00:17:34 The Cray stuff and the dynamic demo stuff was a bit of a disappointment; the actual alternative demo compo wasn't that bad, though. At least not everything in it. 00:24:04 -!- fax has quit ("Leaving"). 00:24:19 -!- fax has joined. 00:28:10 nooo 00:29:28 NO 00:29:32 fungot, help me 00:29:33 Oranjer: i could not fnord refrain from telling what i found was only this that the horses had become utterly frightful, and i therefore read long in the dark. there is little in common between garrulous country folk and a paralytic who cannot see, hear, or speak to them it may be that he also had distinct affections amongst the other cats in other parts of the 00:29:50 okay 00:29:51 thanks 00:30:07 see ya 00:30:09 peoples 00:44:08 okay 00:44:09 see ya 00:44:19 i'm going to close my eyes now, though 00:44:20 -> 00:44:24 <- 00:44:26 oh and by that 00:44:29 i mean going to sleep 00:44:49 so yeah -> 00:45:17 <- 00:45:57 ok 00:46:28 -> -> <- <- -> -> -> <-<-<- 00:46:46 a new esolang? 00:46:53 DDR-based? 00:46:55 _could_ be... 00:47:13 deutsche demokratische republik 00:47:35 no 00:58:01 -!- ais523 has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 01:21:32 * SimonRC goes to bed 02:02:33 -!- FireFly has quit ("Later"). 02:04:14 eek backwards time travel! 02:27:43 Just messing with time. Wonder what stories will appear in RISKS this time... 03:48:38 Hmm... On password hall of shame, one site is described as: "Permits only alphanumeric characters; passwords are case-insensitive; limits passwords to 20 characters". Hmm... Doesn't sound that bad to me. 03:51:23 that's like, the sort of limitations real people have 03:54:54 Entropy: ~103 bits. The strongest passwords I have had where ~59 bits... 03:55:21 *were 04:00:21 Case-insenstive alphanum racks ~5.17 bits of entropy per symbol. Printable ASCII racks ~6.57 (~6.55 without space). Couple extra symbols make up the difference. 11 symbol alphanum case-insensitive password is stronger than 8 symbol full printable ASCII. 04:09:03 Heh... Unicode 5.2 adds some Egyptian Hieroglyphs.. 04:09:17 cool 04:14:44 Also lots of SAMARITAN, CANADIAN SYLLABICS, TAI THAM, VEDIC, LISU, BAMUM, JAVANESE, TAI VIET, MEETEI MAYEK, IMPERIAL ARAMAIC, OLD SOUTH ARABIAN, AVESTAN, INSCRIPTIONAL PAHLAVI, OLD TURKIC, KAITHI stuff. 04:15:05 Go Canada! 04:15:59 fungot 04:16:00 Asztal: you want all space eliminated, than to wait for 04:16:12 Must be my DNS :( 04:25:06 Why it seems that all more serious "sudden acceleration" cases involve cars with automatic transmission and start buttons? 04:26:46 Maybe because they don't tend to have a mechanical safety mechanism to prevent the card from starting in anything but park? 04:26:59 (might have something to do with clutch disconnecting engine from wheels, and traditional ignition key lock being able to mechanically disconnect ignition power...) 04:27:09 -!- jix has quit ("Lost terminal"). 04:27:26 -!- Azstal has joined. 04:27:42 (Interesting fact: I have a tendency to park slightly uphill, meaning I sometimes don't discover I haven't started the car until halfway out of the parking stall, wondering where the power steering went) 04:31:07 Reminds me of that one incident when my father parked car in quite steep downhill. He then got the idea that since there is barrier ahead that needs to be moved anyway, he's going to release the brakes and roll to that barrier without starting engine... 04:31:35 That didn't go very well... 04:32:10 also, this is pretty funny, even if you don't play Magic: http://magiclampoon.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Thran-Generator.gif 04:32:43 (no brake power assist => almost no brakes). 