It’s freaking me out that this channel went from a typical “host sitting at a computer in the corner of a screen cast” to a full on television show. In like a month! And the content is new and engaging, not just someone reading a Wikipedia page at the audience. I was already subscribed but well done. Looking forward to the next one.
@12q85 ай бұрын
Yeah, the editing and everything made me stick around. Especially for a small and new channel. I’ve never seen a channel start out professionally edited.
@f5e4b5t6c45 ай бұрын
She is brilliant, it glows in the dark if i dare to say
@kurtm545 ай бұрын
How do they even find someone to help them with all this?
@12q85 ай бұрын
@@kurtm54 it’s homemade.
@Ajay-kz9ns5 ай бұрын
@@12q8still need to someone to help with. That camera is not gonna move by itself.😅
@Nikifuj9085 ай бұрын
This girl is gonna blow up, mark my words. Reminds me of the golden age of science content on KZbin (2011-2013).
@SudiptoDasDeep-fk3rh5 ай бұрын
Oh yea. She's gonna blow up really well ig 😳
@NameUserOf5 ай бұрын
Tech + women = everything a man need. In addition she has a great ideas for a video. Not sure she(or whoever works for her) could keep up with the last one for a long time.
@johnmckown12675 ай бұрын
She is a very good presenter. Well spoken.
@theviniso5 ай бұрын
@@johnmckown1267 Good presenter, good content and good editing. She's got everything to succeed.
@robbiedozier28405 ай бұрын
@@NameUserOfew
@eduardosd20005 ай бұрын
I am a digital designer and been diving pretty deep into RISC V in the last year or so, and no joke that is one of the best pieces of work I've seen. Amazing explanation while still beeing entretaining, keep the great work, you've just gained a new fan
@DrInnappropriate5 ай бұрын
I have seen every kind of video on KZbin, but nothing prepared me for this. This is my first video of LaurieWired. I didn't expect to go from analogies of baking sheets to coding vectors in raw risc-v assembly using Mac OS 9 Windowing system, the modern Windows Terminal with a Win XP start bar. I was on the edge of my seat watching you hold that cookie and never taking a bite. You're a menace and I am here for it.
@Simplified-Script-Development5 ай бұрын
Soo true
@BruceHoult5 ай бұрын
MacOS 9? Looks like System 7 at the point I just got up to. On a twin floppy SE. Wtf? Continuing...
@AndrewEddie5 ай бұрын
And no recipe for the cookies either. How wude!
@MikeLevin5 ай бұрын
On another level
@voidFutureVector2 ай бұрын
Tech + attractive girl + amazing information presentation + old school MacOS window system. These videos are amazing and ive been binging. Going to use these to teach my kids too.
@u0000-u2x5 ай бұрын
Wow crazy production quality and valuable content 🔥
@Walczyk5 ай бұрын
and don’t forget the bangs
@RegiJatekokMagazin5 ай бұрын
On point
@theviniso5 ай бұрын
@@Walczyk Came for RISC-V, stayed for the bangs.
@captainMony5 ай бұрын
This day and age a channel like this is a blessing
@stephm05 ай бұрын
The editing on this one 👌
@strangefeeling89015 ай бұрын
for REAL, next level
@mortysmith6665 ай бұрын
Noice 👌
@justanaveragebalkan5 ай бұрын
The misinformation is also on point.
@strangefeeling89015 ай бұрын
@@justanaveragebalkan what information is incorrect?
@florianflowfabworx44605 ай бұрын
... and I like the bg music - unfortunately the soundcloud link for "more of this style" is missing...
@GunAinmNoAodann5 ай бұрын
It's cool to get a mini-tutorial on using gdb in the middle of this. Great video!
@QuanrumPresence5 ай бұрын
As an ex VLSI engineer this was an amazing quality intrduction to vector processing, but also video production, meme's and audio all are great. Susbcribed for more!
@walhalla82175 ай бұрын
Just curious, why did you leave your role?
@Wahinies4 ай бұрын
@@walhalla8217if like my old man at VLSI ; replaced by H1Bs.
@Flockman30655 ай бұрын
this juxtaposition of nitty-gritty details and the airy and pleasant presentation style is the format i never realised i wanted, but it just works, keep it up :)
@pablogracia82474 ай бұрын
I concur 100% with the above!
