00:03:51 -!- Jafet has joined. 00:37:39 -!- ssue has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 00:37:54 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: Good night). 00:39:02 "In all honesty and speaking as someone who used C++ professionally for years -- C++ has passed the point of usefulness. I have heard people say that Ada was a language designed by a committee to prove that not all programming languages can be implemented, it is overly complex and difficult to understand, yet it is a model of simplicity and elegance compared to C++, which in its latest incarnation also demonstrates the pristine and readable 00:39:02 qualities of APL. Frankly, C++ should have its head cut off and its head and body buried at a crossroad with garlic in its mouth and a stake though its heart. That probably won't kill it, but it should slow it down somewhat. Nowadays I would never start a project in C++ that I ever thought I'd need to finish. I'd rather do it in something simpler and more portable. Like assembler." 00:41:38 wow what an original opinion 00:42:28 I mean it's not a bad screed, but why did you paste it? 00:42:38 * Sgeo_ thought it was amusing 00:59:48 -!- pikhq_ has joined. 01:00:04 -!- pikhq has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 01:05:26 -!- copumpkin has quit. 01:06:07 -!- copumpkin has joined. 01:34:18 -!- kubra09 has joined. 01:34:35 -!- kubra09 has quit (Client Quit). 01:58:23 -!- ssue has joined. 02:04:41 -!- zzo38 has joined. 02:09:25 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 02:16:10 What languages have Smalltalk-like IDEs? 02:16:17 Smalltalk and Tcl at least 02:16:28 Although the Tcl ones probably aren't well-maintained 02:22:57 I don't know 02:46:48 Tcl does. 02:47:17 And Smalltalk itself, by definition has a Smalltalk-like IDE 02:54:30 What does BIG talk have? 02:55:42 `pastelogs big 02:55:49 http://codu.org/projects/hackbot/fshg/index.cgi/raw-file/tip/paste/paste.31651 02:56:18 X is much bigger then Y -- this really says so much with so few words 02:57:49 ok can do better 02:57:58 `pastelogs big.*big 02:58:31 No output. 02:58:34 `pastelogs big.*big 02:58:59 http://codu.org/projects/hackbot/fshg/index.cgi/raw-file/tip/paste/paste.22129 02:59:22 -!- pikhq_ has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 02:59:24 -!- pikhq has joined. 02:59:28 ... not enough 02:59:37 we must give her all she's got 02:59:45 `pastelogs big.*big.*big 02:59:54 http://codu.org/projects/hackbot/fshg/index.cgi/raw-file/tip/paste/paste.9313 03:05:05 -!- monqy has quit (Quit: hello). 03:06:58 `pastelogs bigtalk 03:07:05 http://codu.org/projects/hackbot/fshg/index.cgi/raw-file/tip/paste/paste.27446 03:07:42 it's probably on a drawingboard somewhere 03:12:00 one of those programming language designers who uses drawing boards 03:15:04 -!- Jafet has quit (Quit: Leaving.). 03:24:34 What assembler features did you like to have in assemblers? 03:32:25 "A man standing at a drawing board with Lets Draw written above" http://image1.masterfile.com/em_w/03/47/29/608-03472993fw.jpg 03:34:28 @google "A man standing at a drawing board with Lets Draw written above" 03:34:31 http://www.inmagine.com/izs015/izs015555-photo 03:34:31 Title: A Man Standing At A Drawing Board With Lets Draw Written Above Stock Photos / Pi ... 03:39:40 -!- elliott has joined. 03:39:59 hellio, elliott! 03:40:21 `WELCOME elliott 03:40:27 ​ELLIOTT: WELCOME TO THE INTERNATIONAL HUB FOR ESOTERIC PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE DESIGN AND DEPLOYMENT! FOR MORE INFORMATION, CHECK OUT OUR WIKI: HTTP://ESOLANG 03:42:28 -!- elliott has left. 04:25:24 -!- ogrom has joined. 04:25:47 -!- ogrom has quit (Client Quit). 04:29:51 -!- fgfd9ou has joined. 04:31:05 -!- fgfd9ou has quit (Client Quit). 05:34:06 -!- TodPunk has quit (Quit: This is me, signing off. Probably rebooting or something.). 05:42:30 -!- TodPunk has joined. 05:49:37 -!- augur has joined. 05:51:29 -!- Jafet has joined. 06:12:20 -!- zzo38 has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 07:01:03 -!- asiekierka has joined. 07:45:01 -!- copumpkin has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 07:45:32 -!- copumpkin has joined. 07:46:53 -!- Jafet has quit (Quit: Leaving.). 07:56:23 -!- epicmonkey has joined. 08:00:38 -!- nooga has joined. 08:21:04 -!- nooga has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 08:33:23 -!- ogrom has joined. 09:02:35 -!- Taneb has joined. 09:02:43 Hello! 09:02:54 Hang on 09:02:57 -!- Taneb has quit (Client Quit). 09:03:15 -!- Taneb has joined. 09:03:24 Hello! 09:10:12 -!- ogrom has quit (Quit: begone). 09:11:42 Hang on. 09:25:02 stand by for transmission 09:26:30 -!- epicmonkey has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 09:27:13 -!- nooga has joined. 09:34:24 -!- azaq23 has joined. 09:34:38 -!- azaq23 has quit (Max SendQ exceeded). 09:35:07 -!- azaq23 has joined. 09:35:42 Roger. 09:35:50 Can you repeat that? Over. 09:36:28 delta oscar november golf sierra 09:39:20 Romeo Oscar Golf Echo Romeo 09:43:57 Hotel India 09:44:17 -!- asiekierka has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 09:50:56 foxtrot foxtrot foxtrot foxtrot foxtrot foxtrot foxtrot 10:00:26 -!- ogrom has joined. 10:18:05 uniform uniform uniform uniform uniform uniform uniform uniform 10:19:14 c dot c 10:24:44 -!- juhovh has joined. 10:24:56 -!- juhovh has left. 10:31:09 -!- epicmonkey has joined. 10:32:46 -!- asiekierka_ has joined. 10:44:13 -!- pikhq has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 10:44:27 -!- pikhq has joined. 10:53:45 -!- copumpkin has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 10:53:45 -!- SimonRC has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 10:53:47 -!- Sgeo__ has joined. 10:53:54 -!- augur_ has joined. 10:53:56 -!- Taneb has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 10:53:57 -!- Sgeo_ has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 10:53:57 -!- lambdabot has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 10:54:02 -!- augur has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 10:54:58 -!- copumpkin has joined. 10:54:58 -!- SimonRC has joined. 10:55:02 -!- Taneb has joined. 10:55:13 -!- copumpkin has quit (Changing host). 10:55:13 -!- copumpkin has joined. 11:16:37 -!- mig22 has joined. 11:19:03 -!- monqy has joined. 11:28:32 -!- derdon has joined. 11:31:05 -!- Taneb has quit (Quit: Leaving). 11:31:54 -!- copumpkin has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 11:32:24 -!- copumpkin has joined. 11:40:04 -!- mig22 has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 11:41:35 -!- Taneb has joined. 11:41:41 Hello 11:42:43 -!- mig22 has joined. 11:55:51 -!- ais523 has joined. 11:55:59 -!- MoALTz has joined. 12:00:14 -!- boily has joined. 12:05:42 -!- Taneb has quit (Quit: Leaving). 12:07:26 TclTalk seems fun 12:16:20 Ugh, it uses a non-Tcl-standard way of initializing variables in namespaces 12:16:41 I mean, it makes sense, because [namespace eval] stuff isn't exactly stored anywhere available for introspection, but still 12:17:48 Bluh, the single-dispatchness of Tcl OO systems in general is striking me again 12:20:07 does somebody know the name of this constructed script that was based on 3x3 grid of letters 12:20:42 and the characters were constructed from the cell edges with longer or shorter lines 12:38:52 -!- ogrom has quit (Quit: begone). 12:40:28 -!- ogrom has joined. 12:45:50 -!- ogrom has quit (Quit: Left). 12:46:14 -!- ogrom has joined. 12:46:21 -!- asiekierka has joined. 12:46:21 -!- asiekierka has changed nick to SoftDodger. 12:46:30 -!- SoftDodger has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 12:47:43 -!- ais523 has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 12:48:04 -!- ais523 has joined. 12:50:50 -!- ogrom has quit (Client Quit). 12:52:48 -!- ogrom has joined. 12:54:38 -!- ogrom has quit (Client Quit). 12:54:59 -!- pikhq_ has joined. 12:55:17 -!