00:00:06 alise, hahaha, nice 00:00:33 hey, I remember you ... well, i remember you being in here, just not anything about you 00:01:02 me? haha 00:01:13 i think i may have accidentally stumbled in here and idled for a few months maybe 00:01:22 i wish you were the chuck that drafted agora's ruleset, then you'd be interesting 00:02:01 Place menu.xml, rc.xml and autostart.sh in ~/.config/openbox 00:02:01 They can be found in /etc/xdg/openbox 00:02:06 You know, pacman, you could have done that yourself. 00:02:11 Lazy package manager... 00:02:40 let's see if this works 00:02:42 -!- alise has quit (Quit: Lost terminal). 00:03:47 If "pacman" and "mmaker" are both Arch Linux programs, why is it broken like that? 00:03:56 Perhaps you can file a bug report 00:07:29 -!- lament has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds). 00:11:53 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 00:12:07 -!- augur has joined. 00:36:19 -!- alise has joined. 00:36:23 blargh; I think xfce was better 00:36:32 this is something akin to the epitome of fussitude 00:37:51 16:03:47 If "pacman" and "mmaker" are both Arch Linux programs, why is it broken like that? 00:37:54 It's a good question 00:38:00 I have a suspicion mmaker isn't just Arch 00:38:04 http://menumaker.sourceforge.net/ 00:38:05 Indeed 00:38:48 I need someone to endorse xfce4 so i feel ok about using it 00:43:54 I feel the control flow in Mimsy could be better, but it's hard to find an alternative 00:44:12 -- were the borogaves, and the nome raths outgrabe. if I have my spelling right 00:44:27 *borogoves, *mome. 00:44:47 -!- FireFly has quit (Quit: swatted to death). 00:45:18 great poem 00:49:12 Godel, Escher, Bach, contain, same poem but in English, French, German. 00:49:58 Are you sure it's GEB that contains Jabberwocky? 00:50:02 Not his book on translation? 00:50:27 Yes it does contain Jabberwocky, I will check the chapter number right now 00:50:42 Chapter XI 00:50:51 Chapter XII 00:50:56 Chapter XIIII 00:51:03 Sorry, there is no chapter number. 00:51:18 Chapter CCCLXVI 00:51:26 I mean, page 366 00:51:48 Half of the chapters are not real chapter numbers 00:52:02 Gah, I still have an urge to typeset the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. 00:52:22 Then, perhaps you can do so? 00:52:36 Are you going to include the appendix? 00:52:54 I would, but I'd need to find some text for it that has some sort of delineation to mark the italic portions; and some way to distinguish the open and close quotes. 00:53:02 If I had that, I could easily convert it into LaTeX and go from there. 00:53:05 zzo38: H2G2 has an appendix? 00:53:25 alise: I don't know if it does. But you can include it anyways if you really want to? 00:53:56 I'm pretty sure, as a work of fiction, that it doesn't. 00:54:01 Although House of Leaves probably has an appendix, and a tonsil. 00:54:02 appendix, spleen, tonsil, take your pick 00:54:07 oerjan: hello don woods 00:54:27 alise: i was thinking of the INTERCAL manual there 00:54:54 hm wait 00:55:01 that's what you were referring to 00:55:03 yes :P 00:55:06 The work of fiction "Harper's Challenge" does have appendices! ("Harper's Challenge" is a book working with me and some other people; and most of the data in the appendices are useless to to most people outside that group) 00:55:35 alise: i thought you meant house of leaves _actually_ had a tonsil. well i guess could be an INTERCAL homage 00:55:36 Well, uh, Douglas Adams was too awesome for appendices. 00:55:38 So there. 00:55:47 (But other people can still read the appendix if you want to read it anyways, in case you like to.) 00:55:49 oerjan: it doesn't, but with all the /other/ things that book has, it must have at lesat an appendix 00:56:02 oerjan: You can't do upside-down, spiral, coloured, ... text and not have an appendix, really. 00:56:25 you'd need an umbilical too, i think 00:56:33 (at the front) 00:57:49 i was about to ask "is the umbilical removable?". 00:58:50 *+cord 00:59:20 "After contacting the original author by the (nowadays nostalgic) means of sending an e-mail to crowther@sitename, where sitename was every host currently on the Internet" 00:59:33 :) 00:59:44 ucb!vax!... 01:00:57 um that wouldn't be Internet, would it? 01:01:04 uucp iirc 01:01:11 I forget what the exact paths looked like. 01:01:20 But I know it passed through a lot of non-"Internet" nodes. 01:01:30 A lot of conversion and whatnot, and also path components with their own curious semantics. 