The difference is visibility, with a van you can often see as close as 1,5 m in front of you due to the short hood. The problem is a lot of the newer trucks and SUVs are so tall that a full child (or 5) just disappear in front the car.
Wouldn't that intern just use an NLE (be it Premiere, Davinci Resole etc) anyway? If you need to style subtitles and edit shorts and video content, you'll need a proper editor anyway.
So this is a good thing even for coreutils itself, they will slowly find all of these untested bits and specify behaviour more clearly and add tests (hopefully).
There are some neat tricks to remove almost all the pack and unpack time. Apache Arrow can help a ton there (uses the same data format on both CPU and GPU or other accelerator). And on some unified memory systems even the send time can be very low.
oh absolutely reducing any of those spots can change the dynamics of the formula. 'zero copy memory' is another local item many drivers can use. It is just one of those things that also change as tech marches on. What used to be the gold standard on speed is suddenly rendered moot because one of those variables changes. Or suddenly something new will become possible. It is kinda cool but you need to keep an eye on it.
YC isn't that unknown and you can absolutely judge that org for funding stuff like this, you really don't need that much detail. And if you have interacted with a lot of the "founders" you know that statistically you're in the clear to judge them all too. It's a pretty weird world where a lot of dumb exists, like A LOT. The realities of their lives are frankly immaterial anyway, it's about the output (and input in case of VC money).
Well be prepared for it to get MUCH MUCH worse, two AI agents battling it out trying to get each other to mess up. While all the human have no idea what the hell is happening.
Most of the financial services and systems are all still on very boring old databases (hell quite some cobol still touches a ton of it). Since well they don't need to get hype funding for their Series A or whatever. Databases are just pretty good and processing data efficiently. It's a tiny tiny part that actually runs on some blockchain.
there are hundreds of billions, maybe trillions in volume going through financial services on blockchains
and yes that is a tiny fraction of all financial services volume at all, or even involving crypto assets.
I was referring to the traffic onchain as that’s what’s interesting
permissionless liquidity providing in unincorporated
partnerships is still novel and unique to those platforms and highly lucrative. on assets that dont need permission to be listed anywhere.
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