- pikhq has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds). 12:57:50 -!- ogrom has joined. 13:01:52 -!- Taneb has joined. 13:02:23 google maps has very bad coverage in bosnia & herzegovina 13:02:36 but (probably not by coincidence) openstreetmaps has exceptionally good coverage 13:02:55 Just because I like TclTalk doesn't mean I should start looking at Smalltalk again, does it 13:02:56 ? 13:04:18 -!- ogrom has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds). 13:04:27 make something interesting in whatever language seems appropriate for the job 13:04:34 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 13:05:04 Hello 13:06:48 hi 13:07:49 Sgeo__: if you were me, you would only be contented with an IDE which only exists undesigned in your imagination and find everything else has faults 13:08:40 eventually along this train of thought you would realize that any program would be imperfect 13:09:03 Smalltalk-like IDEs tend to let you change the IDE while it's running 13:09:22 So you could probably make it to your satisfaction 13:09:25 Smalltalk's the really object oriented one, right? 13:09:30 Yeah 13:09:33 (Class-based) 13:09:38 And image-based 13:10:17 Should it be on my list of languages to learn eventually? 13:10:52 EVERYTHING should be on your list of languages to learn eventually. Except PHP. 13:11:37 and algol 68 13:11:49 And COBOL. 13:12:17 What about NetFuck? 13:12:29 Phantom_Hoover, hey, COBOL's fun! 13:12:31 13:12:54 But... it's interesting to see an.... old model for programming 13:13:47 Learn FORTRAN then! 13:14:12 Although I could describe the thing that sticks out the most to me: ALL variables must be declared in one section of the code. COBOL procedures (I forget what they're called) do not accept arguments, instead, they must look at and modify some of the declared variables. 13:14:14 or algol 60 (which doesnt suck how algol 68 does) 13:19:13 COBOL was the language my parents used 13:19:37 Taneb, you should learn Tcl 13:19:56 I thought that was a protocol? 13:20:01 That's TCP 13:20:05 Ah 13:20:26 http://www.tcl.tk/ 13:20:39 Note that opinion in this channel does seem to be divided about it 13:21:05 Is Tcl the one with tk? 13:21:16 Yes 13:24:02 learning about the siege of sarajevo makes me think it might not be such a crazy idea to stockpile years worth of food, medicine, etc. 13:24:50 in the USA there is a general tendency to make fun of people who do this 13:24:57 i bet that tendency does not exist in bosnia anymore 13:29:02 In Bosnia a domestic war was a very likely possibility. 13:29:08 In the US? Not so much. 13:29:12 more likely than the USA, yeah 13:31:33 but how many residents of sarajevo in 1984 -- when the city was hosting the Olympics -- would believe that in 8 years time they'd be under daily attack by artillery and snipers? 13:31:48 i don't really know 13:32:20 You could say the same thing of Germany in 1936. 13:32:29 yeah 13:34:00 How many people in London 1940 would believe that in only 8 years they'd be hosting the olympics? 13:34:11 or beirut in the 60's 13:34:32 Taneb: heh, i like your reversal :) 13:35:05 in early 1940 it was not totally clear that wwii was going to be a big deal 13:35:56 i think these things sneak up on people 13:36:05 I think if you were discussing the crazy survivalist angle with someone you could make a good case for war reaching Germany being possible. 13:36:15 people who are enjoying prosperity for the time being, and who are more concerned with their daily lives than geopolitics 13:38:07 this is an instance of the fat tails phenomenon 13:38:23 people underestimate the probability of unlikely events 13:38:57 Unless they've invested time and resources into preparing for them, in which case they'll overestimate. 13:39:01 sure 13:39:47 Also I think one reason the survivalists get mocked is because many of them don't have a clue what they're doing (just ask quintopia about his gold reserves). 13:39:54 sure 13:39:59 many of them are crazy, for sure 13:41:08 building a fortified NBC-proof bunker in your backyard is probably crazy :) 13:41:18 but stashing away some food and water is not that crazy, or expensive 13:41:25 even if you don't expect to use it 13:41:45 in disaster-prone areas this is a normal thing to do, but with like 1-2 weeks worth 13:42:14 which will not do you much good in a prolonged armed conflict 13:43:25 Phantom_Hoover: i dont have any gold reserves. its still a better idea than bitcoin reserves. 13:43:55 That second sentence might make sense if anyone actually stockpiled bitcoins. 13:44:14 funny thing is...some people do 13:44:24 -!- MoALTz has quit (Quit: Leaving). 13:44:25 There's a bitcoin thing-thing here this year. 13:44:48 quintopia, if they started doing it earlier, they're richer now than anyone who put it into gold. 13:44:51 You collect hidden QR codes and send something like 0.0005 BTC to each address you find. 13:45:06 Who finds most gets a 5 BTC physical coin-thing (or whatever) and things. 13:45:43 Phantom_Hoover: not necessarily. have you compared the rise in gold prices over the last twenty years? 13:46:39 No, but I somehow doubt there's been a 30-fold increase in the span of a year. 13:49:21 i am afraid of bitcoin myself 13:50:03 fizzie, is the physical coin thing the necessary cryptographic information on a chip or something? 13:50:09 I've never seen anywhere that takes bitcoin? 13:50:33 i have no desire to help anyone get rich by advancing bitcoin 13:51:06 My greatest fear in gold reserves is that at some point, we'll look at ourselves as a species, and decide it's time to stop worshiping valueless shiny rocks. 13:51:09 and i like currencies which have evolved slowly and found some degree of balance 13:51:24 Gregor, invest in tantalum!!! 13:51:46 It's shiny but also vital for microelectronics! 13:52:35 Phantom_Hoover: I don't know, but I guess I can check. 13:52:56 Or rhodium, which AFAIK is a really good investment because it's incredibly rare and incredibly useful as a catalyst. 13:53:37 Phantom_Hoover: It's just a piece of paper in a "tamper-proof" seal. 13:53:39 https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Casascius_physical_bitcoins 13:53:42 One of those. 13:53:46 Dammit. 13:53:59 isn't energy the best investment? 13:54:05 my view of survivalism, money, reserves and life is that no matter what we do about all of these things, we are always at risk of dying due to some event we cannot predict or control 13:54:06 store your wealth by pumping water to the top of a hill 13:54:07 I mean, a piece of *paper*? 13:54:16 You'd need a big hill. 13:54:34 itidus21: that's why i don't wear my seatbelt when i ride in a car 13:54:44 i mean, you might die anyway, so there is no point in doing anything to decrease the chance of it 13:54:44 -!- copumpkin has quit (Quit: Computer has gone to sleep.). 13:54:49 Phantom_Hoover: I've understood people do Bitcoin "paper wallets" to avoid those dastardly hackers. 13:54:57 kmc: oh i go out of my way to decrease the chances of it .. 13:55:35 i have known people who genuinely don't seem to care 13:55:48 The people doing the thing also mentioned the first restaurant in Helsinki to accept BTC just opened recently. 13:56:11 like when i would take my time before crossing a road, he would mention something about that 13:57:14 or i have even been told of by someone when i was younger for wearing seatbelt 13:58:08 itidus21, kmc's point is that survivalism is another way of going out of your way to decrease your chances of dying. 13:58:14 hmm... 13:58:25 im also an asshole 13:58:43 its the only explanation 13:59:02 I have to admit those "physical bitcoins" are pretty 13:59:19 well.... collecting food is good 13:59:41 someone once suggested to me that at such times the valuable things are food and guns 14:00:38 And ammunition. 