04:33:24 RIGHT... 04:35:17 -!- Oranjer has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 04:36:20 Also, malfunctioning ABS can kill brakes pretty efficiently... 04:39:03 -!- Asztal has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 04:39:12 The standard automatic transmission interlock prevents shifting out of park without brakes being held... 04:42:33 -!- Oranjer has joined. 04:43:10 what's the point of that? 04:43:13 ^style 04:43:13 Available: agora alice c64 ct darwin discworld europarl ff7 fisher ic irc* jargon lovecraft nethack pa speeches ss wp youtube 04:43:23 ^style discworld 04:43:23 Selected style: discworld (a subset of Terry Pratchett's Discworld books) 04:45:30 fungot, what color is the librarian? 04:45:31 coppro: ' what's happening?" he said. 04:46:03 uh 04:46:14 fungot, that's not an appropriate answer 04:46:14 Oranjer: ' what about those?' she said. 04:46:29 fungot, are all of discworld's quotes actual quotes? 04:46:31 Oranjer: " the sea, and birds, and magical leakage, which has far too many dimensions for anyone to find their niche. they'd welcomed him, or them, rather. they seemed to think that i just used to build sweat lodges and smell like a blacksmith's armpit and drink scumble and dance around the fire with horns on and piss in the trees, 04:46:43 hahahhahaha 04:47:01 bsmntbombdood: That interlock? Well, prevent that incident that gave Audi the backronym "Accelerates Under Demonic Influence": 1D10T pressing gas instead of brake until the car crashes... 04:47:31 what 04:47:40 Ilari are you a person 04:47:49 people have driven cars with manual transmissions with no such interlock for ages 04:48:17 i thought we already established all the finns were AIs. or was that the swedes... 04:48:44 oerjan: Probably the swedes 04:48:53 fungot, describe the Great A'tuin 04:48:54 coppro: " um," said carrot. " i thought perhaps the food-tasters were getting fnord and fnord 04:49:07 hmm... Pretty sure fnord isn't discworld 04:49:10 dammit all that fnord is clogging up the results 04:49:20 I think fnord is just fungot 04:49:21 Oranjer: ' they weren't real,' she said wearily. 04:49:25 haha 04:50:17 yep, fnord is used to replace any word that only exists once in the corpus 04:50:24 bsmntbombdood: It might also have something to do with pedal layout of that Audi... 04:59:01 the programming equivalent of "mu" is a page fault 05:07:22 -!- oerjan has quit ("Good night"). 05:15:17 http://i.imgur.com/Fypvj.jpg ^^Actually, this was in Gregor's Facebook stuff 05:22:51 -!- madbrain has quit ("Radiateur"). 05:36:03 -!- immibis has quit (Remote closed the connection). 05:52:30 -!- fax has quit ("Leaving"). 05:54:00 -!- Oranjer has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 06:17:13 -!- Sgeo has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 06:32:55 -!- augur has joined. 06:38:01 hey guys 07:22:28 -!- Pthing has quit (Remote closed the connection). 07:59:59 -!- clog has quit (ended). 08:00:00 -!- clog has joined. 08:08:50 -!- Azstal has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 09:00:22 -!- coppro has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 09:54:13 -!- puzzlet has joined. 10:18:33 I haven't fnorded every corpus, but what oerjan said applies to most of them. 10:22:16 -!- adam_d_ has joined. 10:29:49 -!- adam_d has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 10:32:17 -!- kar8nga has joined. 12:30:15 -!- jix has joined. 12:52:24 -!- oerjan has joined. 