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Comments by "" (@GoatZilla) on "LaurieWired" channel.
Because you can't fit 32 bits of immediate into an instruction that itself is 32 bits long. You'd have no space for the actual instruction encoding. The interesting thing is the split at 20 bits, which means if your data section is 4k aligned/sized then really you only need to load the upper bits once and then only need to load the lower whenever you change locations.
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raw doggin dat code
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Interesting they split the load immediate into 20 and 12. Someone was thinking about paging...
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hypothesis: people who get into "cybersecurity" do so because they are in fact bad at programming. Like your b-tier and below "cybersecurity" guy defaulted to security because they couldn't handle being an actual developer.
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@epicotakugamer4930 b-tier and below
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@epicotakugamer4930 No, I made a "couldn't" argument, and you substituted a "wouldn't" argument. Being bad at something and not wanting to do something are two different things. System-wise, yeah if you want to be b-tier and below, you'll still find a place in the cybersecurity ecosystem. No problem. But personally, why would you aim to cap your own skill level at b-tier and below? Because "i dun wan 2 sit around coding all dayz"? Developers sit through security training all the time. I've never once heard one balk at it and go, "pfft, I don't want to sit around doing cybersecurity all day". Not during code reviews, not during scan tool training... never.
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@epicotakugamer4930 Wat? Were you trying to answer the quoted question, or were you trying to not answer the quoted question?
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@epicotakugamer4930 So you think that people cap their own skill level because ... they think that increases their job security? How long have you worked in cybersecurity?
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@epicotakugamer4930 Then what was the point of all that job security gibberish? There's a difference in being "required" to code and it being ... "not required". If you have a large pile of proprietary logs that you need to sort through and analyze and there's no existing tool for it, you can either sort through all the data manually, or you can write a code to do it. If you can't code, welcome to the b-tier and lower. How long have you worked in cybersecurity?
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@epicotakugamer4930 No, seriously. You've been on here since 2013 so you should be old enough to know better. How long have you worked in cybersecurity?
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@epicotakugamer4930 what's that? sorry I don't hear so well you'll have to speak up. how long have you worked in cybersecurity? would you consider yourself a-tier?
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fun project. defo having some flashbacks...
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