01:01:42 Was a wonderful time, not that I saw it, a wonderful, chaotic time, but a wonderful time nontheless. 01:01:47 *nonetheless 01:01:54 i thought the Internet was sort of defined by having the usual dot addresses 01:02:25 There probably are valid Internet E-Mail addresses that don't have dots in them... 01:02:28 There's an epilogue in the fourth book (of h2g2), that might be considered as a sort of an appendix. 01:03:07 * alise takes a look at it. I don't remember that epilogue. A strange one it is. 01:03:20 Ilari: e-mail != internet, is what i thought 01:03:33 usenet definitely was not the same as internet 01:03:37 The epilogue and the story are a bit unrelated. 01:04:17 There is no technical reason why TLDs can't have MX records, and in fact, some do. 01:04:27 Ilari: oh well, that. 01:04:52 governments should set up ccTLD email addresses for everyone 01:05:20 no, that's a very bad idea 01:05:25 governments should stay the fuck out of the internet 01:06:37 Yes and no. Yes, the Internet should not be controlled by governments, but it would be unreasonable to let anyone else set up ccTLD email addresses for a nations' citizens 01:06:51 Oh, you mean like foo@uk? 01:07:02 I don't really believe in ccTLDs for people, anyway. People move. 01:07:11 -!- Oranjer has joined. 01:07:14 Corporations, sure, corporations never "move" as such. 01:07:44 People, though, and groups that aren't specific to one country, shouldn't be on ccTLDs. The whole point of the Internet, more or less, is to remove geographical boundaries from the picture. 01:16:35 -!- alise has quit (Quit: Lost terminal). 01:22:42 I make hypernet, using hypernet there is no TLDs or anything like that, and no central authorities or central servers, it is completely decentralized. Central authorities are for defining standard protocols and nothing else. Hypernet can pass through anything, including internet, sneakernet disks, ham radio, barcodes, even by somebody remembering all of the numbers and then traveling to another country to type number on other guy's computer! 01:23:09 A hypernet address might look like the following, for example: FM/4.30/DS.AXYPPRAPPREIOTUMQOIZUNVKKOURA.401 01:24:00 Or: FP/1.111.129944.393.4491.22/ST.OAJDGOIJWENTIVNNURNRUUEJJEOQNEIRNNF.62 01:24:38 ("FM" is "file (menu)", "FP" is "file (plain) 01:24:52 -!- ec has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:24:53 ", "DS" is "digital signature", "ST" is "static", etc) 01:26:03 -!- ec has joined. 01:27:46 -!- augur has quit (Ping timeout: 260 seconds). 01:30:38 -!- ws has quit (Quit: ...). 01:31:14 -!- zzo38 has quit (Quit: +++). 01:42:47 -!- Gregor has joined. 01:44:18 -!- alise has joined. 01:44:49 Hello. 01:45:35 alise, http://omploader.org/vNGlocw (safe for work) 01:45:43 alise, detail of the panorama thing in lego 01:45:47 You know, I don't not click NSFW links. :P 01:46:08 BUT BUT YOUR CHILDISH INNOCENCE 01:46:22 alise, okay, http://omploader.org/vNGlobQ http://omploader.org/vNGlobg (sfw, at least if you work at lego, otherwise boss might think you should grow up) ;P 01:46:28 alise, now that is both SFW and NSFW 01:46:36 HOW WILL YOU HANDLE THAT? 01:46:48 okay, now make porn involving it 01:46:56 alise, I can't imagine that 01:46:58 I just can't 01:47:08 well you'd need to add a few holes 01:47:39 alise, lego has a lot of holes in all those technic 1xn bricks 01:47:52 as well as in the technic beams 01:48:16 alise, also filebin is down 01:48:26 Q: I always disable the user list in IRC clients; am I crazy? 01:48:27 which mean I can't upload video of it's operation 01:48:28 :) 01:48:32 alise, yes 01:48:37 AnMaster: Crazy suggestion here -- YouTube 01:48:42 I know, right? YouTube for videos? 01:48:44 Sheesh! 01:48:49 AnMaster: But... /names 01:49:01 alise, well, depends on your needs I guess 01:49:23 Hmm, the tabs layout looks ugly with this xfce theme. 01:49:27 alise, as an op, to review the user list, quite useful to have one on the side 01:49:33 alise, what? No I don't want to become famous due to youtube ;P 01:49:39 AnMaster, you can make videos private 01:49:41 plus I forgot if I had an account there or not 01:49:42 only visible to those with url 01:49:57 and if I had an account, what the fuck the user name was 01:50:00 or password 01:50:11 bleh... on one hand, xfce is convenient 01:50:22 on the other hand, it'd be better if i was motivated enough to make something i like myself 01:50:23 alise, anyway I had problems recoding it. I got quicktime from my camera 01:50:38 ffmpeg to recode as ogg theora gave abysmal quality 01:50:53 Deewiant: I made powerpill give aria quiet=true, because no matter how many packages I install they always download instantly 01:51:01 And aria2 is really noisy 01:51:06 So I never see any download progress at all :-) 01:51:17 Gotta love that download-all-dependencies-at-once-from-hundreds-of-servers-at-once tactic. 