13:21:17 oerjan, iwc 13:21:33 y ic 13:21:50 hm? 13:22:10 *small woosh* 13:22:37 oerjan, possibly 13:23:27 * AnMaster has been reading a changelog containing lots of odd typos. Like "breath search" instead of "breadth search" 13:24:01 breath search is performed _entirely_ through whooshes, me thinks 13:25:19 I suspect "chanhing" is meant to be "changing" though. "grphics" is probably "graphics". And "chnages" looks somewhat interesting too. 13:25:55 switched na probably 13:26:26 oerjan, what about the extra h though (if you referred to "chanhing") 13:26:35 err wait 13:26:37 misread that 13:26:38 yeah grphics is *probably* graphics, could be tons of other stuff too. 13:26:50 like gruphics 13:26:52 always grope your hics 13:26:53 oerjan: "ADD: ambient sound effects (for all grphics + forest + beaches)" 13:27:02 oklopol, ambient sound effects for grphics? 13:27:13 :D 13:27:27 okay, i'll take that back 13:28:11 oh and "goods" was typoed as "gods" in one place. Routing algorithms for gods, hm? 13:29:33 even if you ignore the typos the grammar are in many entries quite awkward. 13:29:41 just as long as they don't route it through a hyperspace bypass 13:30:25 oerjan, oh I think they fixed the bug where you could create a tunnel *over* water some versions ago. 13:31:58 that's discriminatory toward underground oceans! 13:32:22 hah 13:36:56 -!- oerjan has quit ("Later"). 13:48:54 -!- fax has joined. 13:57:18 -!- Rugxulo has joined. 13:59:01 negative remainders ... what would be the use of that? (e.g. Befunge) 14:40:23 hm? 14:40:59 you ever used negative remainers? 14:41:46 isn't it undefined in befunge what happens with negative arguments 14:41:57 there is the fingeprint MODU with some specified variants 14:46:45 -!- kar8nga has quit (Remote closed the connection). 15:08:20 what are negative remainders? 15:09:30 I guess from mod (%)'ding a negative number 15:09:58 i even often need mod for floating point numbers 15:10:06 I don't really know, I just noticed some remark from Jeffrey Long's fungus test suite 15:11:01 but (mod z) should always reduce the number between [0, z), basically find a representative for x + z*Z from that inteval... the remainder should never be negative 15:11:29 hmmm, official handles it okay, so it must be a bug in one I'm using 15:11:41 oklopol: That is a matter of taste, really; Scheme, for example, defines both "modulo" and "remainder", with different behaviour for negative arguments. 15:11:52 !befunge 09-2%.@ 15:11:52 -1 15:12:25 fizzie: haven't really seen a use case for negative remainders 15:12:47 i just want "reduce to interval" 15:12:55 well, reduce onto interval maybe 15:13:08 if that interval is different for negatives, well, that's just stupid 15:13:18 but, probably there are use cases if scheme does that 15:13:42 cuz, well, i hear scheme is pretty awesome 15:14:11 oklopol: The "remainder" is defined the way it is so that (= n1 (+ (* n2 (quotient n1 n2)) (remainder n1 n2))) is #t for every integer n1, n2 as long as n2 is not zero. 15:16:28 i suppose that makes sense 15:16:34 and modulo is the reduction thingie 15:17:20 Yes; (modulo n1 n2) always has the same sign as n2. 15:17:26 well i don't suppose that, that is the superior way; for quotient, negatives and positives should be treated symmetrically, so there needs to be a function that gives you the sensible remainder. 15:19:01 i hate how complicated trivial things are 15:19:22 BTW, I forget the name, but Pressey's site has a really small Scheme subset that can compile itself 15:24:07 I guess you mean http://catseye.tc/projects/pixley/doc/pixley.html 15:24:19 yes 15:24:20 "minimal subset of Scheme that was still expressive enough to permit writing a Pixley interpreter without too much pain" 15:27:50 -!