14:01:09 maybe thats an over simplified view they put though 14:03:24 i keep imagining gold containing chocolate 14:03:39 damn those foil wrapped coins 14:03:50 itidus21, invest in cocoa 14:04:04 it brings mice 14:04:15 at least if its not sealed properly 14:04:24 gotta seal ur food 14:04:34 darn it 14:05:39 Wrap all your food in gold so that even if someone manages to steal it they'll just discard it as worthless gold. 14:05:53 hmm ok im catching up 14:06:15 so the point of the gold reserves is if the economy crashes you still have something of value 14:06:27 and not implying a war scenario 14:06:54 I think it's also because some people still think it has inherent value. 14:07:22 -!- ogrom has joined. 14:07:42 i wonder if it does 14:07:50 i think you'd be better off investing in barterable skills 14:08:43 even if gold retains some "intrinsic value", there is going to be much less demand and liquidity in gold markets after an economic collapse 14:08:52 especially because you lose the infrastructure which makes markets work 14:09:15 women often like tradesmen, they're fit and always find work 14:09:21 whereas if you can, say, perform basic medical procedures, or repair automobiles and convert them to run on wood gas 14:09:26 then i think you're set 14:10:10 kmc: there is no counter argument. 14:10:18 on a barely related note, it seems that about 50% of cars in albania are 90's mercedes 14:10:29 i don't know why 14:10:31 whoa 14:10:48 maybe during the communist era, the ability to import a german luxury car was a great sign of power and wealth 14:11:11 oh i saw a video about russian video games yesterday 14:11:17 and somehow mercedes caught on versus other brands 14:11:22 rather video games sold in russia 14:11:31 and now it's easy to get one, but status symbols are sticky 14:11:38 they had super mario bros 1 - 16 for the dendy 14:11:39 this is also why everything is covered in bright blue LEDs these days 14:12:30 i wonder why blue is cooler than green 14:13:18 "Among the games was the Super Mario Bros. series, which included the three original Mario productions from Nintendo, along with a series of unlicensed Mario games, most of which were just other Famicom games with the main character replaced with Mario sprites." 14:13:41 itidus21: blue LEDs were still expensive at a time when red and green LEDs were cheap 14:13:58 so they became a signifier of expensive quality electronics 14:14:05 as it turns out, the russians were led to believe that all of these games were actually canonical mario games 14:14:08 now they are cheap and are found all over cheap kwality electronics 14:15:07 and on a tv show, when joe and mac was being reviewed they said that joe and mac was merely a pirate copy of super mario 16 with the sprite of a caveman 14:15:49 it's the same with laser pointers, except that green is subjectively much brighter at the same output power 14:16:05 so i think ludicrously overpowered green lasers are still the main coveted nerd-toy in this area 14:16:12 I guess computer programming is not a barterable skill 14:16:21 but blu-ray-based purple lasers that can set stuff on fire are also popular 14:16:25 Unless somehow we end up in Alpha Complex 14:16:29 Sgeo__: it depends but probably not 14:17:06 the ability to hack whatever computing equipment is left over after the apocalypse into basic automation stuff would be useful 14:17:14 my understanding of nature isn't good enough to predict how knowledge of computation could be lost 14:17:14 also telecommunications 14:17:19 -!- copumpkin has joined. 14:17:21 ham radio and maybe long-distance wifi 14:17:29 it depends on the type of apocalypse though 14:17:41 if most people die off, automation will be valuable 14:17:49 like, predicting the actual future is a super-complex problem 14:17:54 if there is a surplus of people, then not so much 14:17:57 yes im making up these words 14:18:11 Um, wait. 14:18:23 Automation is necessary for large numbers of people, not small ones. 14:18:43 not predicting one event in the future, but predicting the collective events leading to some future moment 14:25:07 albania google maps looks like it was done by people walking along the streets on foot 14:25:22 ^street view 14:27:28 maybe google were driving on the pavement 14:27:32 it looks to me like they don't have actual street view 14:27:38 just geo-tagged photos taken by random people 14:27:52 i like it 14:28:04 i don't know where they scrape these from 14:28:56 the bus through albania stopped at a truck stop which only had squat toilets 14:29:12 this would not be such a problem except that a lot of the people using them apparently did not know how to use squat toilets 14:29:17 i was contemplating the other day that street view must have an enormous fuel budget 14:29:22 so there was a lot of shit all over the floor 14:32:01 are these 90's mercedes? https://ssl.panoramio.com/photo/75112590 14:32:45 also the mercedes thing was observed mostly in Shkodra so it may not hold in other cities 14:33:08 that looks like a mercedes on the left of that pic at a guess 14:33:23 the big one won't load for me 14:33:26 maybe it wants frash prugin 14:33:32 me neither 14:33:36 screw it 14:34:03 ill make it happen though via another means 14:34:10 cos clearly i have nothing better to do 14:34:44 itidus21: you should check out the pyramid at 41.323411,19.821246 14:36:03 http://oi50.tinypic.com/11lmyjs.jpg 14:36:53 it looks much shitter now than most of these photos 14:37:08 this one's about right: 14:37:18 Aren't the Google Maps photos from Panoramio? At least that's what I thought. 14:37:29 too blurry to tell itidus21 14:37:34 ok 14:37:59 Also they have a walk-around streetview camera, the blog mentioned it. 14:38:01 i did go with jpeg, via microsoft paint, so even if it was a good pic before who knows 14:38:06 Though only for places where you can't drive a car to. 14:38:42 http://i1-news.softpedia-static.com/images/news-700/The-Google-Street-View-Car-Now-Fits-into-a-Backpack.jpg 14:38:45 That thing. 14:39:09 reminds me of http://www.pcworld.com/article/241960/throw_this_camera_ball_to_take_a_360degree_panorama.html 14:39:56 -!- ogrom has quit (Quit: Left). 14:40:06 "So the ball captures images once reaches its maximum arc because it is almost at a stand still as its velocity and the gravity acting on it are at equilibrium." 14:40:12 good job pcworld writer person 14:40:56 How can it tell if it's at the top of the arc? 14:41:33 Here's a panorama which I made from a ball that was already there: http://xn--nxa.zem.fi/g2/d/16009-4/p1100262.jpg -> http://xn--nxa.zem.fi/g2/d/16203-2/p1100271-remapped.jpg 14:41:38 Okay, it's not very high-fidelity. 14:41:41 i was going to say "accelerometer" but no, it's not that simple 14:41:50 The ball isn't actually spherical, and it's a bit dirty too. 14:41:52 because the acceleration on the free ball is constant regardless of its velocity 14:42:13 It has a velocitometer, of course. 14:42:23 possible 14:42:40 An heightometer. 14:42:59 Well, there's acceleration added by the thrower 14:43:04 If you just drop the ball, what happens? 14:43:16 Although that too would be detectable, hmm 14:43:25 Sgeo__: the initial acceleration is (in theory) instantaneous 14:43:31 once the ball leaves your hand, the only acceleration is gravity 14:43:43 you could measure the initial acceleration and then dead-reckon the top point from that 14:44:24 Is it sad that the reason I know the term dead-reckoning is because of a book on Microsoft Flight Simulator that I had many years ago? 14:44:32 no 14:44:33 Mm, possibly. 14:44:40 Very prone to calibration errors, though. 14:44:59 what if you had like a marble inside a hollow chamber in the ball 14:45:07 the marble would move to the other side of the chamber when the ball starts to fall, no? 14:45:25 kmc: Why would it? 14:45:31 Both have the same amount of acceleration downwards. 14:45:41 Yeah, what fizzie said. 14:45:55 The ball is in an inertial frame from leaving your hand to hitting the ground. 