@Jimtheneals4 ай бұрын
I agree, she is an excellent teacher. I love this format.
@PrivateSi4 ай бұрын
I used a pitch shift effect so I didn't have to listen to a child's voice!
@Flockman30654 ай бұрын
@PrivateSi, dont be mean, i did give it a try though, sounds........interesting....and disturbing
@niki_dev5 ай бұрын
Vector Processing is how modern video games (typically) achieve so much at such high framerates. We use SIMD everywhere we can. Great video!
@videodude81375 ай бұрын
Laurie, you are an excellent speaker! Never once said, "you know" or "just". Not a single word whisker. You are the Standard all should strive to meet. Thank you! I have subscribed.
@user-pv7gt4mi5b2 ай бұрын
That's how teleprompters work
@smeegleАй бұрын
8:04 :)
@Slycooper24565 ай бұрын
Wow! The quality of these videos just keeps getting better and better. Great job Laurie!
@Vazzible_gaming5 ай бұрын
Damn, the 90s called, they wanna put your KZbin channel on tv.
@argvminusone5 ай бұрын
That's why they call it “KZbin”! Even you can be on your very own TV channel.
@Vazzible_gaming4 ай бұрын
@@argvminusone You got me there, I guess I never made the comparison. Thanks!
@thepanable50045 ай бұрын
You're a modern day Ada Lovelace. Some of the best low level content I've seen on this platform.
@canhobby62865 ай бұрын
Amen bro,,,
@CoreDumpped5 ай бұрын
Only 3 minutes into the episode and this is already the best video I've seen this year so far. Great job!
@charlesarmstrong945 ай бұрын
I learn quite a lot from your videos too @CoreDumped
@user-qq4dh3rk3u5 ай бұрын
Yes, your videos are so helpful too!
@gustavodemacenabarreto45725 ай бұрын
Im really proud that RISC-V is finally getting noticed. Actually, I'm working as intern in order do develop verilog modules for such operations in RISC-V Architecture.
@domspoetry5 ай бұрын
You're an Artist for sure. No one does more justice in the world than a good teacher, keep it up!
@NoshLambeaux5 ай бұрын
Velma's over here trying to disguise herself via the superman method. No one's fooled. Awesome video, thanks for the explanations!
@ohokcool3 ай бұрын
She doesn't want people to know she's Lain when she's Velma, leading a double life haha
@thebluriam5 ай бұрын
I have never felt more engaged watching a KZbin video on any topic like this in maybe forever, I am losing my mind right now. I have never wanted to work with RISC architecture as much as I do now. I don’t think I’ve ever subscribed to a channel so fast
@jdl34085 ай бұрын
Amazing flow of explanation and balance between technical details and real world analogies to help the viewer understand. Production quality and editing are very impressive. I learned a lot and your obvious passion for this topic is inspiring.
@user-on6uf6om7s5 ай бұрын
Editing - 10/10 Information - 10/10 Cookie Baking - Ehm....
@alex-ju6qh5 ай бұрын
too much baking powder, I think
@ribeiro46425 ай бұрын
lol
@DebbieMarieClassics5 ай бұрын
Gosh, I was really totally following the first 8 minutes of this video. The history lesson was so interesting. You're a natural teacher. Love all of the new editing stuff too. My new favorite words, VECTOR VECTOR!
@ayonsamajder5 ай бұрын
There is something psychological with these videos. I just get hooked into it.
@statinskill5 ай бұрын
Young fertile female. Bangs. Sweet voice. Actually saying something interesting. How could you not get hooked?
@dang-x3n0t1ct5 ай бұрын
maybe it's because she's attractive
@HUEHUEUHEPony5 ай бұрын
Sexxxo
@erongjoni34645 ай бұрын
You know the movie "Despicable Me"? You know how people can't get enough of the Minions? You remember how the Minions sound? It's that.
@NeovanGoth5 ай бұрын
It's the girl. She's cute _and_ smart.
@matthewlazaric35433 ай бұрын
great video, I thought a lot of it would go over my head but you dumbed it down then built up the complexity in such a way that I followed the whole way through
@jyothishkumar30985 ай бұрын
Amazing video on RISC-V! Glad to see there's an RVV 1.0 board now!