- olsner has quit (Read error: 60 (Operation timed out)). 15:30:31 -!- ehird has joined. 15:31:36 -!- olsner has joined. 15:37:51 14:28:35 AnMaster: maybe 15:37:52 14:28:44 but liking mirc is enough of a reason to ban someone 15:37:53 that's an uncommonly assholish and idiotic statement coming from you. 15:38:05 the thing madbrain linked to was talked about earlier by fizzie, FYI 15:39:06 14:34:21 this channel can be a good place to learn until people tell you off for spamming 15:39:06 Preoccupied with something, are we? 15:39:12 Burn the witch! 15:39:55 14:35:23 befunge93 is not interesting 15:39:55 you is not not an idiot for saying thatt 15:39:56 *that 15:41:31 there's a Befunge93 interpreter plugin for mIRC 15:41:58 15:55:32 SimonRC, I'm reading OSDev right now 15:41:58 i'm almost entirely sure you do not have the prerequisite knowledge. 15:42:51 to read? :-P 15:43:01 To write an OS. 15:43:14 there are some really really simple OSes out there, though 15:43:26 I'm talking 512 bytes 15:43:39 Thanks for that. Totally irrelevant. 15:43:59 just like Befunge93? :-) 15:44:30 You'd be good at word association, I see. 15:44:59 I be not not bad, true 15:49:17 21:15:17 http://i.imgur.com/Fypvj.jpg ^^Actually, this was in Gregor's Facebook stuff 15:49:18 You have a stalker, Gregor! 15:50:03 it says "sale" but do they mean use? 15:52:31 -!- BeholdMyGlory has joined. 15:57:06 -!- Rugxulo has left (?). 16:02:09 ehird: say one good thing about someone, right now. 16:02:26 i like you oklopol 16:02:42 i'm twitching now, I think it's a stroke! 16:02:48 :))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))) 16:02:51 I AM LIKED! 16:02:52 I AM LIKED! 16:02:52 I AM LIKED! 16:02:52 I AM LIKED! 16:02:52 I AM LIKED! 16:02:53 I AM LIKED! 16:02:54 I AM LIKED! 16:02:56 I AM LIKED! 16:02:58 I AM LIKED! 16:03:00 I AM LIKED! 16:03:02 I AM LIKED! 16:03:02 YOU ARE LIKED! 16:03:03 YOU ARE LIKED! 16:03:03 YOU ARE LIKED! 16:03:04 YOU ARE LIKED! 16:03:04 I AM LIKED! 16:03:05 YOU ARE LIKED! 16:03:06 YOU ARE LIKED! 16:03:10 hi 16:03:16 HEHEEEHEEEHEEHHEEHEEHHEHHEHHEEHHEEEEEHHEEHEEHHH 16:03:19 HEHEEEHEEEHEEHHEEHEEHHEHHEHHEEHHEEEEEHHEEHEEHHH 16:03:19 HEHEEEHEEEHEEHHEEHEEHHEHHEHHEEHHEEEEEHHEEHEEHHH 16:03:19 HEHEEEHEEEHEEHHEEHEEHHEHHEHHEEHHEEEEEHHEEHEEHHH 16:03:19 HEHEEEHEEEHEEHHEEHEEHHEHHEHHEEHHEEEEEHHEEHEEHHH 16:03:25 okokokokokokokokokjkokokokookkokoo 16:03:26 dammit 16:03:33 okokokokokokokoko 16:03:34 okokokokokoko 16:03:35 okokokoko 16:03:41 (o) 16:04:00 okokokokokokokpkokokokokokokokokokokokokokokoko 16:04:00 perfect apart from that p 16:04:12 shit, i need to go outside :< 16:04:26 okokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokoko 16:04:34 perfect apart from nothing 16:04:57 okokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokookokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokokoko 16:05:02 hell yeah 16:27:35 -!- adam_d__ has joined. 16:30:08 now there's something I haven't heard before (someone claiming that Apple's advertising means that anyone who considers Macs easier or smoother to use is *under a placebo effect*_ 16:30:12 *effect*) 16:33:39 -!- adam_d_ has quit (Read error: 60 (Operation timed out)). 16:39:24 -!- kar8nga has joined. 16:45:05 -!- Slereah has quit. 16:52:07 -!- Pthing has joined. 16:52:47 -!- FireFly has joined. 17:06:14 -!- Slereah has joined. 17:24:28 -!- Jakepii has joined. 17:25:33 ehh... esoteric programming... not esoteric/occcult philosophy then... :P 17:26:01 You worked it out without us telling you! 17:26:07 That's new. 17:26:26 Obviously the average person interested in the latter doesn't trust deductive reasoning enough to figure it out... 17:26:31 Awwww 17:26:37 It's so much fun when they don't 17:26:40 Slereah: I know, right? :( 17:26:46 Jakepii: Sacrifice a goat anyway. 