Is there anyone on the compiler team that also plays a role in llvm development and optimizations? Or is there anyone on the llvm core team that cares about optimizations that would directly benefit Swift? If there's no one available that either can or is willing to optimize llvm, this feels like a worst case scenario. I'm curious what steps need to be taken to see actual compiler performance gains as it relates to llvm.
Unfortunately, I can't get a single paper to load on https://github.com/papers-we-love/papers-we-love, at least on my laptop. I guess PDF.js is limited to smaller PDF files or it just requires more GBs of RAM to support all file sizes.
+1. I live in an extremely rural community where you can afford to buy a 3 bedroom home for under $100k. If you can put 20% down on a 15 year loan and pay it off in 12 years, then yes, buying is much better than renting. If you're 25 years old, from the age of 37 to retirement you've just earned almost 30 years of free living (with the exception of taxes, utilities, etc.).
At the expense of permanantly undermining your earning power and raising other living expenses by committing to live in an extremely rural community. There's a reason those houses are so cheap.
This repo appears to be outdated. I forked it and submitted an extension to the Chrome store so you can use it with the latest version. https://github.com/marksands/dotcss