zanity Posted October 6, 2023 Share Posted October 6, 2023 Please deity, don't tell me the fools are still dribbling about AVX. One thing about this industry is it ain't short of no-nothing fools who think because they've touched a computer, they are some kind of expert. Everyone should understand this cancerous arrogance actually takes real industrial giants down. You have a fool who began in engineering (as a lousy engineer), who works his way to the top (because management is a great career for fools), and then considers himself an engineering god and dictates scientific and engineering policy for his company. As the top guy, he delights in ignoring all the advice from the actual experts the company employs, because nothing makes a fool feel 'big' than running his mouth on subjects he literally has no understanding of. If he can say it, it must be 'true' because didn't he study engineering at university? It is a general problem in high-tech that knowledge advances so quickly, your normie engineer that hates the idea of keeping up, but ages and therefore probably moves upwards in the corporate structure, hates the fact that he/she is clueless about the 'new' that younger (and lower rank) employees may be very well versed in. I would say that to understand why AVX is important in modern coding methods is a 2 out of 10 skill level. Of course, the average skill level of people who claim tech knowledge on the Internet is probably 1 out of 10. But the less they know, the louder they shout. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vik24328 Posted October 13, 2023 Share Posted October 13, 2023 I would say that to understand why AVX is important in modern coding methods is a 2 out of 10 skill level. Of course, the average skill level of people who claim tech knowledge on the Internet is probably 1 out of 10. But the less they know, the louder they shout.Listen, smartass! I'm sure you're "brilliant." But unfortunately, Cyberpunk 2077 2.0 without AVX looks much more technologically advanced than this empty, gray, dull, unoptimized s#*! with AVX! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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