Author: Miguel A. Ballicora
Date: 21:25:58 09/04/02
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On September 04, 2002 at 18:38:17, Dann Corbit wrote: >My take on the matter (in one paragraph): >Robert wrote a paper on parallel speedup, showing a 1.7 increase for 2 CPU's (as >derived from his more general formula). Vincent was unable to reproduce this >sort of speedup, and thought the research was faulty. Robert agreed that the >test set was limited and you won't always get that sort of speedup, but as an >average (over a broad set of positions) that's about what he got. There has >been some acrimony over whether superlinear speedups are possible. I think that >the jury is still out on that one. > >At any rate, that's my take on the whole thing. > >Vincent always sees things in pure, jet black or gleaming, powder white. If >something isn't terrific, then it is pure junk. While I think his mode of >interesting is a bit odd, it's one of the things that make Vincent interesting. He crossed the line when he used the word "fraud" and "lie" to describe a scientific paper without any solid proof (he only proved a flaw in the presentation). Too serious. To be honest, I am embarrassed to be reading this thread. One side does not recognize a flaw (it could be honest and I believe it, happens many times, big deal) and the other makes pathetic accusations of fraud mixing it up with old issues (Deep blue etc.). To top it all, ad hominem attacks. In this conditions it is impossible to discuss anything. Regards, Miguel > >Robert has always been a man of strong convictions, and if you call him a >'noo-noo head' he'll call you one back. He isn't one to back down when he >thinks he is right. That's one of the things I like about Dr. Hyatt. > >When these two styles happen to ram into one another, the sparks are sure. A >philosophical question is often asked: >"What happens when an immovable object meets an irresistable force?" > >The 'debate' is an answer to that question. >;-)
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