00:00:10 GregorR: I have another brilliant shirt idea 00:00:20 although I don't think you could order it through cafepress 00:00:23 http://www.nonlogic.org/dump/images/1210978678-nmw.png 00:01:15 RodgerTheGreat: A shirt about menswear? 00:01:18 That'd be awesomely meta. 00:01:27 RodgerTheGreat: I am going to put that exact picture on a shirt. 00:01:40 I was thinking more the shirt depicted in the image, but if you want a T-shirt, go for it dude 00:01:54 I could take some time to redraw the saying so it's easier to read 00:02:00 I want something like that on a tie. 00:02:07 I want an infinitely recursing tshirt. 00:02:09 To go with the shirt, of course. 00:02:12 A tshirt of a tshirt of a .. 00:02:13 "Fuck you. Yes, you reading this shirt. You." 00:30:52 ehird: I think the better metashirt would be if the shirt in the shirt was the shirt *brain explodes* 00:31:22 GregorR: that wsa what i meant 00:32:04 RodgerTheGreat: OK only-person-here-who-can-draw, draw our recursowear! :P 00:33:02 I dunno, I don't think drawing it would make it much more entertaining 00:33:03 (But it's only amusing metawear if it's actually /advertising/ itself :P ) 00:38:00 xv,mn.nm,/\zvnafs 'qw r ASXDAW A 00:38:12 QA'PLAH! 00:38:15 anyway, 00:38:25 GregorR: model a thinkgeek page 00:38:37 'This hilarious shirt models a store page for itself! $9.99' 00:41:01 -!- timotiis_ has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 00:50:17 -!- Iskr has quit ("Leaving"). 00:50:55 e.g. comex's point score as of this point in my determination is 0 + 42 + (10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi - g_(10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi))%10 00:50:59 sgeo is a god among men 00:51:13 What if I made a mistake? 00:51:18 Sgeo: i have no idea 00:51:21 you're still a god 00:52:08 It's called copy+paste 00:54:51 oerjan 00:54:51 (10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi - g_(10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi) - (10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi - g_(10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi))%10 - (10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871 00:54:51 041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi - g_(10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi) - (10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi - g_(10+1+4+5 + 1,000,000 + xkcd +1 - 9543331207720871041898 - 1000000000000000000th-digit-of-pi))%10)%100)%1000 00:55:52 Mine's going to include all that, you know 01:24:10 -!- bsmntbombdood has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 01:29:07 -!- olsner has joined. 01:30:38 Bye for today :-) 01:31:02 -!- ehird has quit (Remote closed the connection). 01:34:35 darn, just missed him 01:35:21 not that I had anything to say to ehird, but still, I missed him by about as much time it took for me between starting xchat and actually looking 01:35:26 you need to aim better 01:35:36 Wee, rule 38 repealed 01:35:52 oerjan: I shall pour fermented milk over you 01:35:58 * Sgeo hopes he missed no rule changes 01:36:29 * oerjan unfolds his umbrella 01:37:04 I did not say over "your umbrella", I said over *you* :P 01:37:36 * oerjan keeps his umbrella between him and olsner 01:38:00 * olsner devours oerjan's umbrella 01:38:04 eek 01:38:20 beware the spikes 01:38:24 * olsner 'll eat almost anything 01:39:08 bah! not much more trouble than eating a fish; remove vertebrae before eating 01:41:43 Kefir mjølk? Kefir ikkje kaffi? 01:42:12 -!- RodgerTheGreat has quit. 01:42:33 -!- RodgerTheGreat has joined. 01:42:37 jeg trenger icke kefir, jeg trenger svensk filmjölk. 