What's your username? I am very interested in seeing your CUDA
solutions if you submit them.
On Sun, Aug 30, 2009 at 11:22 AM, krzychkrzychoo...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks! That's all I wanted to know. I was joking about usage of CUDA
in brute force solutions (if I couldn't come up with better
My username is krzychoo. But don't expect very much, for many GCJ
problems it's hard to come up with solutions more interesting than
solving each case in it's own thread.
On Aug 30, 2:03 pm, Luke Pebody luke.peb...@gmail.com wrote:
What's your username? I am very interested in seeing your CUDA
Hi,
There is no use in running CUDA on emulator mode. It would be v v slow.
If the server supports real time CUDA, then only it would be of any use.
Cheers!
Prakhar Jain
On Sat, Aug 29, 2009 at 6:36 PM, Himanshu Sachdeva sachdev...@gmail.comwrote:
whats so special about cuda? i saw a thread
What does one need in order to run CUDA in non-very-very-slow mode? A
modern NVIDIA graphics card?
On Aug 29, 2009 6:47 AM, Prakhar Jain prakh...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
There is no use in running CUDA on emulator mode. It would be v v slow.
If the server supports real time CUDA, then only it
Actually I can't imagine for what GCJ's problem you need CUDA.
All tasks can be solved even by 80's ZX-spectrum.
Turn on your mind, CPU power won't help you.
Bartholomew Furrow wrote:
What does one need in order to run CUDA in non-very-very-slow mode? A
modern NVIDIA graphics card?
On Aug
Actually I can't imagine for what GCJ's problem you need CUDA.
All tasks can be solved even by 80's ZX-spectrum.
Turn on your mind, CPU power won't help you.
That's not true, and it's a little unkind. :-) Our problems are designed so
that a pretty big range of modern computers can handle
If you advance to the final round, giving that CUDA is free, our
onsite machines are equipped with NVIDIA Quardo video cards.
On 8/30/09, romanr goo...@romanr.info wrote:
Actually I can't imagine for what GCJ's problem you need CUDA.
All tasks can be solved even by 80's ZX-spectrum.
Turn on