14:45:58 "are you serious, it' acceleration is not a constant. If it's first derivative(velocity) is 0, then the second derivative(acceleration) HAS to be zero....the derivative of any constant is 0... 14:46:02 FAIL...." 14:46:03 * kmc facepalm 14:46:44 wish i could find the frikkin paper 14:46:53 various people speculate that it integrates acceleration 14:47:37 ok "Our camera contains an accelerometer which we use to measure launch acceleration. Integration lets us predict rise time to the highest point, where we trigger the exposure. " 14:47:40 from the abstract 14:47:46 http://jonaspfeil.de/ballcamera 14:48:29 Booooring. 14:48:57 Yeah, it should use laser range-finding to estimate distances from the ground. 14:48:58 yeah, it should bounce radio waves off the ground or something 14:49:02 -_- 14:49:13 :/ 14:49:31 probably it doesn't matter too much to get the high point correct 14:49:41 It should measure the CMB and calculate its velocity from the Doppler shift. 14:49:42 as long as your are shooting daytime scenes with fast shutter speed 14:49:48 There's an app for the N900 (probably other phones too) which measures free-fall times, the idea being that you compete by throwing it into the air; the one who gets longest free-fall time wins. 14:50:08 They held a competition here a year or two back, IIRC. 14:50:13 hahaha 14:50:20 that is fantastic 14:50:24 It has a lot of disclaimers about the app-makers not being responsible for broken phones. 14:50:39 were you allowed to put padding etc around it 14:50:45 like the egg drop competitions of high school physics 14:51:00 The phones were supplied by the organizers, I believe. 14:51:17 I suppose you could make a padding-allowed house rule if you were playing it with your friends, though. 14:51:21 i imagine they could also make a variant where the ball records the entire arc and lets you replay it panoramically 14:51:49 maybe that would, like all my ideas, be shit in practice and make people throw up 14:53:24 I think I know how to give Tcl CL-style conditions. 14:53:33 http://maemo.org/downloads/product/Maemo5/n900fly/ is the app, I can't recall which year the competition was. 14:53:40 Unfortunately, it requires users to list which C-implemented commands can give errors. 14:54:07 OR! I could just wrap every single C-implemented command 14:54:08 like the egg drop competitions of high school physics 14:55:14 Phone drop would probably be easier though, since the main thing that damages phones is their shape focusing the impact. 14:56:21 sounds like a party Sgeo__ 14:56:58 Might need to provide a command to tell the library to look for these commands 14:57:55 Everyone does agree that CL-style conditions are a good thing, right? 14:58:27 Yeah I'm behind it 15:05:33 -!- lambdabot has joined. 15:13:31 -!- aloril has quit (Read error: Operation timed out). 15:16:24 -!- aloril has joined. 15:19:32 -!- Slereah has joined. 15:25:07 Maybe I should read up on Dylan's condition system, which apparently was based on CL but does... something different, I forget whar 15:25:08 what 15:30:49 -!- Taneb has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 15:31:58 -!- mig22 has left. 15:44:32 -!- HackEgo has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds). 15:44:57 -!- EgoBot has joined. 15:44:58 -!- HackEgo has joined. 15:47:01 -!- zzo38 has joined. 15:57:39 -!- Vorpal has joined. 16:02:48 -!- ogrom has joined. 16:03:13 -!- elliott has joined. 16:07:54 -!- nooga has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 16:13:33 -!- MoALTz has joined. 16:25:05 -!- Taneb has joined. 16:29:05 -!- nooga has joined. 16:30:36 Hello 16:35:16 -!- epicmonkey has quit (Read error: Operation timed out). 16:42:21 Do you sometimes make useless schematic diagrams? 16:43:00 Probably 16:54:01 -!- ais523 has quit. 17:04:39 Hey, there are Norwegians on the seminar floor. 17:04:43 What foolishness is this. 17:12:33 What is the most difficult sport? 17:12:42 My answer: Pool ball because the balls (including the white ball) are extremely difficult to hit, even though they aren't moving. 17:13:28 -!- Taneb has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds). 17:13:36 -!- augur_ has changed nick to augur. 17:14:56 The most dangerous game. 17:17:43 http://www.smbc-comics.com/?id=1488 17:18:01 Is what I was thinking about. 17:20:06 -!- boily has quit (Quit: WeeChat 0.3.8). 17:26:57 Oh, awesome, there's a *very* useful feature I missed. Linux's seccomp (a very simple sandboxing scheme) got extended somewhat. 17:27:05 You can now hand it a list of system calls that are permitted. 17:28:00 Oh, it's a little more complicated than that. You can filter based on the arguments too. 17:28:07 nice 17:28:15 Yeah, I'm very intrigued. 17:28:35 Probably Google's doing, no doubt :) 17:28:49 heh 17:28:54 You might sometimes want to override system calls with your own though, too? 17:29:34 Such a system would be considerably thicker even for non-users, so probably isn't going to happen. 17:29:49 Gregor: It is, indeed, a Chrome dev. 17:29:50 zzo38, presumably the feature is intended to contain programs written specifically to run under it, as opposed to being a general purpose sandbox mechanism 17:30:08 It's for GNC. 17:30:13 Gregor, GNC? 17:30:18 Google Native Client. 17:30:21 aah 17:30:32 Yeah, they now use it. 17:30:45 They were actually thinking of dropping seccomp, then GNC went “NO NO WANT” and then this happened. 17:30:50 might be useful for the normal sandboxing that chrome does anyway 17:30:56 Probably is. 17:31:06 This actually makes native client-esque things *really easy*. 17:31:55 Wasn't Chrome's plugin thing on the old seccomp or something? 17:32:17 "Chrome 20 On Linux Gives Seccomp Filters For Flash" says Google. 17:32:22 (The search, not the company.) 17:32:54 What's done for Windows? 17:33:19 (Also don't they canonically and puntastically abbreviate that thing as NaCl?) 17:33:27 fizzie: Yes. 17:34:32 Sgeo__: Segmentation to restrict the address space code can access, an ABI designed so they can statically verify certain things. 17:35:16 I just remember the nop-padding so that all branch targets are divisible by something so that they can guarantee nothing jumps in the middle of an opcode. 17:35:17 fizzie: Yes, they do, but I refuse. 17:35:19 On the grounds that no. 17:35:32 Natrium Client. Native Chloride. 17:35:35 fizzie: Yeah, that's part of it. 17:35:55 That's for NaCl, though; do they do any sandboxing for the Flash plugin on Windows? 17:36:38 The Pepper plugin API runs under NaCl, yes. 17:37:08 Ah, it's part of the same thing. 17:37:21 http://blogs.valvesoftware.com/linux/faster-zombies/ Valve sez: OpenGL is faster than Direct3D... even on Windows. 17:37:32 Gregor: They are using DirectX 9, though. 17:37:48 It's a nice URL. 17:37:52 Which is Microsoft's old shit that they only keep around for backwards compatibility. 17:38:21 pikhq_: Uh, then why are they using it? 17:38:30 Gregor: Newer versions don't work on XP. 17:38:36 Because Microsoft is a bunch of assholes. 17:38:48 There was an "advanced DirectX 11" seminar 30 metres to the left few hours ago, with Smash/Fairlight speaking. It was... popular. 17:38:51 I do have idea make a different kind of computer, there is no operating system but BIOS calls require NMI which also enables the other hardware to be used, or you can move a jumper to always enable the other hardware and disable the security system (which, other than this, is similar to a UNIX security). You can move another jumper to reflash the BIOS ROM if you want to change it. 17:38:59 (this is the first time they've made a version of DirectX that *doesn't* work on older Windows, FWIW) 17:39:23 What version of DirectX works only on Windows 8? 17:39:57 Dunno. DirectX 11.1 ships with it, but they might intend to do a release for Windows 7 at some point. 17:40:43 pikhq_: DirectX 9 isn't available for Windows 95; 8.0a is newest. Or so they say. 17:41:18 fizzie: Oh, look, they broke compatibility with the *oldest* version they could possibly work with. 17:41:52 Well, Wikipedia table implies (though doesn't quite say) that 8.1 is also the best you can get on 98, Me and 2000. 