01:43:35 not that that actually corresponds to what I mean, since I have a half litre of filmjölk left anyway 01:44:01 but I kind of like the norwegian word "trenger" 01:44:26 btw så verkar svenskar vara sämst på att förstå andra sorters skandinaviska 01:45:07 har en norrman på jobbet, han måste nästan prata engelska för att en jävel ska förstå hans norska, men när vi pratar svenska fattar han allt 01:45:16 01:48:25 go ahead and cut this monologue off at any point 01:48:44 * oerjan thought it was finished already 01:49:00 well, it was, but I was waiting for some kind of response 01:49:13 craving, rather 01:49:52 of course, filmjölk and surströmming are illegal outside sweden anyhow, by treaties against biological weapons 01:51:17 well, when we reinstate the Union, it will be legal in norway as well :P 01:51:37 sheesh, why do you think we separated in the first place? 01:52:03 why of course, to give norway the illusion of independence :P 01:53:05 no, it was to get away from the smell 01:55:23 maybe it was... I live on the east of sweden though; norway doesn't smell as much over here 01:57:06 okokokokokokokokokoko 01:57:10 my bushes make no sense 01:57:12 whatsoever 01:57:23 just came home to eat some noodles 01:57:24 bushes rarely do 01:57:33 yeah, my bushes usually don't make sense either 01:57:35 have to get back afterwards 01:58:06 back to ... the sauna? (I mean, oklo-whatever = finn, right?) 01:58:21 it's quite weird developing 4 languages simultaneouly, ideas are colliding so much i can barely keep my self in balance 01:58:25 i'm finnish 01:58:33 ah that's where the bushes come from 01:58:37 i'm a night watchman or whatever it's called atm 01:58:47 4 am now 01:58:51 as you prolly know 01:59:08 "jour"? if that makes sense to you 01:59:10 also 01:59:27 i realized almost every non deterministic computational model makes a good game with the same rules 01:59:32 hnmm 01:59:38 at least the X rewriting ones 01:59:49 graph, tree and string rewriting make a good game, that is 01:59:52 basically 01:59:56 night watchman = on standby for fixing bugs? watching a garage? fixing servers when they break down? 02:00:14 one player at a time makes up a new rewriting rule, the next player then applies rules until none apply 02:00:22 and the turn switches 02:00:33 the more moves, the more points, infinite loop = loss 02:00:49 easy to make up for the fact you can't always know whether it is an infloop 02:01:08 some additional rules for stuff like that, but basically it's a great game just like that 02:01:15 also, another game i invented a few hours ago 02:01:22 you take a board, 2d, prime*prime 02:01:38 each turn you take two pieces, and rotate one 90 degrees aroudn the other 02:01:47 if there's a piece there, you eat it, and get it in your pile 02:01:50 also there's a bank 02:01:56 containing an infinite amount of pieces 02:02:14 you take one piece from the bank, turn the *other* way, 90 degrees, and put a piece there 02:02:25 unless there's already a piece, in which case you take that to your pile 02:02:31 if you eat something, you get a new turn 02:02:43 a bit confusing an explanation, but it's great in every variation 02:02:52 i'm a fucking genius, was my point 02:03:05 you should hear my ideas about ef for my journey back here... 02:03:10 but i don't have time 02:03:12 now noodles 02:03:19 continue whatever you were doing, i'll go -> 02:04:10 oklofok wins at monologues 02:04:16 -!- Quendus has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 02:04:37 i also win at the rewriting games 02:04:43 but i fail at stepmania 02:04:55 failing at stepmania? it's just a matter of exercise! 02:05:05 which is quite weird considering i'm a pianist, and a guitarrist 02:05:22 reduce life, increase stepmania => win at stepmania 02:05:41 (also, leg coordination is quite different from hand/arm coordination) 02:06:32 -!- Judofyr has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 02:07:05 -!- Judofyr has joined. 02:07:15 heh, called a guy who's at the job with me, was quite lucky it was the correct number :P 02:07:31 i just do stepmania on keyboard 02:15:10 god these noodles are hot. 02:15:30 -!- olsner has quit ("Leaving"). 