@motheroats19 сағат бұрын
1. The actual content of your videos are sophisticated and intelligent 2. Please do a BTS video showing how you do the things you do, this has got to be easily the best set design I ever seen in a channel. You are definitely a multi-talented genius thank you so much for sharing your work!
@respergu135 ай бұрын
The assembly code example was very helpful to underestand the benefits of using vector instead of scalar funtions. Cool video!
@DonaldOfEarth5 ай бұрын
@LaurieWired, this is my first viewing of your channel. I've learned some things, have a new SBC to order, and feel like I just received an invite to Cyberia. I'm glad that you exist. Thanks!
@truevision14635 ай бұрын
I work at Tenstorrent, where we, among other things, design RISC-V CPUs primarily for data center use. It's good to see RISC-V gaining popularity and support. Hopefully, the ARM-x86 duopoly will come to an end!
@yldrmcs2 ай бұрын
OK I have a complaint :) I have your card which supports very old ubuntu version and it doesn't remotely support redhat based distros.
@blackanode5 ай бұрын
Your aesthetic, enthusiasm, and vibes are amazing! The attention to detail and passion you put into your videos always leave me impressed. The cut at 29 seconds had me cracking up. I really appreciate the pauses you include between pieces of information; it gives me time to process everything. All the different bits really take this from good to great. This video even got me hyped up about a new instruction set! I appreciate the disclaimer at the end, too.
@godnyx1175 ай бұрын
You are the definition of "Quality over Quantity" and I love that! Thank you for your content! You remind of pre-2016 KZbin!
@dalewheat5 ай бұрын
Yes, very interesting stuff, and a very interesting time to be watching all this happen. Thanks, Laurie, for making this *exceedingly esoteric* subject both accessible and interesting. You make it look effortless. Do please keep up the good work.
@RickeyBowers5 ай бұрын
Your enthusiasm is infectious, content thorough and candid. Keep up the great work!
@Gantics-Antics2 ай бұрын
Holy moly. The quality of this video is incredible. I enjoy programming in C++ (hobyist) but never touched asm nor programmed on rasberry pie - I feel inspired to try on these cool new RISC-V systems :)
@MichalKobuszewski5 ай бұрын
Wow Laurie, that was intense! A lot of info in this one. Got to read on how do length agnostic intructions work. Interesting musical quotes from Madonna's Ray of light album around 4:00 - hard to believe this album came out the same year as SSE instructions did :)
@ianollmann93932 ай бұрын
You can actually do VLA in software on Intel / arm based CPUs using clang’s C vector language extensions. You can declare a vector with 64 floats in it, for example, and the compiler will split it up into the appropriate vector size depending on whether you have 16-, 32- or 64-byte vectors, all of which are common on different Intel CPUs, depending on the vector extension flag passed to the compiler. If you are tired of rewriting software for N different vector lengths, it is the way to go. The compilers ability to narrow vectors is flawless.
@enthusi5 ай бұрын
Splendid. Thank you. RiscV is highly appreciated content and here to stay :)
@chrish89414 ай бұрын
What a fantastic channel. Great writing, great editing, and wonderfully technical and educational content. The video style and spoken cadence are strangely hypnotizing and feverishly ethereal. Incredible stuff
@RocktCityTim5 ай бұрын
Great video and presentation. This reminds me of the robust nature of the TI 99/4 from the early 80s. Need a 16 bit reg? Make one. Run out of registers? Create a new set! We were doing stuff that the Z80 and 6502 couldn't dream of. It looks like you're witness to (and participant in) a new revolution in computing. Hopefully, it goes better than it did for the 99/4 ...
@djstraylight5 ай бұрын
Nice overview. Can't wait to see what other RISC-V boards are released. Especially processors that accelerate matrix operations for LLM inference.
@TheJuanjo2345 ай бұрын
Great video. I'll start a PhD in computer architecture in september so as you say it's nice to have an "open" ISA to work with. People from europe complains about not hearing opinion outside Berkeley, Berkeley made decisions without taking into account out-of-order designs making it more complex. But overall it's nice to have an open ISA and computer architecture investigation switching to RISC-V to have more freedom. Very good video to introduce vector operations I will recommend it to bachelor students :)
@ChrisSmith-tc4df5 ай бұрын
They’re free to create EuRISC 🤷🏻♂️
@rj7250a5 ай бұрын
What in Riscv, make it harder to design a out of order core?