17:41:59 What version of DirectX works only on Windows 9.999? 17:42:19 I've *used* 9 on 2000. 17:43:03 http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=35 "Supported operating systems: Windows 7, Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 1, Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2, Windows Server 2008, Windows Vista, Windows XP Service Pack 2, Windows XP Service Pack 3" (Could be a different download, of course.) 17:43:27 Yeah, it is. 17:43:31 They did break compatibility with 9.c, yes. 17:44:39 Anyway, even a nitpicky counter-example is still a counter-example. :p 17:44:59 It does seem you could use older versions of DirectX 9 on Windows 98, though. 17:45:24 And then they went and made it so you couldn't use DirectX 10 on XP. ... Which, at the time, was the most popular version of Windows. 17:45:35 98, but maybe not on 95. (Or NT 4.0.) 17:45:43 And even now is at least significant enough you might well want to support it. 17:45:58 -!- FreeFull has joined. 17:46:07 So I've been playing with Game of Life rules 17:46:32 Does anyone know if there is a spaceship possible in B3/S12 17:46:41 Yeah, it doesn't seem like there's anything newer than DirectX 3 for NT 4.0. So there, they've broken it twice, even when looking at major numbers only. 17:46:50 I did find one in B3/S125 but not in B3/S12 yet 17:48:07 valve is also a bunch of assholes :> 17:48:27 i guess one bunch of assholes can get annoyed by another 17:48:47 FreeFull: I think there's a database of whether certain lifelike rules have spaceships. 17:48:49 Next up on the left: "Occlusion culling for the next generation", by someone from Umbra. 17:48:49 I don't recall where it is, though. 17:49:52 -!- Taneb has joined. 17:50:10 The spaceship I found in B3/S125 is pretty neat. It moves at c/6 diagonally 17:50:23 Hello 17:52:20 FreeFull, I don't recognise you. You new? 17:52:52 Yes 17:53:02 :) 17:53:43 `welcome FreeFull 17:53:55 FreeFull: Welcome to the international hub for esoteric programming language design and deployment! For more information, check out our wiki: http://esolangs.org/wiki/Main_Page. (For the other kind of esoterica, try #esoteric on irc.dal.net.) 17:54:09 fungot: You welcome him too. Learn some manners from the other bots. 17:54:11 fizzie: " my beautiful zoe, i live only for glory, but he does not resemble me. you well know, that without the guide and light of sound, well-understood principles, all those evils which are attributed to corruption may, with equal wisdom, provided for the return of the bourbons. 17:54:17 Reason I didn't do that earlier is because that's usually used for people who haven't indicted that they're aware that this is not for "the other kind of esoterica" 17:54:23 I, uh... maybe not quite in that way. 17:54:29 You've indicated awareness, so it's all good 17:55:32 I really like the befunge family for some reason 17:55:44 fungot is written in befunge 17:55:45 Sgeo__: false policy in our war with france or america, the refuge of the oppressed from everywhere ( who can pay fifty dollars' fnord one except a fnord up for human rights everywhere, even helping china let people in free when she wants to collect fifty dollars upon them. 17:55:59 Impressive 17:56:02 Ver 17:56:03 y 17:56:29 FreeFull, two important questions? 17:56:38 Do you live in Hexham? 17:56:41 No 17:56:47 How about Finland? 17:56:53 Nope 17:56:57 Okay 17:57:00 Why? 17:57:15 They're statistical anomalies in the esoteric world 17:57:18 ^source 17:57:18 http://git.zem.fi/fungot/blob/HEAD:/fungot.b98 17:57:23 You can see what makes fungot tick there. 17:57:24 fizzie: but there is one member of the committee of public safety. irruption of the mob, one a term of fifty, another a term of twenty-eight years. in ten years. 17:57:27 I live in High Wycombe 17:58:11 Yeah, that's not really near Hexham nor Finland 17:58:51 ^style 17:58:51 Available: agora alice c64 ct darwin discworld europarl ff7 fisher fungot homestuck ic irc iwcs jargon lovecraft nethack pa qwantz sms speeches* ss wp youtube 17:58:56 Hexham's a town in Northumberland where at least 1 in 6000 people are in this channel RIGHT NOW 17:58:58 Does fungot do markov modelling? 17:58:59 FreeFull: the following is a list of the fnord of nations. but, it is impossible, sir, this defence is unworthy of a man, and diffident about appearing before legislative bodies, and of manly sincerity for which i have mentioned, have no objection to the " greatest happiness fnord supposition which may be found among its defects. 17:59:50 Finland is similar, but a country that isn't in Northumberland 17:59:54 -!- ogrom has quit (Quit: Left). 18:00:39 (Hexham has population 12000ish) 18:00:42 1 in 6000 people in finland are in here? 18:00:54 The population of Finland is a lot smaller than I thought 18:00:55 Nah 18:01:11 Just about 15% of this channel is Finnish 18:01:14 Including fungot 18:01:15 Taneb: " now you talk like a human being who is fnord around and teaching school, and thou must be. 18:01:35 -!- epicmonkey has joined. 18:01:41 fungot's source link doesn't seem to work 18:01:41 -!- Gregor has set topic: We are fnord around the teaching school | http://codu.org/logs/_esoteric/. 18:01:41 FreeFull: a radical war song, a. lincoln. washington. february 3, 1862_ a change. but nowhere has the revolution been more complete and violent than in england. 18:01:42 It's timing out 18:01:55 ^source 18:01:56 http://git.zem.fi/fungot/blob/HEAD:/fungot.b98 18:02:17 Hmm 18:02:44 fizzie, fix it please? 18:02:46 FreeFull: I'd spew out my usual few-hundred-word explanation of fungot babble, but I've done it so many times... but yeah, it technically speaking has the Markov property. It generates by sampling from a variable-length n-gram model, implementation-wise. 18:02:47 fizzie: i say, blame him for this? not merely because i had unworthily filled the chair of the house of commons. 18:02:53 Taneb: It works for me. :/ 18:02:57 And I'm not even at home. 18:03:16 Has fungot's server's ISP fell out with the UK? 18:03:17 Taneb: it is the law. 18:03:27 I'll take that as a yes 18:03:39 Taneb: Seems that it works over IPv6, but not over IPv4. I'll try to get it fixed at some point, but not from here. 18:03:54 Yeah, IPv6 is rare in the UK 18:03:59 My ISP is shitty and doesn't offer IPv6 18:04:03 In the meanwhile, fungot.b98 is at http://sprunge.us/hGRJ 18:04:04 fizzie: if i have anything to do with the question. yet it does somehow happen that this evening, and the hateful institution, like a second deity, fnord to the senate. 18:04:10 * pikhq_ mutters at the objections to NaCl 18:04:19 "It's not HTML" is an actual objection. 18:04:37 Javascript isn't HTML either 18:04:46 Like, people think the HTML/Javascript/bullshit stack is *actually good* 18:04:52 And Google should focus on improving that. 18:05:22 *This* is the reason Mozilla doesn't intend to support NaCl. 18:05:36 !!! 18:06:27 sodium chloride? 18:06:40 Mozilla doesn't support table salt? 18:06:49 native client 18:06:57 FreeFull, http://hpaste.org/raw/72555 18:07:03 It's made of sodium and chloride, therefore it's poisonous 18:07:06 I had it cached 18:07:41 Incidentally, the whole lack-of-portability aspect in NaCl is going away. Google's currently trying to make it so it works using LLVM bytecode. 18:08:20 Taneb: fizzie already linked a copy 18:08:23 And they won't have it on by default in Chrome until that's done. 18:08:24 fizzie: Impressive 18:08:27 Does that mean you can program it in any programming language which can compile to LLVM? 18:08:37 Aah 18:08:40 Didn't see that 18:08:51 Taneb: Could you retry the original source URL. For some reason, even the v4 access suddenly started to work for me, while I was tcpdumping to find out what's wrong. 18:08:53 zzo38: Yes. 18:09:08 Yeah, it's up? 18:09:15 The weirdest. 