02:16:45 Pixplz 02:19:22 nowai, these kefenders are mine and mine only 02:25:35 but seriously, the hotness is kinda hurting me 02:26:09 Ask them out. 02:27:53 umm, why would i ask them out when i'm eating them? 02:27:58 *i'm already 02:29:12 Hot. 03:00:07 -!- bsmntbombdood has joined. 03:04:47 -!- oerjan has quit ("Good night"). 03:10:18 -!- Slereah_ has joined. 03:10:19 -!- Slereah- has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 03:15:01 http://pastebin.ca/1020713 03:50:08 -!- Corun has quit ("This computer has gone to sleep"). 04:25:30 -!- augur has joined. 04:26:28 y hulo tharr 04:26:30 O_O 04:26:38 GregorR -- gregor richardson? 04:27:28 Richard. 04:28:04 ok. nevermind then. 04:28:15 i know a gregor richardson and i was gonna be all like 04:28:17 ZOMG IS IT YOU 04:31:02 so peoples 04:31:13 i hear you like the esolangs 04:32:02 the channel name would imply that 04:32:22 now i hear you have no humor detector :P 04:32:45 do you ever try to figure out esolangs from their behavior? 04:32:57 Hell, there's been people thinking this was a magic chan. 04:33:03 augur : There is one! 04:33:28 like.. given some source code and program output, or something, try to figure out what each piece does? 04:33:34 http://esolangs.org/wiki/Burn 04:33:41 sort of reverse engineering the language? 04:34:02 thats funny ol 04:34:03 If you can find out, try it! 04:34:03 lol 04:34:39 ok so i presume that yes, esolangers like to go backwards as well, yes? 04:35:07 Not really. 04:35:11 fine. :P 04:35:15 It's the only one I can think of. 04:35:25 And so far, no results. 04:39:05 ok so slereah told me you peoples like the pattern matching 04:42:46 Well, they know more than me on the topic. 04:42:52 That is, more than nothing. 04:46:27 does anyone know how a pattern distinguishes variables from names? e.g. a haskell pattern like fac n = ..., the n is a variable, but fac isn't, and so "5 6" isnt matched to fac=5, n=6 04:46:35 does anyone know how such things are distinguished, if at all? 04:48:41 Ask in #haskell ? 04:48:54 well, im not asking specifically regarding haskell, but in a general sense 04:49:05 i just use haskell as an example 04:50:07 well, 5 isn't fac 04:50:40 fac 5 would match, well, in Haskell only if fac is a constructor, which it isn't 04:51:02 no i mean... 05:02:24 -!- cherez has joined. 05:05:26 -!- cherez has quit (Client Quit). 05:14:55 -!- cherez has joined. 05:21:39 -!- Judofyr has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 05:47:58 -!- GreaseMonkey has joined. 05:56:42 -!- Slereah- has joined. 05:57:15 -!- Slereah_ has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 05:58:57 -!- augur has left (?). 06:06:15 poor augur left 7 minutes before a perfect explanation 06:06:34 PERHAPS I SHALL TELL THE REST OF YOU ABOUT THE WONDER THAT IS OKENITY 06:06:40 or not 06:06:43 perhaps i shall do a sleep. 06:09:40 -!- augur has joined. 06:09:49 what'd i mis what'd i miss 06:09:54 ::checks logs:: 06:10:50 coool 06:11:03 about that pmatching 06:11:42 well i discovered that in haskell the distinction between bindable and unbindable symbols is such that all non-first symbols in a pattern are bindable. 06:12:10 usually, when you have something like "fac n" as a pattern, the trick is parsing it as if it was normal code, haskell is applicative so we get (call (operator fac) (operand n)) 06:12:36 yeah, the reason is, in some level, that the first one is kinda the operator. 06:12:54 hmm 06:12:58 you see 06:13:14 the first one isn't always the one that's non-bindable 06:13:24 because the operator can be something other than the first one 06:13:45 sure 06:13:50 "a `opr` b" is the haskell way to do infix when you have an alphabetic operator 06:13:57 yeah 06:14:11 so you can do "n `func` m = ..." 06:14:20 and func is the operator, so it's not binded 06:14:25 right 06:14:30 but is as if it was an atom there 06:14:36 *is used as 06:14:43 but again theres a distinction between bindable and non-bindable 06:14:51 instead of position here its `..