01:51:22 Surefire way to max out your connection. 01:52:10 My current desktop: http://imgur.com/cDUlo.png 01:52:20 Guess what login manager I'm using, anyone... 01:53:46 I'll tell you the browser, Namoroka. Which is apparently Mozilla's latest "can't touch this" alternative for those not blessed to use its real name, Firefox. 01:53:47 How about /bin/login 01:54:27 Gregor: xdm. 01:54:36 Interestingly enough, xdm can be made to look good. 01:54:55 You go into its Xresources file, disable all the borders, use an Xft font, and make it use actual RGB colours. 01:57:16 Gregor: Btw, hackego broke agin. 01:57:56 -!- EgoBot has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 01:57:56 -!- HackEgo has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 01:57:59 -!- EgoBot has joined. 01:57:59 -!- HackEgo has joined. 01:58:25 Gregor: it happens when you give it a lot of commands at once, I think 01:58:50 Even more so than usual I don't have time to deal with that now :P 01:59:33 Gregor: Oh, then you'll be interested to know ALL my ideas for lonelydino!-- 01:59:43 And that was, in fact, sarcasm, just in case you were wondering. :P 01:59:50 Okidoke. 02:03:13 Whaaaat? Pidgin depends on cdparanoia. 02:03:26 :-D 02:03:32 Because it depends on some GStreamer thing which depends on cdparanoia. 02:05:37 -!- augur has joined. 02:09:13 Hi augur. 02:09:20 hey alise 02:09:30 Hello suspiciously cordial people. 02:09:31 I am having real trouble finding a good text source for H2G2. :-( 02:11:49 SOMEONE FIND IT FOR ME. 02:16:40 -!- relet has quit (Quit: Leaving.). 02:18:56 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: And a splendid night to you too). 02:19:56 alise, powerpill? aria? 02:20:03 wft? 02:20:05 wtf* 02:20:17 powerpill is a wrapper around the Arch package manager pacman 02:20:20 it uses aria2 to do downloads 02:20:30 aria2 is a program that, given a file -- called a metalink or some nonsense -- 02:20:44 will download a file from many servers, listed in the file, at once -- including HTTP, FTP, bittorrent, etc. 02:20:51 we're talking dozens of servers at once for one single file 02:20:56 the effect is, it completely maxes out your connection 02:21:05 even if you never get full speed, aria2 certainly will 02:21:12 alise, that's not nice 02:21:21 the whole point is speed... 02:21:23 aalnetiquette and so on 02:21:26 ?? 02:21:28 alise, * netiquette and so on 02:21:29 -!- HackEgo has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 02:21:29 -!- EgoBot has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 02:21:31 -!- HackEgo has joined. 02:21:31 -!- EgoBot has joined. 02:21:31 you're an idiot 02:21:32 is what I meant to type 02:21:35 how does it violate netiquette? 02:21:43 it doesn't overload any server 02:21:47 alise, well, it hogs a lot of mirrors 02:21:53 no, it doesn't hog them 02:22:00 anyway it's officially supported by a lot of stuff, so that's just rubbish 02:22:00 http://aria2.sourceforge.net/ 02:22:04 which makes it slower for other users if they are already near fully loaded 02:22:10 alise, okay then 02:22:26 alise, anyway, the mirror I use maxes my connection with normal wget 02:22:29 so I'm happy 02:22:38 maxes as in all you ever get, or maxes as in what your ISP says you should get? 02:22:43 aria2 gives you the latter almost always 02:22:51 anyway, powerpill just downloads all the files of a package and its dependencies with aria2 given all the arch mirrors. 02:22:56 alise, those two are close to each other 02:22:56 (simultaneously) 02:23:00 I should get 8 mbit/s 02:23:17 AnMaster: I used to get 200-300KiB/s on downloads usually. 8 Mbit rated connection. aria2 gave me 800 KiB/s. 02:23:20 I get 950 kB/s normally 02:23:24 far away from exchange 02:23:39 alise, I'm just 50 kiB short of what I should get 02:23:45 and that is probably TCP overhead and such 02:23:51 Well, you're lucky. Most people aren't so. 02:24:34 alise, that is when I'm lucky, more often I get around 800 kiB/s from mirrors.kernel.org 02:24:44 alise, which is still very good 02:25:04 and about what you got with aria2 02:25:29 alise, just use a good mirror, like mirrors.kernel.org 02:25:38 I've used every mirror there is, more or less 02:25:46 alise, mirrors.kernel.org is just 12 hops away from me 02:25:59 $ host mirrors.kernel.org 02:25:59 mirrors.kernel.org is an alias for mirrors.geo.kernel.org. 02:26:04 aha 02:26:08 it goes to a mirror in Sweden 02:26:09 :D 02:26:15 umu.se 02:26:23 I think that is Umeå University 02:26:35 which is in north Sweden, so could have been closer 02:26:53 alise, still best mirror ever for me, much better than other .se mirrors 02:29:40 night → 02:29:40 alise, is picking the parts that I want, and scaling back if it goes over $1000, sensible? 