18:09:16 Seems like an ISP problem? 18:09:22 I didn't change any configuration or anything. 18:09:27 zzo38: I think it might require a few extra bits so it'll comply with the portable NaCl ABI, *but* that seems like a very minor thing. 18:09:41 I don't know, they could be inbound-filtering port 80 but they haven't so far. 18:09:49 Don't see why it'd suddenly start working. 18:09:59 SSHing in worked the whole time. 18:10:22 So, Common Lisp in the browser? 18:10:25 >.> 18:10:30 Sgeo__: Yes. 18:10:42 So I think it would include: C, C++, Objective-C, Objective-C++, Haskell, LLVM IR coding, possibly others too, does it include Pascal? 18:10:52 ^bf +. 18:10:53 18:10:58 o.o 18:10:59 zzo38: Quite plausibly. 18:11:00 Woops 18:11:02 Hmm, C can be compiled to LLVM, right? So Tcl? 18:11:08 Sgeo__: Yes. 18:11:30 FreeFull: You hit my "on the TODO list for the last several months" bug of not filtering CTCP control character (\x01) on the first try. Congratulations. 18:12:03 Sgeo__: There's already some work on Tcl in NaCl, BTW. 18:12:06 ^bf ,[>,]<[.<]!hello 18:12:06 olleh 18:12:09 Also Python? 18:12:21 ^show 18:12:21 echo reverb rev rot13 rev2 fib wc ul cho choo pow2 source help hw srmlebac uenlsbcmra scramble unscramble asc ord prefixes tmp test celebrate wiki chr ha rainbow rainbow2 welcome 18:12:25 I have checked, LLVM now could support the Pascal ranged types, I guess, since you can specify the valid range when loading a value. 18:12:27 Many of those are brainfuck things. 18:12:34 (Many of those are very inane.) 18:13:34 But I have been told that LLVM cannot optimize brainfuck codes very well. 18:13:47 pikhq_, cool 18:13:47 Sgeo__: Also, anything on NaCl has access to the HTML DOM. 18:13:47 Tcl > Javascript? 18:14:51 pikhq_, Is there an API for that or something 18:16:41 Taneb: Yeah. 18:20:12 -!- boily has joined. 18:26:45 ^bf +.++++ +++[- >++++ ++++< ]>+.+ +.<++ ++[-> ++++< ]>+.< +++[- >---< ]>--.+++++ +.-.< +++++ +[->- ----- <]>-- ----- ---.< +++++ ++++[ ->+++ ++++++<]>+ +++++ .<+++ [->-- -<]>- ----. --..+ ++++. ----- --.<+ ++[-> +++<]>++++ +.<>>>>>+. 18:26:45 Is it too long 18:28:54 It doesn't look cut off. 18:29:19 Seems to be a netsplit kind of thing. 18:29:36 As seen from the bot's console IRC-rawlog, we all don't exist. 18:30:13 Fix it 18:30:27 I? 18:30:31 I think that's Freenode's job. 18:31:39 -!- Deewiant has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds). 18:32:08 -!- atehwa_ has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds). 18:32:08 -!- glogbackup has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:08 -!- FireFly has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:10 -!- sirdancealot7 has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:11 -!- boily has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:12 -!- elliott has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:12 -!- HackEgo has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:12 -!- EgoBot has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:12 -!- monqy has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:13 -!- SimonRC has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:13 -!- ssue has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:13 -!- shachaf has quit 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-!- cknz has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:38 -!- nortti- has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:43 -!- MoALTz has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:43 -!- lambdabot has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:44 -!- azaq23 has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:44 -!- TodPunk has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:44 -!- FreeFull has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:45 -!- []{}\|-_`^ has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:45 -!- coppro has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:47 -!- mroman has quit (*.net *.split). 18:32:47 -!- ineiros has quit (*.net *.split). 18:33:45 lol 18:33:59 Hey, freenode people: fix it. 18:34:07 (I'm sure you're sniffing in our private things.) 18:37:15 -!- atehwa has joined. 18:37:15 -!- FireFly has joined. 18:37:15 -!- ineiros has joined. 18:37:15 -!- mroman has joined. 18:37:15 -!- coppro has joined. 18:37:15 -!- []{}\|-_`^ has joined. 18:37:15 -!- TodPunk has joined. 18:37:15 -!- azaq23 has joined. 18:37:15 -!- lambdabot has joined. 18:37:15 -!- MoALTz has joined. 18:37:15 -!- FreeFull has joined. 18:37:15 -!- boily has joined. 18:37:15 -!- epicmonkey has joined. 18:37:15 -!- nooga has joined. 18:37:15 -!- elliott has joined. 18:37:15 -!- HackEgo has joined. 18:37:15 -!- EgoBot has joined. 18:37:15 -!- aloril has joined. 18:37:15 -!- copumpkin has joined. 18:37:15 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 18:37:15 -!- pikhq_ has joined. 18:37:15 -!- monqy has joined. 18:37:15 -!- SimonRC has joined. 18:37:15 -!- augur has joined. 18:37:15 -!- Sgeo__ has joined. 18:37:15 -!- ssue has joined. 18:37:15 -!- variable has joined. 18:37:15 -!- ion has joined. 18:37:15 -!- Gregor has joined. 18:37:15 -!- Yonkie has joined. 18:37:15 -!- sirdancealot7 has joined. 18:37:15 -!- sebbu has joined. 18:37:15 -!- TeruFSX_ has joined. 18:37:15 -!- rodgort has joined. 18:37:15 -!- nvt has joined. 18:37:15 -!- comex has joined. 18:37:15 -!- shachaf has joined. 18:37:15 -!- fungot has joined. 18:37:15 -!- kmc has joined. 18:37:15 -!- mtve has joined. 18:37:15 -!- lahwran has joined. 18:37:15 -!- cknz has joined. 18:37:36 I wonder what happened on the other side of that split 18:37:42 Awesome things. 18:37:44 PING netsplittest 18:38:03 fizzie, I was on your side 18:38:19 Yes, but fungot was on another side. 18:38:22 fizzie: " it pronounces that there exists a real, not a blemish upon it; for it seems to be, either a truism or a contradiction in terms; and that difficulty is as complete in the case of a mere majority ( say of one) shall pass with them and with least inconvenience to the litigants. it was pleasant to hear that i am not one of them to know that a salutary change has taken place which makes them ten times as strong as the reas 18:38:44 -!- glogbackup has joined. 18:38:56 -!- glogbackup has left. 18:39:04 one way to find out 18:39:44 darn i was on the log bot's side 18:39:53 I saw both fungot and fizzie split away from me 18:39:54 FreeFull: whilst the inferior people were thus insensibly led into a better order, the foundation of other thrones: they must be just as true for the punjab and the united provinces, that there are 18:40:02 So seems to be a multi-server split 18:40:13 Some appear to be slow 18:40:50 fungot: You can just filter any character whose value is below 32 18:40:51 FreeFull: in reference to every case, showing the determined and daring character of the men i see at these tables, or how soon our better half of human nature 18:41:04 I mean fizzie 18:41:11 FreeFull: But then I couldn't have any bold. 18:41:17 (I had it that way originally.) 18:41:22 Currently it only filters 10. 18:42:04 hi FreeFull 18:42:04 Filters 10 because otherwise someone could take control of the bot? 18:42:11 Hi 18:42:29 Yes. 18:42:34 It turns into a . 18:42:36 It should filter at least 0x00 0x0A 0x0D and perhaps also 0x01 0x03 0x07 18:42:40 A ., I mean. 18:42:54 I think it might filter 13 too. 18:43:02 show me your previous work FreeFull 18:43:05 It should filter 13 too. 18:43:07 ^bf ++++++++++.+++. 18:43:08 .. 18:43:09 It does. 18:43:19 ^bf ++++++++++..>.<.. 18:43:20 .. 18:43:22 But not 0. 18:43:26 what does it do for infinite loops? 18:43:31 It just results in a truncated message, though. 18:43:32 quintopia: I'm afraid I don't have any 18:43:34 times out 18:43:40 It ought to filter 0. 18:43:57 ^bf [+.] 18:44:05 ^bf +[+.] 18:44:05 .. !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~ ... 18:44:11 zzo38: Actually, it "filters" 0 in that it doesn't output it. It just cuts it at that point. 