| I had to step away from this conversation because of how aggressive you were being. Now that no one is watching, we might try to have a productive conversation. Please consider dropping the adversarial attitude. This place isn't like other sites. The way people converse is equally important to what they say. It's better to transcend than to dominate. For example, we do not slip in underhanded comments like this: > In that scenario, your surgeon would see the program suddenly freeze. Only if the programmer or his management were incompetent This is just short of a personal attack, which is against the rules. I know you probably didn't mean it that way, but look at how you're framing the debate. I felt as if I'd been teleported onto Fox News and forced to defend myself from an aggressive interviewer's mischaracterizations. Now, you can take the stance that "It's not against the rules, so I can say whatever I want." That's true, you can. But we're worse off for it. We optimize for good conversation here. The point I'm trying to get across is that if you really throw yourself into this community, wholeheartedly and without a feeling of having to prove something wherever you go, then this place has a lot to offer. You'll meet a lot of interesting people, you'll hear a lot of interesting stories, and perhaps you'll have an opportunity to contribute to something quite unexpected. But none of that will happen if you try to skewer your opponents wherever you go -- or if you see people here as opponents. We're people. It doesn't matter what the conversation is. It doesn't matter whether it's about life-or-death, or that this one happened to be about a surgery. The goal is to put yourself in the other person's shoes and to ask yourself, "If I were them, why would I say that?" Regarding our conversation, if you want to continue it, I'd be happy to. But unless you're trying to learn as much from me as I'm trying to learn from you, it's not going to go anywhere productive. And what would be the point? No one's looking anymore -- it's fallen off the front page, so it's just you and me here. But why should our conversation be so different just because nobody is watching? There are things to be said, but I have no time to defend myself. You can characterize what I was saying however you want. Or, alternatively, you could ask me what I meant. I won't pull one of those "I've been in the field for a pretty long time, so I bet you'll learn something..." routines. Those are tired refrains, usually coming from people who have long forgotten what it's like to be young and hungry. But I'm still pretty young, and money's low enough that I'm pretty hungry. Being unable to afford meat is unfortunate, but it's worth not having a job for a little while to throw myself into my research. See why there's no time to defend against aggression? I think I wrote this because in many ways, you remind me of how I used to be. And if I could go back in time, I'd ask myself what I was doing and why. This type of discourse is an intellectual dead-end. No one is going to learn a thing from watching people try to tear each other apart. Maybe you didn't realize that's what you were doing. It's very easy to slip into that mindset without realizing it. As for displaying random data, why would the programmer want to do this? GPUs are bastards. They ignore what programmers want, almost by definition. And as someone who has spent way-too-many years wringing as much performance as possible from them, I assure you that this is a realistic characterization of a possible outcome. Perhaps that piques your curiosity. If so, then that sounds like the start of a good conversation, no? |
If you want nuanced dialog, start with nuance and make room for other people's opinions.