` 06:15:43 the idea is, we get a (operator operand operand ...) AST, and the operator is not binded 06:16:01 why the operator is binded is just convenience. 06:16:29 you can think of all this as rewrite rules, you pattern match your program on the functions 06:16:47 functions consist of a left-side, which is a pattern, and a right side, which is the substitution 06:16:50 yeah. 06:17:18 but, i guess you already understood it, it's just hard to stop explaining. 06:17:24 i just wasnt sure if there were ways that were used to distinguish between bindable and unbindable symbols, or whatnot 06:17:42 because i'm really bad at it, and constantly try to make at least *some* sense :) 06:17:46 ah 06:18:04 :p 06:18:26 well everything can be done in so many different ways 06:19:09 some languages have pattern matching as a first-class citizen, and you *don't* have that kind of named functions at all 06:19:24 oh? tell me more 06:19:25 for instance oklotalk, which i have to mention to anyone who seems new here. 06:19:41 {} creates a lambda 06:19:49 and inside the lambda, you can do explicit pattern matching 06:19:59 example? 06:20:14 {[A B] -> A+B; N -> N+1} 06:20:30 this is a function, that explicitly matches whatever it gets as args on [A B] 06:20:36 matching 2-element lists 06:20:50 if it succeeds, the elements are summed and returned 06:20:57 if it fails, the next case is tried 06:21:11 N is binded to whatever the argument is, one is added, and it is returned 06:21:16 now to call this func... 06:21:18 you would just do 06:21:31 Func = {[A B] -> A+B; N -> N+1}; 06:21:51 as you can see there's nothing like haskell's not-binding-function-names rule 06:22:41 so how would you apply this?? 06:22:51 well, tbh this is a bit different, because haskell kinda matches on stuff on the runtime "tree" representing program state, and this one just does it to the arg. 06:23:08 i'm using very iffy concepts, so don't feel bad if that makes no sense :D 06:23:14 :p 06:23:14 func 5 06:23:17 func [4 6] 06:23:30 that seems rather like haskell, to be honestly 06:23:31 "func" makes it a "funcoken", meaning it's an operator 06:23:36 func n = n + 1 06:23:41 func [a b] = a+b 06:24:13 well, that will not work in haskell because of types, it's not haskell syntax, and it's only syntactically similar 06:24:24 but yes, pattern matching on lists is usually similar in languages 06:24:35 i see what you mean 06:24:51 if patterns are first class items 06:24:56 how do you define just patterns? 06:25:01 like, the pattern N 06:25:04 rather than referring to N? 06:25:22 there's a specific list type 06:25:27 and there's all kinds of quoting 06:25:41 ah, so sort of like lisp 'n and '(a b) 06:25:49 kinda 06:25:58 but lisp is very clean when it comes to names 06:26:13 so you cannot in general pass patterns around like that 06:26:31 (well there's no pattern matching anyway really in lisp) 06:26:47 you can implement it easily enough :p 06:27:05 well, you can build a pattern matching language on top of lisp easily enough 06:27:08 sure 06:27:23 i'm not bashing lisp, that was just a side note 06:28:08 in ef, i have very extensive pattern matching capabilities 06:28:28 existential quantification an the likes 06:29:12 you can pattern match on a certain slice of a list 06:29:18 or a sublist within it 06:29:40 existential quantification? do tell 06:29:41 (wtf am i doing? trying to find different pattern matching kinds for you, and advertising my languages) 06:29:48 alright 06:30:12 _ is the implicit parameter variable in Ef, as in oklotalk and perl 06:30:16 *as it is in 06:30:21 so you can do stuff like 06:31:01 {(x:_; y:_; ?xy) -> x,y=y,x} 06:31:12 this is a function that sorts a list 06:31:29 -> is the pattern matching here 06:31:42 the right side says what to do if the left side matches 06:32:16 left side takes x and y, two elements of _, and tests if x is smaller than y in index, but greater than it in value 06:32:38 Ef is a fixed-point language, so this is done infinite times 06:32:47 