18:44:22 * itidus21 was like.. wtf was that 18:44:23 FreeFull: It runs something like 30k or 100k cycles of the underlying intermediate bytecode. 18:44:29 ^bf +[] 18:44:34 ...out of time! 18:44:38 Filter 0 like that is OK I guess 18:45:00 ^bf .-. 18:45:05 ^bf -. 18:45:05 18:45:13 .. !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>? 18:45:23 nvm 18:45:27 Cells are wraparound with 8 bits, and the tape is 1000 cells and cyclic. 18:46:09 ^bf +[>+] 18:46:48 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds). 18:47:16 -!- boily has quit (Quit: WeeChat 0.3.8). 18:47:21 -!- asiekierka_ has quit (Quit: Connection reset by PO). 18:48:38 ^code 18:48:41 ^code a 18:48:51 -!- boily has joined. 18:50:12 The Google Web Store requirement part is annoying 18:50:38 64 GB MicroSD cards are fascinating... That you can fit that much in something so small 18:51:38 -!- nortti- has joined. 18:51:39 Oh, apparently that's going to change 18:52:21 Vorpal, imagine how it will be like in 3 years 18:52:27 256 GB MicroSDs... 18:52:32 true... 18:52:35 i'm trying to procedurally generate sand dunes heightmap 18:53:35 nooga: so.. i know you didn't ask my opinion but, what is under a desert? 18:53:36 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 18:53:48 does what is under a desert affect the shape of the dunes? 18:53:48 itidus21, rock, generally 18:54:21 or can we assume that sand dunes form upon a base of sand? :D 18:54:49 nooga, how's that going? 18:54:51 clearly its better to just let me on my way 18:56:31 -!- kallisti_ has joined. 18:57:29 -!- kallisti_ has quit (Client Quit). 19:05:37 Can you invent any game played using snooker balls or pool balls? 19:07:58 not one better than fantasy classique 19:08:14 What does that mean? 19:09:06 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artistic_billiards 19:11:20 zzo38: naturally 19:11:22 brb 19:13:09 we begin by adding a cage net around the table 19:13:19 and installing ramps 19:14:01 and placing some of the pockets on the top of cylinders on the table 19:14:23 How can you strike the ball if there is a cage net? 19:14:36 thats a good point 19:14:44 stick the cue through the holes 19:14:45 :P 19:15:03 still not a better game than fantaisie classique :) 19:16:34 hmm you could use a spider i suppose 19:17:50 or.. perhaps something where both players send the balls to smash together 19:18:16 is snooker the one with the mushrooms on the table? 19:18:27 No. 19:18:43 Snooker is the one with fifteen red balls and various other color of balls on the table. 19:18:52 2 balls, 1 hole, and a countdown after which both players may hit their ball precisely once 19:19:09 oh it's "bar billiards" 19:19:40 oh no 19:19:42 that's not it 19:19:44 hmm 19:19:52 snooker trick shots can be quite interesting to watch 19:20:03 wow you guys really know a lot 19:20:17 personally I don't find that type of sport interesting in themselves 19:20:36 still, i feel like i wasted my life by not learning largely useless trivia 19:21:00 quintopia, snooker is snooker? 19:22:42 aha! 19:22:46 found it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bumper_pool 19:23:23 -!- MoALTz_ has joined. 19:23:24 -!- Slereah_ has joined. 19:23:28 quintopia, no, snooker is played on a much larger board? 19:23:42 Vorpal: i don't know what you are going on about. 19:23:42 or with smaller balls than that picture 19:23:54 is snooker the one with the mushrooms on the table? oh it's "bar billiards" found it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bumper_pool 19:23:58 but is successfully found the game i was looking for, so you can talk to ourself about it 19:24:00 quintopia, not the same thread of thought? 19:24:01 *I 19:24:14 -!- Slereah has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds). 19:24:36 quintopia, no? 19:25:41 -!- MoALTz has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 19:35:40 -!- Phantom__Hoover has joined. 19:39:18 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds). 19:39:53 -!- oerjan has joined. 19:56:59 -!- azaq23 has quit (Quit: Leaving.). 19:58:28 -!- MoALTz_ has quit (Quit: brb). 19:58:46 -!- MoALTz has joined. 20:01:47 -!- pikhq has joined. 20:04:48 -!- pikhq_ has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 20:11:04 alg 20:11:21 o, rithm 20:11:33 -!- TodPunk has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 20:12:40 i c 20:12:48 -!- TodPunk has joined. 20:13:15 abbage an 20:13:35 d waffle 20:20:45 -!- Vorpal has quit (Ping timeout: 272 seconds). 20:20:59 There are a lot of subreddits... 20:24:35 -!- boily has quit (Quit: WeeChat 0.3.8). 20:27:26 -!- Deewiant has joined. 20:30:00 pikhq, what do you think of this? (In #tcl person who'd rather see 8.6 released ASAP even if coredumps occur) 20:37:41 confucius say billiards is wrong because man with nine balls cannot walk 20:40:43 confucius smart 20:50:08 -!- epicmonkey has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds). 20:53:39 -!- Taneb has quit (Quit: Leaving). 21:15:57 theat 21:16:31 rhythm 21:16:56 yes 21:19:02 something is very wrong here: http://www.gamingunion.net/newsimg/theatrhythm-final-fantasy-review.jpg 21:25:20 -!- Sgeo__ has changed nick to Sgeo. 21:33:01 -!- MoALTz has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 21:34:07 there's a Tardis monad? 21:35:24 https://github.com/DanBurton/tardis it seems 21:35:55 * Sgeo misread monad as command 21:36:01 So was thinking Tcl instead of Haskell 21:36:20 as punishment you shall have to implement that. 21:42:55 I'm already trying to get my mind around doing dynamically-scoped variables in the presence of coroutines 21:44:01 And being told not to try using a seemingly useful Tcl command because it's likely to be buggy, and I might cause a core dump and if that happens, then they'll have to fix it which will delay release 21:46:17 kmc: Apparently lexand__ isn't one of the 5-HT_2A agonist people. 21:46:22 I thought everyone you knew was. 21:46:39 s/_/e_/ 21:51:34 -!- heroux has joined. 21:52:00 -!- david_werecat has joined. 22:01:25 `pastelogs No output. 22:02:07 `pastelogs i just.. had to 22:02:41 mkdir: cannot create directory `/hackenv': File exists \ http://codu.org/projects/hackbot/fshg/index.cgi/raw-file/tip/paste/paste.23453 \ /hackenv/bin/paste: line 14: /hackenv/paste/paste.23453: No such file or directory 22:03:24 ok. cool. 22:03:39 -!- pikhq has quit (Read error: Operation timed out). 22:04:10 -!- pikhq has joined. 22:15:27 Sgeo: they should just release it with the proviso "don't use this command in this release it's buggy and it may cause a coredump" 22:16:31 `ls . 22:16:34 bin \ canary \ foo \ karma \ lib \ paste \ quotes \ share \ wisdom 22:17:04 im glad that my query failed cos it felt kind of abusive 22:17:30 `pastelogs life 22:17:35 http://codu.org/projects/hackbot/fshg/index.cgi/raw-file/tip/paste/paste.331 22:17:44 Why did the first one not work? 22:25:41 `pastelogs sgeo.*tcl 22:25:51 http://codu.org/projects/hackbot/fshg/index.cgi/raw-file/tip/paste/paste.19893 22:26:10 wow 22:26:14 unexpected 22:26:43 little did you know that tcl was embedded in that id 22:27:23 ? 22:27:47 22:28:05 Ah 22:28:32 I was vacillating between Lisp and Tcl in February? Really? 22:29:05 hi 22:33:02 Nothing wrong with Lisp, as long as you choose the right implementation 22:33:14 Racket and Clojure are nice 22:33:27 so, i'm interested in total functions. i think they're wonderful things. 22:33:29 * Sgeo has become a Tcl person. 22:35:17 Sgeo: yes, finally out of the closeTCLoset. but i can't help feeling that my way of discussing it is inappropriate 22:36:12 it's not my business 22:37:54 Huh, so elliott once wanted to make a Tcl-inspired language 22:37:57 How did that go? 22:39:30 i didn't do it 22:39:40 cpressey's new language is tclish 22:39:52 btw you're not a tcl person because you won't be a tcl person in N days for some N 22:40:41 Well, Tcl-liker? 