17:27:02 WE CONJURE THE SPIRITS OF COMPUTERS WITH OUR SPELLS 17:27:12 Isn't the cover of SICP pretty esoteric? 17:27:24 Mystical parentheses. 17:30:05 ok, but what the hell is esoteric programming? 17:30:24 How did you figure it out from just this room? 17:30:25 I'm curious! 17:30:32 Jakepii: ever heard of brainfuck? 17:30:35 INTERCAL? 17:31:35 Your silence is stunning. 17:32:05 i'm just trying to figure out all your output. 17:32:22 funny, that's what the average esolanger does. 17:32:37 Jakepii: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esoteric_programming_language 17:33:16 tl;dr a deliberately pathological programming language, intended either for our amusement or to explore new language-design ideas; often purposefully over-minimal 17:33:26 often designed deliberately to be hard or frustrating to use 17:33:33 http://esolangs.org/ is us. http://esolangs.org/wiki/ 17:33:48 hmm, that still redirects to the voxelperfect mirror 17:33:52 http://esolangs.org/wiki/Main_Page 17:34:43 aha ok. interesting stuff but not exactly what i'm looking for right now. Thank you all for these enlightening moments 17:34:48 -!- Jakepii has quit ("Lhdss"). 17:35:05 -!- Asztal has joined. 17:35:08 what I love is the massive barrier between us and then 17:35:47 esolanging is a logic-based pursuit that requires a good amount of intellect and reasoning (to make a good one, that is) 17:35:50 or even to use one 17:36:33 esoteryck magyck is just meaningless context-free bullshit thrown together until it seems vaguely aesthetically pleasing, then accepted as dogma until someone decides that it isn't unmeaningful enough 17:42:32 whoa 17:42:45 about that "Jakepii" above 17:42:53 Whoa, people. 17:42:57 My blinds are mown. 17:43:09 ehird, they grow grass or something? 17:43:16 Totally. 17:43:19 I have to mow them. 17:43:24 ehird, cool. Where can I get some 17:43:33 Every day, oh look at my blinds... better go blow my minds 17:43:34 oops 17:43:36 I mean mow my blinds 17:43:55 ehird, interesting use of plural there :D 17:44:12 some split personality thing? 17:44:13 I was just pointing out my spoonerism due to the rather high chance you didn't get it. 17:44:55 mhm 17:45:14 -!- coppro has joined. 17:45:37 coppro: why'd cwalker ragequit? 17:46:21 ehird: no clue 17:46:25 e didn't even FAGE 17:46:46 i like eir deregistration email 17:46:55 yeah 17:47:01 I guess this is about some nomic? 17:47:07 agora. 17:47:16 clue is in the spivak 17:47:30 B has spivak too 17:48:01 Yes, but 90% of everyone stopped giving a shit about B after they took Agora's ruleset and made it crappier. 17:48:09 spivak hm... Could it possibly mean "speak" or "speech" or such? (thus refer to the non-standard words used) 17:48:23 Michael Spivak, mathematician. 17:48:32 In his books, used e/eir/etc pronouns for gender neutrality. 17:48:35 aha 17:48:41 Said someone else invented them, but didn't know the name. 17:48:47 So they're Spivak pronouns. 17:49:06 that story sounds familiar now that you mention it 17:49:08 e, eir, em 17:49:22 emself or eirself, who knows, nobody's said it 17:49:22 eirs 17:49:32 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spivak_pronoun 17:49:36 we use spivak (original) 17:49:37 also, rofl at BobTHJ threatening to quit over a repeal of random stuff 17:49:51 coppro: random stuff that he helped shape, he says 17:49:54 /almost/ makes me actually want to repeal cards 17:49:58 surely by now you know he's an authoritarian egotist? 