@PhilfreezeCH5 ай бұрын
Once you enter the realm of OoO super-scaler and so on, you will likely have micro-ops anyway so the ISA doesn‘t matter too much anymore.
@TheJuanjo2345 ай бұрын
@@rj7250a I don't remember exactly. It was because the bits in the mask in vector operation that complicated wiring when you are renaming registers. I need to watch the documentation to remember
@rj7250a5 ай бұрын
@@TheJuanjo234 ok, if you could at least give me a name to search this documentation, it would be nice.
@tbfromsd5 ай бұрын
Web dev who accidentally stumbled into this content, and don't regret it. I feel like your summary was informative, and approachable to anyone with interest in RISC-V. I don't think my Raspberry Pi's are going to be banished to the closet just yet but I might just see what kind of janky programming I can get up too with the Canaan K230 versus the Orange Pi 5 I was thinking about picking up. Thank you kindly for what was obviously a lot of work making this video!
@Tueftel-2k5 ай бұрын
Love the editing and pacing of this one. Cookie analogy was also on point. Outstanding work! 👌🏻
@Zarathinius3 ай бұрын
Presenting this information to me like something my teacher would have put on the classroom TV in the late 90s does something to my brain. Well done.
@AshtonCoolman5 ай бұрын
Her editing and teaching skills rizzed my ADHD attention span. I want to play with RISC-V now and I'm not a software engineer 🤔
@MrHaggyy5 ай бұрын
Math, coding, engineering is a great exercise for attention. I had a hard time following the usually 90min long modules at university. Now i easily spend 4h on a problem if my job allows me to do so. I hope that doesn't sound discouraging... It's my job so i prepared around 10 years to do so if we add my time at universities.
@PhilfreezeCH5 ай бұрын
Lmao I need to tapeout a RISC-V chip called Rizz-V
@Michael_Jackson1875 ай бұрын
You are high if you think she understands 1% of what she is saying
@matthewhayes76715 ай бұрын
@@Michael_Jackson187 Aww, found the fragile guy in the comments who can't stand that there are so many women in the world who are way smarter than he is. It's okay bud. 😢
@Michael_Jackson1875 ай бұрын
@@matthewhayes7671 dumb ass dudes like you is what keep the channel going
@brian-nr5moАй бұрын
It's amazing that this is free. Super fun and comprehensible breakdown!
@hagenrahn61585 ай бұрын
I really love how passionate you are about the topics you present and also about how you present them. Please, continue to brighten our mood and infect us with your profound and optimistic way of valueing hardware and software
@austindolan31425 ай бұрын
Seeing cutting edge technology grow like this is really cool, and this channel explains it very well and with entertaining editing/production.
@boltez65075 ай бұрын
The editing is top notch,tbh the production quality matches that of good television documentaries.
@SonShani4 ай бұрын
The Serial Experiments Lain elements were such a throwback, I recognized them immediately even after all those years !
@ignacionr5 ай бұрын
Keep doing it like this, you'll have 1M subscribers before the end of the year.
@ayder5 ай бұрын
I haven’t seen such a good content in one video. Great production in every aspect.
@ashwalker15 ай бұрын
I feel like I'm watching an anime but it's very nerdy
@henrikholst74905 ай бұрын
In what dimension is Anime not nerdy??
@ohokcool3 ай бұрын
It's literally serial experiments lain but she grew up and became a youtuber haha, I'm loving this. Starting off a little strong with the first video I'm watching being about RISC-V assembly 😳 I'll understand it eventually
@Noubers2 ай бұрын
@@ohokcool The ending we hoped for for Lain.