22:41:26 FreeFull: some random seeding with MCell doesn't seem to throw up any spaceships for your CA... 22:42:08 and only few oscillators 22:43:56 and stuff seems to move not very far from the seeded rectangle 22:44:07 shachaf: that's stupid that you thought that 22:44:29 i'm in a bad mood so i'm not going to try to be nice about it 22:44:30 sorry 22:44:58 FreeFull made a CA? 22:45:10 well mentioned one 22:45:16 We haven't had a good CA discussion in ages (oko doesn't count because he just monologues.) 22:45:28 B12/S3 isn't complicated enough to be unknown 22:45:50 Ah 22:45:53 kmc: hi :( 22:46:02 which means -> google 22:46:27 http://fano.ics.uci.edu/ca/ 22:46:28 this is it 22:46:38 B1 makes all patterns infinitely growing, FWIW. 22:46:42 http://fano.ics.uci.edu/ca/rules/b12s3/ 22:46:47 @tell FreeFull http://fano.ics.uci.edu/ca/rules/b12s3/ 22:46:48 Consider it noted. 22:48:02 I note that that website hasn't been updated with Gemini. 22:48:22 Phantom__Hoover: er 22:48:31 *B3/S12 22:49:13 kmc: after visiting the brothel that one time i bought a bottle of pheromones 22:49:30 is this real life you're talking about 22:49:33 it eventually leaked into my drawer also somehow 22:49:58 no, lol. that virtual reality which has both brothels and pheromones 22:50:02 elliott: *B3/S12 22:50:06 thank god 22:50:13 oerjan, 3 gliders according to the site. 22:50:14 which seems harder to google :( 22:50:21 @tell FreeFull sorry -- http://fano.ics.uci.edu/ca/rules/b3s12/ 22:50:22 Phantom__Hoover: which site? 22:50:22 Consider it noted. 22:50:26 @tell FreeFull so there are gliders 22:50:26 Both big, and ungainly. 22:50:26 Consider it noted. 22:50:30 you don't wanna know about my second life activities 22:50:30 oerjan: the one i linked??? 22:50:39 itidus21: no i do 22:51:11 -!- derdon has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 22:51:29 i have other stories.. but.. thats enough for today 22:52:24 i also saw the episode of bottom where they buy some pheromones and visit a bar 22:52:32 at a later stage 22:53:52 -!- copumpkin has quit (Quit: Computer has gone to sleep.). 22:54:03 elliott: should we tell itidus21 and Sgeo to get a channel? 22:54:23 no i want to keep hearing itidus21's stories here 22:54:29 okay 22:54:34 i am trying to cheer up kmc with that anecdote 22:54:45 hahhahah 22:54:59 did kmc's pheremone adventures go horribly wrong 22:55:16 never play the theremin on pheromones 22:56:22 elliott: Thanks 22:56:22 FreeFull: You have 3 new messages. '/msg lambdabot @messages' to read them. 22:56:25 shachaf, wait, what's the relevance of the 5-HT2A receptor? 22:56:38 FreeFull: oh, i didn't realise you were still in the channel, sorry :) 22:56:54 elliott: They are pretty big, no wonder I didn't find them 22:57:05 Phantom__Hoover: a group of people studying and documenting the effects of different stuff if i understand right 22:57:52 ...what, all kmc's friends are neurochemists? 22:58:29 .... sorry by studying i meant using.. and 22:59:15 Phantom__Hoover: I just use golly 22:59:18 Phantom__Hoover: they are "chemists" who do things to neurons, if you catch my drift 22:59:29 i don't think this is helping.. 22:59:39 this channel. 23:00:15 But WP doesn't say 5-HT2A has anything to do with sex! 23:01:03 http://fano.ics.uci.edu/ca/rules/b3s125/g1.html This is the same glider I found for B3/S125 23:01:58 elliott: wait, do you want me to ban everyone, including myself again? 23:02:24 yes 23:02:31 thought so. 23:02:54 +b *!*@* 23:03:44 * oerjan suddenly wonders if that means something in geek code 23:04:17 -!- itidus21 has left ("With over 150 related products we have the KVM switching solution for you"). 23:04:43 The chanmode +b *!*@* bans everybody 23:05:00 shocking! 23:05:11 i think oerjan knows +b :P 23:05:14 at least, i hope he does. 23:05:25 he probably has his doubts. 23:05:27 In what languages other than shell is :(){ :|:&};: legal code? 23:05:45 Languages where : is a line comment delimeter? 23:06:11 I don't know any where that's the case though 23:06:39 maybe you could get that into a pascal program, {} is comments there 23:06:40 i think there's one 23:06:50 that's valid forth, if you make some predefinitions 23:06:54 but that's a rather trivial property 23:06:58 hm ;: probably won't work 23:07:22 is it valid agda? (/me doesn't know agda but has heard rumors) 23:07:39 It would be valid brainfuck (just treated entirely as a comment) 23:07:49 But there isn't anything that isn't valid brainfuck 23:08:03 ^bf ] i beg to differ 23:08:03 Mismatched []. 23:08:14 oerjan, ooh, I think that's a legal Agda token. 23:08:22 Oh, you're right 23:08:31 But it would be valid brainfuck in this case 23:08:36 Phantom__Hoover: both of them? or even with the space? 23:08:43 ^bf :(){ :|:&};: 23:08:48 Yeah, both. 23:09:06 () has a special meaning but I suspect it needs whitespace for that. 23:11:14 itidus is an SL person? 23:11:50 Sgeo: there seems to be evidence for that 23:11:52 Phantom_Hoover: : is a line comment delimiter in TeX if you write \catcode`:=14 23:14:34 -!- copumpkin has joined. 23:15:14 It's probably legal in Perl with some wrangling beforehand. 23:15:57 Yes maybe. Try it 23:16:27 Oi, kallisti, you're the poor fool who thinks perl is a good language. 23:17:45 It occurs to me that although both Tcl and Lisp could make a good-looking do-like (as in Haskell's do) construct, it would be easier in Lisp because in Tcl you'd have to parse a string if you want it to look the way Tcl code generally looks 23:18:00 Finally I thought of how the macro in Ibtlfmm should be working: There is 2 kind of macros, file macros and module macros. Even module macros there is also 2 kind, open macros and closed macros. And it is possible for some module to import an open macro but export it as closed. 23:18:40 Phantom__Hoover: what are you attempting to do? 23:19:06 : as comment? 23:19:10 Make :(){ :|&:};: legal code. 23:19:14 oh 23:19:40 I'll assume source filters is cheating 23:20:18 I don't even know what : does in perl actually 23:20:22 The only way I know how : as comment is in TeX and in Forth if preceded and followed by a space. 23:20:52 source filters? 23:21:06 you can run perl code on the source files of other perl code before they're compiled 23:21:22 it's used to modify the language syntax. 23:21:37 That.... does it receive the code as a string? 23:21:41 yes 23:22:11 That... seems like it could be harder to deal with than Tcl, even though Tcl also sees Tcl code in terms of strings --- Tcl syntax is very simple 23:22:45 there are some modules that abstract over this to make it easy to define specific syntactic constructs 23:23:13 I'm just going to assume that Tcl is easier 23:23:45 but probably not as flexible 23:24:55 * Sgeo raises an eyebrow 23:25:49 Well, I guess you'd have some trouble (aka impossible) with whole-code transforms such as turning a bunch of stuff into CPS 23:28:04 kallisti, how much do you know about Tcl? 23:29:26 enough to know that I'm not interested in this conversation 23:33:04 -!- tswett has quit (Quit: leaving). 23:34:35 -!- pikhq_ has joined. 23:35:07 -!- pikhq has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 23:36:05 In lisp, the code is lists, so you can use the same operations you'd use on lists of data to modify the code 23:36:17 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 23:39:50 In Tcl, the code is strings, and some strings are lists and all lists are strings... 23:40:07 -!- david_werecat has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 23:40:10 It's not perfect, not quite like Lisp, but it's workable 23:43:29 in haskell, the code is just a braided ring over a category of prepromorphisms, so you can use the same operations you'd use on braided rings over categories of prepromorphisms to construct a new code 23:45:07 It's not workable, unlike Lisp and TCL, but it's perfect 23:49:07 -!- pikhq_ has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 23:49:19 -!- pikhq has joined.