meaning it ends up sorted 06:32:51 ok 06:33:12 it's a pattern match in that it "matches" on certain kinds of lists 06:33:52 but, usually pattern match specifies a "body" the represents a certain shape object 06:33:59 using random nouns there 06:34:48 but, i mean, you usually match on a sort of regex, except limited, something that specifies a family of objects, just like a regexp specifies a family of strings -> 06:34:53 *-"->" 06:35:24 like [A B] represents objects that are formed from two elements 06:36:03 variables are "bound" simply because that's a very easy and explicit way to represent structure 06:36:04 ok 06:36:14 well 06:36:38 and because "binding" lets you refer to parts of the object you matched on, when on the right-side 06:37:02 but you don't need variables at all for pattern matching 06:37:44 you can, for instance, do what string rewriting does, and always have an explicit pattern on the left side 06:38:00 (see thue) 06:39:29 http://www.vjn.fi/oklopol/thue.txt pattern matching without variables, as you can see i have to explicitly list a lot of cartesian products of the symbols i'm using, but it's a *possibility* 06:40:12 i guess my two points are you should keep a very open mind about pattern matching, because it's an awesome and a very general construct, and that i'm feeling very self-advertising today 06:40:38 must be this nick 06:40:40 -!- oklofok has changed nick to oklopol. 06:40:49 :p 06:41:48 i should go to sleep soon, haven't slept in ages 06:42:44 -!- GreaseMonkey has quit ("Unisex."). 06:43:47 ...oh i almost forgot to mention graphica 06:47:38 -!- spal has joined. 06:48:11 hi, I have written my brainfuck compiler and interpreter. is there someone who would be interested in doing a code review and tell me if I am wrong anywhere? 06:48:37 also, are there any standard test cases which I can run on my compiler and interpreter to check whether they work correctly? 06:48:49 oklopol: do you know of any de-obfuscation contests? 06:48:53 for the time being, I have written my own test cases with multiple nested loops, etc. 06:48:56 or esolang interpretation contests? 06:50:30 spal: If you could ask again in about 8-10 hours, I'll be able to help. 06:50:36 I'm going to sleep right about. . . Now. 06:50:45 pikhq: thanks. I'll do that. 06:50:59 spal: there's the unofficial lost kingdom http://jonripley.com/i-fiction/games/LostKingdomBF.html 06:51:15 There's plenty of BF programs lying around. 06:51:15 augur: i haven't heard of such a thing. 06:51:20 umm 06:51:25 *unofficial test case 06:51:26 well then 06:51:27 I know someone wrote stuff about compatibility and test cases 06:51:29 we should start one :) 06:51:38 doesn't sound at all bad 06:51:46 hmm 06:52:04 spal, http://www.hevanet.com/cristofd/brainfuck/tests.b 06:52:08 i'm going to follow pikhq's lead now, so see ya 06:52:09 -> 06:52:22 see ya. 06:52:22 oklopol: Sgeo: thanks 06:52:46 yw 06:53:07 np 07:09:21 -!- olsner has joined. 07:41:35 -!- spal has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 07:59:59 -!- clog has quit (ended). 08:00:00 -!- clog has joined. 08:00:49 -!- augur has left (?). 08:10:38 -!- Slereah_ has joined. 08:12:54 -!- immibis has joined. 08:13:24 -!- immibis has left (?). 08:27:44 -!- Slereah- has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 10:49:00 -!- Sgeo has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 10:58:59 -!- timotiis has joined. 11:01:07 I wonder who Gregor Richardson is :P 12:25:30 -!- Tritonio has joined. 12:33:36 -!- Corun has joined. 13:57:11 -!- timotiis has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 14:16:05 -!- oklopol has quit (Read error: 113 (No route to host)). 14:21:27 -!- ehird has joined. 14:39:07 -!- oklopol has joined. 14:45:54 -!- cherez has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 14:52:19 -!- timotiis has joined. 15:50:26 -!- Slereah- has joined. 15:50:26 -!- Slereah_ has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 15:56:17 -!