rbanffy

✨ Seasoned software developer, proficient in Python, Java. Less proficient in Ruby and Lisp. A bit rusty in C and C++. Learning Erlang very slowly. Also a computer collector and restorer, lover of 8-bit computers, mainframes and interesting Unix workstations.

email: username at that google mail thing

http://about.me/rbanffy

https://linkedin.com/in/ricardobanffy

[ my public key: https://keybase.io/rbanffy; my proof: https://keybase.io/rbanffy/sigs/HtF1uAf_RNpwIkNP1-YGWP_-3doWV6S5Cc1KywXeLYo ]

πŸ“… Joined in 2008

πŸ”Ό 188,741 Karma

✍️ 62,305 posts

πŸŒ€
15 latest posts

Load

(Replying to PARENT post)

I don't really remember many Windows 95 firsts. One I remember is the ability to switch users without logging off. MacOS famously copied that (with a 3D cube look).

I think they made something really revolutionary at the IE3 time. Their News and Mail app was an Explorer extension that placed an e-mail reader as the presentation of a folder full of folders of mailboxes and messages. You wouldn't see the extension, as the apps launched as applications, but that's what the implementation looked like from what I investigated back then.

Unfortunately, the idea was seemingly abandoned almost immediately. I would love to have such views on top of a user-space file system keeping messages, address books, and calendars in sync.

πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘2hπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

A long time ago I did that to make Canonical's Launchpad easier to read - mostly making tables look nicer and so on. I was really nice. I saw similar initiatives at Workday as well - browser plugins that added extra functionality to the development instances of the application.
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘3hπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘3hπŸ”Ό1πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

> What accounts for the premium price/TB of these extremely high capacity enterprise-targeted drives?

Spare capacity, mostly. That’s why they have higher endurance. If you want to double the endurance of a given drive, tell the controller to allocate twice as many spare blocks and report less capacity than you would otherwise.

In this case, you are also paying a premium for the PCIe attachment instead of SAS, and a lot for price elasticity. You see, with drives like these you slash space and energy consumption in relation to HDDs by a large number, and that allows you to pay a premium for the device, because, at the end of its lifetime, it’ll have more than covered the cost difference in saved space and energy.

πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘6hπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

You can trivially modulate flash endurance by tweaking the reported space - the less space you report, the more spares you have.
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘6hπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

And thanks to the density, they won’t need as many racks as they used to.
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘6hπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

I was going to say blood of virgins, but tears are probably better heat conductors.
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘6hπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

The transfer rates limit how much each chip can be active at any given time, so a heat-aware writing allocator can pick the least active blocks for the next writes and distribute the heat accordingly. Even if it’s not heat-aware, the tendency will be that the writes will be distributed over as many chips as there are, and so will be the heat generated.

Now, I would LOVE to see this much SLC flash on a direct to bus attachment setting.

πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘6hπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

I imagine this is mostly about form-based applications, GUI or not, before the Microsoft pulled the rug from under IBM.
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘1dπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

> Microsoft advanced the state of UI and UX more than anyone else in the '90s.

There is no universe where that is true.

πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘1dπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘1dπŸ”Ό1πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

When you type a table on a typewriter you use the tab to advance to the next column (how many you have depends on the typewriter - you often had margins and one or two tabs). In typewriters, tab doesn’t have a specific width and you don’t have tab stops at every 8 columns. At least on the ones I have here.
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘1dπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0

(Replying to PARENT post)

A TRUE: device?
πŸ‘€rbanffyπŸ•‘1dπŸ”Ό0πŸ—¨οΈ0