@Nina-cd2eh5 ай бұрын
Perfect timing with me just finishing a saxpy and dgemv implementation for my post-grad arch class. The permutations of different vector instructions is pretty insane. There's an instruction for everything
@cagatayy11825 ай бұрын
I think a different title would be more appropriate for the video. It may be just me but I started the video expecting to learn what is special about RISC-V's implementation of vector instructions (vector length agnosticism) and that is only ⅒ of the video. And during the assembly section, the most important line for vector length agnosticism (vsetvli) is glossed over. The assembly sample also does not make use of t0, which is pretty crucial to understand what makes RISC-V's vector ISA special. Furthermore, if I understand the docs correctly, the explanation of vector length agnosticism in the video is not really correct. The CPUs do not have flexibly sized vector registers. Rather, they have a way for the processor to pass to the program the number of elements that would fit into its register so that the program can accordingly update the pointer to point at the next region of memory to be processed. This is a cleaner and more general solution to vectors-of-different-sizes problem, but it is important to note that on x86, programs can still read the CPU capabilities at runtime and run different implementations of the same functions for different vector units accordingly. I think for RISC-V the greater advantage of its approach is not backwards or forwards compatibility, it is that the approach allows different processors that are contemporary but on different market segments (and hence have different silicon budgets for vector registers) to run the same code. Lastly, backwards compatibility is not a big deal for x86 vector instructions. For example, 128-bit vector registers are aliases to the lower halves of the 256-bit registers. Sure, there is wasted potential if the program only supports the smaller-sized vectors, but that is not the inefficiency the analogy in the video would imply. The CPU is not keeping "old trays" around, it can cook just 2 cookies in a 16-cookie tray, if that is what is provided by the baker. For the case of the program expecting 512-bit registers but the CPU only having 256-bit registers, there are solutions to that too. Zen 4's implementation of AVX-512 uses 256 bit instructions under the hood. The CPU needs to be explicitly designed to have compatibility with larger vectors, but it is beneficial for supporting programs compiled for larger processors with smaller silicon area.
@vectorcr_02 ай бұрын
I subscribed the moment I saw the serial experiment lain themed intro. The res of the video was awesome too!
@ChanakyanStudent79715 ай бұрын
OMG you touched grass, that's like unheard of in Computer engineering
@pinekel89875 ай бұрын
Honestly a lot of computer scientists love nature, I suppose you get tired of computers working with them all day. I know I do
@ChanakyanStudent79715 ай бұрын
@@pinekel8987 yeah but not everyone works on the Google campus with greenery everywhere 💔
@pinekel89875 ай бұрын
@@ChanakyanStudent7971 I mean... parks and hiking trails exist?
@adrinuk_gamedev5 ай бұрын
It's a green screen :0
@GeoffryGifari5 ай бұрын
why touch grass when you can code grass
@TheHashCrackingSlasher5 ай бұрын
I absolutely love the production quality on this! I am blown away by how good it is and how well you're able to teach these concepts! I hope more like this can continue cause I love watching it and im sure so many others do! This gives off the vibes that once im done watching this video, I'm gunna go ask my mom if I could have a few quarters to head over to the arcade with my friends, and I love that so much. It feels like im stepping back in time! (Which I appreciate a lot as I was born in the 2000s so I never really got to experience that!)
@felipefmavelar5 ай бұрын
youtube should recommend more videos like this, great content.
@hollowgroundxX5 ай бұрын
The increased production quality is appreciated. Valuable info as well! ~
@deadall1275 ай бұрын
that's the highest pitched technical talk I have ever heard
@tonym49533 ай бұрын
I thought it was a child at first 😅😂😂
@l3eatalphal3eatalphaАй бұрын
You can thank YT pitch correction for that ;)
@matthewtymaja37605 ай бұрын
Having coded ARM32 as a hobby since the 90s (because Acorn Risc Machine!), and having heard of RISC-V for a good while, I will finally look to get one of these new SBCs. Aarch64 lost a lot of the ‘magic’ of Aarch32, and looking at the RISC-V ISA, it looks interesting. Thank you for a great video!
@lis65025 ай бұрын
16:12 actually for such old farts as i am i could say that we're having opportunity to re-live 70s/80s. Things IT-wise were much straightforward to the point where single person (and i am looking at you Woz) was able to deliver hardware AND software creating complete product. Now times had changed a bit, hardware long time ago passed beyong single person's understanding, but with RISC-V we can at least follow and be up to date with new ISA's additions and HW being released.