- oklopol has quit (No route to host). 15:59:10 -!- Slereah_ has joined. 16:00:26 -!- Slereah- has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 16:07:20 -!- Tritonio has quit (Read error: 113 (No route to host)). 16:26:11 -!- SimonRC has quit (Remote closed the connection). 16:26:19 -!- SimonRC has joined. 16:59:17 -!- Sgeo has joined. 17:01:57 * pikhq waketh 17:08:36 pikhq: Canada :3 17:09:13 Canada eh? 17:09:22 Yeah. 17:09:27 #ircnomic's nomic is called Canada. 17:21:00 That may introduce some difficulties for diplomatic relationships between Canada Nomic and the Federation of Canada. 17:21:29 pikhq: Eh. 17:21:39 pikhq: Also, oerjan played Canada. You have no choice but to join #ircnomic! 17:22:47 ehird, say the channel name correctly? 17:22:53 #ircnomic 17:23:04 -!- ehird has changed nick to ehird_. 17:23:13 -!- ehird_ has changed nick to ehird. 17:24:07 That was the sound of ehird cheating 17:24:20 hehhehe 17:59:08 -!- helios24 has joined. 18:24:29 -!- Slereah- has joined. 18:24:30 -!- Slereah_ has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 18:36:44 -!- Slereah_ has joined. 18:36:44 -!- Slereah- has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 18:43:54 -!- Slereah- has joined. 18:44:26 -!- Slereah_ has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 18:59:14 -!- Tritonio has joined. 19:13:45 -!- Judofyr has joined. 19:54:27 Slereah-: " Richard." it's "Richards" by the way ... with an 's' 19:55:35 ... with an 's' 19:55:36 ... with an 's' 19:55:37 ... with an 's' 19:56:40 Not an "s"? 19:56:42 sorry 19:57:44 My name is spelled Richard's'. The apostrophes represent glottal stops. 20:04:11 -!- calamari has joined. 20:23:01 Might I recommend adding in a geminative consonant to be even more cruel to people? 20:23:32 (how many languages do both geminates and glottal stops, anyways?) 20:24:24 So, your name would be something like "Rixtuchard's'". 20:24:40 That is fiendishly hard to pronounce. 20:25:04 ooh, how about a geminate glottal stop :P 20:25:13 xtu'? 20:26:10 hmm, that combination of characters conveys no semantic meaning to me :P 20:26:29 I don't even know what I'm talking about anyways 20:27:35 xtu is the geminate in Japanese. 20:42:38 -!- Sgeo has quit ("Ex-Chat"). 20:51:13 oh, xtu = ã£? 20:51:15 -!- RedDak has joined. 20:55:05 -!- oklopol has joined. 20:59:51 okokokokokokokoko 21:00:01 GregorR: gregor richardson is most likely your son. 21:03:19 olsner: Small tsu. 21:03:37 and how does that become xtu 21:03:46 yeah, small tsu's what I wrote :P 21:05:45 olsner: My Unicode terminal hattes Japanese, sadly. 21:06:00 Deewiant: That's just how you type it into an IME. 21:06:02 yeah, unicode is often troublesome on IRC 21:06:52 woah! I didn't know there was a combination for that (always just type something with tte and cut-and-paste :P) 21:07:19 brb 30mins 21:08:14 You can type x before any kana to make it small, IIRC. 21:10:49 -!- SimonRC has quit (Read error: 113 (No route to host)). 21:18:19 -!- helios24 has quit ("Leaving"). 21:28:43 -!- Sgeo has joined. 21:39:38 -!- calamari has quit ("Leaving"). 21:46:23 -!- oklofok has joined. 21:47:11 -!- oklopol has quit (Read error: 113 (No route to host)). 22:18:35 -!- ais523 has joined. 22:22:19 -!- ais523 has changed nick to ais523|busy. 22:36:28 -!- oerjan has joined. 22:45:53 Bacq. 22:47:23 -!- cherez has joined. 22:52:11 -!- oklofok has quit (Read error: 113 (No route to host)). 23:33:20 Bach? 23:34:13 his French cousin, i assume 23:36:17 Bachq. 23:39:14 Bachqx'k? 23:41:46 lament: ouch 23:41:50 lament: that must be painful to say 23:42:18 that's the far-away cousin from r'lyeh 23:42:44 I'll be Bachqx'k, when the stars are right 23:51:33 ais523|busy: Sgeo oerjan Forceful conversation move. 23:52:11 On how oraclebot.com sucks? 23:52:54 um me too? i thought i _was_ speaking in the right - um, well, better than #ircnomic anyhow 23:53:05 -!- RedDak has quit (Remote closed the connection).