02:29:44 Night AnMaster 02:31:00 DAEMONS=(syslog-ng @network !netfs @crond @oss) 02:31:08 ASYNCHRONICITY FUCK YEAH 02:32:36 Anyone used xfce's wm? 02:32:45 How do I stop it focusing a window when I use the scroll wheel in it? 02:44:58 -!- alise has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 02:47:47 -!- alise has joined. 02:50:53 What is it with yaourt and baffling periods of complete silence in which it does nothing? 03:00:32 Anyone know what part of gstreamer offers gstreamer-properties(1)? 03:04:47 sqlite3.c:45653:34: warning: assuming signed overflow does not occur when assuming that (X + c) >= X is always true 03:04:56 -!- calamari has joined. 03:05:09 Oh no, it's calamari. 03:05:19 alise: ??? :) 03:05:27 Well, you're an octopus! 03:05:40 Not exactly an ... alive one, admittedly, but... 03:05:41 nope, you're safe 03:05:52 I'm a squid 03:06:00 err, right 03:06:01 although arent octopus worse? 03:06:06 err squid 03:06:07 lol 03:06:15 all those deep sea things with tentacles are basically the same imo 03:06:20 no point distinguishing them right? 03:06:29 not really.. octopus are much smarter than squid 03:06:40 yeah, I really care about that :-P 03:07:11 and besides, calamari is actually a star wars return of the jedi reference 03:07:16 Gosh, the Mozilla source code really does take a long time to compile. 03:07:29 Serves me right for installing OSSv4. 03:07:42 I should have stuck with the nice big friendly, warm ball of mud that is ALSA. 03:08:04 How on earth that is related to Mozilla, you may all speculate. 03:08:16 I tried OSSv4 but it wouldn't recognize my sound card 03:09:07 I just use onboard sound because the only sound card that matters is Soundblaster anyway 03:09:12 What do you have, some silly X-Fi nonsense? :P 03:10:23 it's an older card that I've kept around because I like my roland sound canvas daughterboard (for midi) 03:10:42 02:02.0 Multimedia audio controller: Aureal Semiconductor Vortex 2 (rev fe) 03:11:04 Although it really is something like turtle beach montego 03:11:46 -!- CakeProphet has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 03:12:05 came installed in a dell p3 600MHz 03:12:59 Bah, get a Roland MT-32. 03:13:08 Then fail to ever figure out how to connect it properly. Like I did! 03:13:28 But seriously, that MT-32 is a beast. Totally reprogrammable sounds, perfect-sounding default set... 03:13:46 Has a little LED display; games used to display little messages on them when they started up as a goodie to whoever was lucky enough to own an MT-32. 03:13:52 Surprisingly heavy! 03:14:05 The sound that comes out has a little analogue fuzz in the background; quite endearing. 03:14:43 alise: I don't have that unit, but the card I have is basically related 03:14:49 probably has the same sound set 03:15:37 calamari: but that's the thing, the base MT-32 set isn't the special thing 03:15:44 it could be reprogrammed on-the-spot to produce different sounds 03:15:53 so indeed the things that sound so good with the MT-32 are because they reprogram it 03:15:57 thus the imitation cards are basically useless 03:19:16 the turtle beach card can be reprogrammed.. but I liked the sound set on the scb-15 so I use it 03:19:28 a beach with turtles 03:20:07 I tried different sound fonts, and it just never sounded right.. I'd heard the songs too many times the other way 03:20:34 I love the music from Monkey Island on an MT-32. 03:20:40 actually iirc mt-32 was a selectable subset 03:20:47 it wasn't the main sounds 03:20:59 Sounds fresh 19 years later. Or is it 20? Gosh. 03:21:06 I'm saying "gosh" an awful lot today. 03:21:20 xulrunner-oss is *still* building. 03:21:55 and dd_rescue has been trying to pull bits from this microSD card for around 24 hours now 03:22:07 I wish I could tell the kernel not to try so hard 03:22:31 yes it's a broken card, no need for three 180 second timeouts to confirm that 03:23:11 the answer to "why do I need to rebuild xulrunner because of my sound system", incidentally, is "because