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“No Bugs” Bunny

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“No Bugs” Bunny
Sarcastic Architect

Hobbies: Thinking Aloud, Arguing with Managers, Annoying HRs, Calling a Spade a Spade, Keeping Tongue in Cheek

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Once upon a time, in a rabbit outsourcing warren of Bunnylore, there was a young software developer bunny. And as a developer, she has had one very unusual treat: she was obsessed with eliminating all the bugs she can get his forelegs on. So, it is not surprising that her friends called her a “No Bugs” Bunny (or simply “NoBugs”).

Later on, she grew up, so she decided that “Bunny” in her name has became inappropriate (not to mention potential arguments with Warner Brothers), so she has asked all her friends to call her “No Bugs” Bunny. She has made a career as a team lead and software architect, and they lived happily ever after.

Optimizing Big Number Arithmetic Without SSE

March 1, 2014 by “No Bugs” Bunny

Juggling ASM operators

Abstract:

How to optimize big number maths without SSE

Quote:

OpenSSL prefers to use assembler for big number calculations

Filed under: On.ProgrammingTips and TricksOptimizations

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On the Other Side of the Barricade: Job Interviewer Do’s and Don’ts

January 1, 2014 by “No Bugs” Bunny

Job Interview

Abstract:

How to conduct job interview - for newbie and not-so-newbie team leads

Quote:

Trying asserting that you’re better than the candidate you’re interviewing, is a Very Bad Thing™ for several reasons

Filed under: On.DevelopmentIT Careers & IT Hiring

Tagged With: ManagerOverload
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YAGNI-C as a Practical Application of YAGNI

November 1, 2013 by “No Bugs” Bunny

You Aren't Gonna Need It!

Abstract:

YAGNI-C is a clarified version of YAGNI, which has been successfully applied in practice.

Quote:

Thinking ahead is good, implementing ahead is bad

Filed under: On.DevelopmentDevelopment Processes

Tagged With: AgileOverload
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Hard Upper Limit on Memory Latency

September 1, 2013 by “No Bugs” Bunny

Low Latencies between Planets??

Abstract:

Speed of light imposes hard limits on possible latencies of high-volume RAM

Quote:

Even if each bit is implemented by single atom of silicon, 2^90-byte RAM is the largest RAM which can possibly have latencies comparable to modern DDR3 SDRAM.

Filed under: On.System ArchitectureRequirement analysisOn.ProgrammingOptimizations

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