
fitM7 <- coxph(Surv(lifespan,censured) ~ south + frailty(id,
2015 Sep 28
3
SourceMgr lifespan
I've tried using SourceMgr in a parser to get the nice error reporting with
automatic line/column tracking, and it works well.
I'm thinking about extending that to try to get the nice error reporting in
subsequent type checking, and that leads to a question.
As I understand it, SourceMgr owns the memory buffers (be they allocated
chunks of memory, or memory mapped files) containing the
2012 Nov 30
3
[LLVMdev] Support for bundles of MCInst?
Hello Owen,
> There should already be sufficient support for what you're trying to do.
See
> MCOperand::CreateInst(). The concept is that you'll build a composite
MCInst in
> your AsmPrinter::EmitInstruction() method, which uses Inst-type MCOperands
to
> hold a list of sub-instructions. Then you call
AsmStreamer::EmitInstruction() on the
> composite MCInst.
Thanks for
2013 Jun 23
2
Ubuntu 12.04 and R 2.15
I'm not sure this is the location to pose this question. If not, please let me know.
Does anyone know if R 2.15 is can be built for Ubuntu 12.04? ( I did attempt a build and it failed to configure due to missing X11 headers/libs. )
I'm trying to install some R packages that are not available for R 2.14, which is the last supported version available under Ubuntu 12.04. I can update
2012 Nov 30
0
[LLVMdev] Support for bundles of MCInst?
Mario,
On Nov 29, 2012, at 4:04 PM, Mario Guerra <mariog at codeaurora.org> wrote:
> Thanks for your reply. This is actually one approach we are considering, but
> there are a few issues with it we weren't sure how to address.
>
> One is that the lifespan of an MCInst seems to be limited to the scope of
> AsmPrinter, and we need them to be persistent in order to do a
2017 Jul 11
2
old hardware / minimal netinstall -> CPU fan control
I have just installed CentOS 6 i386 onto an old rack server (it's gonna be a
Bacula storeage server and is a 1U 1/2 depth chassis)
I did a minimum netinstall and so far so good. However, I have one problem.
The CPU fan is going at full speed constantly. Not a real problem apart from
(a) it will affect the fan's lifespan and (b) it's noisy.
I've done some Googling and found
2012 Mar 05
6
[LLVMdev] Clang question
I would like it to always be lowered, I don't want it.
On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 12:27 PM, Eric Christopher <echristo at apple.com>wrote:
> You don't have memcpy or want it to always lower it?
>
> -eric
>
> On Mar 5, 2012, at 11:56 AM, Ryan Taylor <ryta1203 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Christoph,
> >
> > Yes, you are correct on the lifetime
2012 Mar 05
2
[LLVMdev] Clang question
Christoph,
Yes, you are correct on the lifetime calls, they are just markers for
liveness.
However, the backend is not optimizing these calls away. I could try to
deal with them outside of llvm but I was hoping for a cleaner solution
using llvm?
On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 11:51 AM, Christoph Erhardt <christoph at sicherha.de>wrote:
> Hi Ryan,
>
> the compiler is free to insert
2017 Jul 11
2
old hardware / minimal netinstall -> CPU fan control
Fred Smith wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 11, 2017 at 12:05:55PM +0100, Gary Stainburn wrote:
>> I have just installed CentOS 6 i386 onto an old rack server (it's gonna
>> be a Bacula storeage server and is a 1U 1/2 depth chassis)
>>
>> I did a minimum netinstall and so far so good. However, I have one
>> problem.
>> The CPU fan is going at full speed constantly.
2004 May 02
7
Connection caching?
Hey all,
on the distcc mailing list, a thread about load balancing
got a bit out of hand, and we started thinking about
moving fsh-like connection caching into ssh itself
to get rid of the overhead of starting up the python
interpreter to run rsh.
(Interestingly, mit's "rex", described at
http://www.lcs.mit.edu/publications/pubs/pdf/MIT-LCS-TR-884.pdf,
considers connection caching
2015 Aug 15
4
[syslinux:master] efi/pxe: Reuse handle
On Fri, Aug 14, 2015 at 11:42 AM, Patrick Masotta via Syslinux
<syslinux at zytor.com> wrote:
>>>>>
> website (meaning, HP could test their firmware to be compatible with
> Syslinux and with non-Windows OSes). If the HP firmware could be made
> (more) compliant with UEFI specs, or if it could be improved and still
> be compliant with UEFI specs, wouldn't
2012 Mar 05
0
[LLVMdev] Clang question
You'll need to do the work then. I'd also question why? On most platforms a decent memcpy exists.
-eric
On Mar 5, 2012, at 12:28 PM, Ryan Taylor <ryta1203 at gmail.com> wrote:
> I would like it to always be lowered, I don't want it.
>
> On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 12:27 PM, Eric Christopher <echristo at apple.com> wrote:
> You don't have memcpy or want it to
2012 Mar 05
0
[LLVMdev] Clang question
Hi Ryan,
the compiler is free to insert implicit calls to memcpy(), for instance
for assignments from one struct/class variable to another. The same goes
for memset(), which may be inserted implicitly for the initialization of
local structs or arrays.
The good news is that the backend normally optimizes these calls away
where possible, replacing them with simple moves - at least as long as
the
2014 Apr 14
1
Alembic - Asterisk 11
I've had years of experience using ODBC for CDR, SIP, and extensions with
Asterisk. One thing that has been problematic in the past is with
documentation as far as database tables changing between versions (even
within minor releases, though that was back in the 1.4 days). I was
excited to see there is a plan for better managing that on Asterisk 12 via
Alembic. All that being said, are
2019 Mar 05
2
RFC: Contained stateful AliasAnalysis
TL;DR: I'm looking to have AliasAnalysis passes have the ability keep a
temporary cache when no transformations are performed.
I'm interested to first and foremost clarify what is the best way to even
start such an infrastructure change, such that it is not abused (or even
available) by other passes. We certainly don't want to keep arbitrary
caches in all passes.
Would making this a
2012 Jan 24
1
Plotting coxph survival curves
Hi,
I am attempting to plot survival curves estimated by cox proportional
hazards regression model. The formula for the model is this:
F.cox.weight <- coxph(Surv(Lifespan, Status) ~ MS + Weight + Laid + MS:Laid
+ Weight:Laid, data = LongF)
MS = Mating status (mated/virgin)
Weight = adult female weight, continuous covariate
Laid = number of eggs laid by each female, continuous covariate
I