temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Taken
temp453463343's comments
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Taken
I don't see why they don't make it possible to earmark money - I think they would end up getting a LOT more funding:
People that don't want to fund gay marriage advocacy would donate to the issues that they find more important, and people that feel strongly about gay marriage would donate more because they know it would all go towards their pet issue.
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Taken
"Our four pillars of litigation are private property, economic liberty, free speech and school choice." - their website
What's the deal with school choice? Seems kinda random
One thing I wish advocacy groups allowed is donating towards narrower goals. For instance I support most of what the ACLU does, but I don't really care for their views on gay marriage and don't particularly want to fund that part. It would be great if I could donate to more specific parts of the organization (same goes for public radio, haha)
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: C++ Library for Linear Algebra on Supercomputers
Looking at ScaLAPACK, it's been developed since 1995. I've never touched it, but it's probably many many lines of code (and maybe a few PhD thesis) with all sorts of kinks worked out that will take you decades to iron out yourself. To throw out all that knowledge/work/man-hours and to start from scratch seems like a waste.
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: C++ Library for Linear Algebra on Supercomputers
the C++ linear algebra libraries are basically syntactic sugar for interacting with optimized Fortran libraries like BLAS, LAPACK, etc. (I'm sure I'm overlooking some complexity here, because the C++ libraries, while linking to the same Fortran libraries have very different run times)
Yours interacts with ScaLAPACK and other distributed memory libraries.
Why would it not be possible to simply extend say armadillo or eigen to interact with distributed memory libraries? If you need more syntax, then extend the interface.
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: C++ Library for Linear Algebra on Supercomputers
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: C++ Library for Linear Algebra on Supercomputers
boost::uBLAS
eigen
armadillo
a dozen other...
why not contribute to an existing project?The reoccurring bifurcation of talent and resources in the open source community is really disheartening. Can't we focus on one or two libraries and make them actually good? Or at least fork off of something that already exists and add your own features. I look at benchmarks of the existing tools and one library will do one operation very efficiently, while another will work well with something. Often the differences in speed are huge (more than a factor of 10). So I end up having to flip a coin in choosing which library to use.
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temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Wine 1.6 Released With 10,000 Changes
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Wine 1.6 Released With 10,000 Changes
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temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Cache-aware matrix multiplication – naive isn't that bad
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Is Sugar Really Toxic?
Not to detract from your other excellent points but:
1 - it makes it easier to eat more because it's less dry. If you eat a bunch of fries with nothing it will turn into a huge lump in your stomach and you won't want more.
2 - insoluble fiber in apples slows fructose absorption, but a hunk of fatty meat does not? Fat slows absorption through the intestine.
3 - Vinegar is supposed to suppress appetite. Eating a pickle when your hungry will 4/6 times make you feel a lot less hungry.
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Cache-aware matrix multiplication – naive isn't that bad
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Cache-aware matrix multiplication – naive isn't that bad
Anyone have some insight?
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: When male CEOs have daughters, relative pay for women at their firms goes up
Choosing between two careers, say engineering and being a marine zoologist are equivalent in socially attributed worth and both require a similar amount of effort education-wise. Most people wouldn't argue that being an engineer is in an obvious way "better".
Choosing between going to college or not, for most people isn't an equal choice. The vast majority of people view going to college as a better option.
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Elon Musk to publish hyperloop design by August
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Sanskrit and Lisp (2011)
temp453463343 | 12 years ago | on: Quinoa should be taking over the world. This is why it isn’t
I'm not strongly against gay marriage. I simply don't support it. Sorry if my explanation is a little disjointed. There isn't one particular issue that explains it all.
I see the whole issue as completely artificial. It was almost entirely created and started by Gavin Newsom (former mayor of SF). It was a demogogic move on his part to try to get support for his run for governor several years later.
Aside: Ironic it backfired and ended up pigeon holeing him as a far left politician.
No one talked about or wanted gay marriage before he brought it up.
A more nebulous reason is that society is moving away from marriage. People are more and more living in civil unions. Marriage has become a religious/traditional thing. So revising/redefining antiquated traditions to appease a group of people seems unnecessary.
I think the idea of redefining a term like marriage is also rather problematic for me. It's always described a union between a man and a woman, since like the times of Hammurabi - and now we're just redefining it? It seems a little absurd.
The address the issue, we created a new term. "Civil Unions". But for some reason this isn't good enough - and I don't know why. Seems like the real goal is to redefine a several thousand year old term - which kinda seems revisionist to me.
Another argument I've seen and that I've never seen addressed is: why do gay couples get to marry and not polyamorous people? Seems like there is a double standard here.I personally feel like if they're going to go through all of this, they might as well allow all marriage.
At the end of the day I wouldn't really care if gay marriage passed. What bothers me the most is that so much time, effort and money is spent on something that is a rather insignificant issue.
The right to visit loved ones at a hospital and the tax benefits are more symptomatic of broken hospital/tax laws than a huge national issue on par with the civil rights movement. I think calling gay marriage a civil rights issue is hyperbolic and disingenuous (and is polyamorous marriage a civil rights issue too?). I think there are way way way more important issues currently to deal. Thousands of people are rotting in jails for non violent crimes, thousands of people have their lives ruined by medical bills, thousands of people are forced into plea bargains for crimes they never committed. There is so much suffering happening around us, and we spend out time arguing about redefining marriage. It's just really frustrating for me to see this artificial debate occupy so much of the collective unconscious of the country (and now the world).