@MrTweetyhack5 ай бұрын
blah blah blah. single people can do much more than ever. just because you don't understand new tech doesn't mean it is difficult
@skylinefx0495 ай бұрын
@@MrTweetyhack lol, it seems like you don't understand how much technology has advanced in the past years, and how rapidly. If you think that tech in the 70s was as complex as new tech you are dead wrong
@rya31905 ай бұрын
@@MrTweetyhackConsidering our infrastructure has to handle Gb being thrown around, through different components and across long distance, in seconds, compared to one device that move Kbs over many seconds, on the same system.... I think computers have gotten more complex than the days of the Apple 1, or Pet.
@lis65025 ай бұрын
@@MrTweetyhack this isn't a matter of "understanding" on the level to being able to use it. You can be decent car driver without knowing a single thing about internal combustion engines or how gearwheel sizes affect transmission of torque and speed. But every non-standard usage or modification of said car requires you to have at least basic understanding of inner workings in order to know where to hook and what to change to achieve expected result. Without deep understanding of a car you'll be as good driver as manufacturer allows you to be. For some of us this simply isn't enough.
@shiro31465 ай бұрын
dont forget templeOS dev he singlehandedly make an entire OS and Programing Language himself albeit with some weirdness
@andrewhussey5105 ай бұрын
I love that RISC-V is taking off, having drooled over MIPS and Power-PC decades ago. I love the quality of these videos and the fact she can manage 30 seconds of narration without jump cuts, saying "like" or "awesome". Most of all, the bottle of Glenlivet on the kitchen shelf seals the subscription from me.
@rrl97865 ай бұрын
1:31 "Huh, that really looks like Seattle." 1:43 "Oh."
@LabiaLicker5 ай бұрын
Is that a needle?!
@michaelscarn41335 ай бұрын
One of the best explanations about vector processing, I’ve been looking for a simpler explanation like this since I’m a newbie
@shervin_emperor5 ай бұрын
rather detailed but still concise way of explaining thing!👏
@milktoastgregg5 ай бұрын
First time here. I think KZbin brought me here bc I just finished up the show "Devs" and have been watching videos on quantum computers. Vector processing seems like another example of how the future of computing isn't here for consumer electronics (yet) but possibly better suited to help in the large calculations needed to help expand knowledge of physics, nature, etc. Seems like vector processing might be a really good match for interacting/interfacing with quantum computers. Also also, I had a micro controllers professor that said programming in C is like driving and automatic, while programming in assembly is like driving a stick shift. Might not be the best analogy, but your statement at the end made me think of that. Compilers don't always know best, especially since the instruction set is so new.
@SirusStarTV5 ай бұрын
Intel cpus had vector instructions since a long time. Developers just need to know how to use them or compilers should optimize code that uses those instructions instead of what programmer wrote, recent c# compiler dose that.
@ArchetypalCat5 ай бұрын
Please don't take this first statement the wrong way : I chuckled for a moment hearing your "little girl-like" voice. As the outward expression of a highly intelligent and creative person, it is such a joy for an old, retired coder to hear and witness someone present things in a few minutes that many of us took years to understand. You have a long and very fruitful career ahead of you! Best wishes and looking forward to seeing your next presentation.
@real.ilya_remov4 ай бұрын
Finally a channel I can watch to get a better understanding of underlying technology as a pastime, not as a chore
@AnHourOfWolves5 ай бұрын
RISC is good. -Dade Murphy
@hackerthumb15515 ай бұрын
Very nice serial experiment Laurie :D the code is similar to assembly, the structure of how the risc-v processor processes reminds me of gpu compute "hlsl\cg". the scalability could potentially be awesome. I'm looking forward to the future of open processing. Excellent content, thank you :)
@Neutral40965 ай бұрын
i love how sound like cute vtuber, not like tech ytber
@AnthonyElsom5 ай бұрын
Thanks to THIS delivery, I'm now totally interested and invested in RISC-V, this is exactly what I want if I go SBC wise.. I love to fiddle with hardware and software since I had my Sinclair ZX Spectrum ( Yes, I'm that old!) and was following along through the SBC scene in search of that special something. Thank you for clarifying RISC-V Vector Specification to me. Disassembler-Editors and Machine code Compilers,your daddy is back.. 🙂
@Dee-Ell5 ай бұрын
“Completely open and free to use.” The US gov is considering changing that.
@SomeoneOnlyWeKnow.3 ай бұрын
Really? I mean, I don't doubt they would want to do that, I'm just curious about the details.
@Dee-Ell3 ай бұрын
@@SomeoneOnlyWeKnow. Because China has been working with the tech. US doesn't like that.
@guitarcat015 ай бұрын
just wow. the recording, audio, editing, literally everything in this video is top notch!
@Olfan5 ай бұрын
Back in Uni - well before the new millennium - we had this concept of singly, doubly and triply hot women: physically appealing, mentally capable and/or a friendly/helpful heart. Of this set of {pretty, clever, nice} most women have up to two traits - pretty+clever has no need to be nice, pretty+nice is rarely clever, nice+clever is rarely pretty. Having all three of these traits was considered very rare, especially among students of machine-assisted maths (which was renamed computer science later). Having all three traits AND being a fellow nerd was so rare that even just briefly meeting such a quadruply hot woman was worth remembering for life, a cherished memory on the same level as, say, having talked to Brian Kernighan in person. I know this isn't in person and therefore only counts half at best, yet still I am so grateful to have found this channel. Can't wait to watch everything released so far and everything yet to come.
@Sekhmmett2 ай бұрын
High-quality video with exceptional clarity and visual fidelity.
@michaelevan91845 ай бұрын
Just took a graduate course in advanced computer architecture.... this vid is spot on! nice work. This would be a cool little board for CS majors to experiment with to get a grasp on RISC-V
@Oliver-kv2mm5 ай бұрын
Whats the vector Victor?
@lawconic3 ай бұрын
Surely you know, Shirley.
@ShawnTheDriver5 ай бұрын
I love the fact that the whole style of the videos have changed, BUT still keeps in line with what we know from you with the Laurie Wired windows in the corner and all of that. A mix of old and new 🔥
@e00d205 ай бұрын
Thanks for keeping it post, Laurie
@Vercingetorix0619835 ай бұрын
It's amazing the quality of your videos for every new one. Congratulations. We love you Laurie ❤️😊
@omercakmak30995 ай бұрын
she's a unicorn
@sleaf65 ай бұрын
I’ve never seen someone so succinctly drop a SIMD explainer in my life. Subbed, the production quality and information density alone makes this a winner
@DamianAI95 ай бұрын
I swear at the beginning I thought a Kid was speaking XD
@long-d4k5 ай бұрын
Amazing video! Your skillset is incredible. From programming, filming, editing to presenting. I just found this channel through a short and I immidiately subscribed. Love the aesthetics.
@GuillermoQuinteros_5 ай бұрын
I love your content ❤
@Locriana5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video and for your work in general! This video is amazingly edited and you make this topic interesting and easy to understand. And ofc I'm glad that you encourage people to learn low-level computer programming
@twenty-fifth4205 ай бұрын
Me: "Why is this so niche?" Laurie: "You could say this ISA is...risk-vy" Me: "....." Laurie: 😜
@VicunaX5 ай бұрын
I like the transitions done to visualize the devise and drill down to the scheme.. Top notch!
@rshzs35884 ай бұрын
The voice is too cute.
@GameDawgs5 ай бұрын
Simply amazing video. Easy to follow to me, a regular PEBKAC. Engaging and well produced without getting in the way of the content. Thanks
@KellyWu045 ай бұрын
RISC-V propaganda! x86-64 will not be defeated- *Draws 200 W and melts itself*
@christianmajeres97723 ай бұрын
wow, really enjoyed this video, nicely paced, fun and no fluff! also had to smirk at all the Lain references, great taste!
@WilliamRaezer5 ай бұрын
How long have you been in the industry? I get the sense that the only way you could be detached enough from your work to humanize your content would be if you had at least 15 years of experience.
@korewatori5 ай бұрын
The editing on this is insane. Semi long time viewer of the channel, looks like I'll be watching this tonight. Great work Laurie :)
@drkastenbrot5 ай бұрын
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@manhattansnob14834 ай бұрын
Thanks, first thing that helped me understand why I might care about RISC-V