17:50:06 ehird: sure. Doesn't make it unfunny 17:50:11 yep 17:50:21 my repeal proposal is better because it's more fun :( 17:50:26 I like it 17:50:34 highly scammable too :D 17:50:38 [[The original pronoun set was not created by me. I think I read about it in a newspaper clipping, perhaps from the Boston Globe, during the time I taught at Brandeis, and I believe it was credited to an anthropologist; later on, when I wanted to use it, I was unable to locate the source. In "The Joy of TeX", I wrote "Numerous approaches to this problem have been suggested, but one strikes me as particularly simple and sensible." I assumed people would figu 17:50:38 I was using a construction I couldn't properly credit, and not consider me so immodest as to praise my own invention (though I guess that was a rather immodest assumption).]] — Spivak 17:50:47 coppro: erm, only if you have enough friends 17:51:00 i.e., yes, if you have a bunch of partners in crime, you can repeal a bunch of stuff... you could also use a proposal 17:51:06 admittedly it makes it AI 1 instead of AI 2, so to speak 17:51:13 but really, that's not a huge thing 17:51:38 ehird: but the thing is that this rule could easily erase half of a collection of rules 17:51:45 and leave the rest scammable 17:51:53 that's true 17:51:57 but not majorly scammable, I don't think 17:52:03 it'd be fun chaos for a bit, but the game would go on 17:52:09 it would! 17:52:41 and murphy would spend hours detailing the effects of appealing various lists of rules before and after :P 17:53:54 coppro: think it'll pass with the typo? without? 17:54:07 i figure it'd cause people to vote against it, but i like it 17:54:14 ehird: I'd be fine with the typo personally, and I'll vote 17:54:16 FOR 17:54:21 but others? 17:54:23 remember to play around with Chamber 17:54:33 ugh, i have to learn that shit? 17:54:44 i've been practicing the policy of totally ignoring chamber card blogosphere automatics 17:55:01 chamber's pretty easy 17:55:15 there are three Titles and three Chambers, being red, green, and purple 17:55:15 anyway, do you think it'll haev more of a chance of passing iwth the typo? methinks so 17:55:21 it's like rock-paper-scissors 17:55:27 ehird: maybe. Not hugely 17:55:34 i'll do it 17:55:43 'cause at AI 2, this is pretty tenuous anyway 17:57:43 ehird: distrib-u-matic? 17:57:55 Oh yeah, we can't submit proposals freely. 17:58:13 I guess I really did turn my mind off to Agora when it started sucking 17:58:21 coppro: I don't even know if I have one, what're the reports titled? 17:59:04 ehird: hang on, I have an Anarchist database right now 17:59:33 you have 6 17:59:46 It's like Christmas! 18:00:02 coppro: does that elevating-as-separate-action-then-tallying-the-elevations actually work? I wouldn't be arsed to make any state 18:00:04 *couldn't 18:00:11 ehird: what? 18:00:26 elevating a rule doesn't change anything, it's a no-op action 18:00:31 then the rule picks the rules elevated most 18:00:41 yes... 18:00:45 I'm just wondering if that works or if I have to keep track of the elevations e.g. as a part of the rule 18:00:49 because, you know, legalistic assholes 18:01:05 Nope. Agora's platonic gamestate includes whether or not a rule has been elevated 18:01:11 in theory nothing needs a tracker 18:01:29 it's not whether or not it has been elevated, it's how many times :) 18:01:30 but sure 18:01:38 how many times as well 18:01:42 yeah 18:01:45 The game is all-knowing 18:01:50 aum 18:01:54 auuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuum 18:02:00 it's just a question of whether its players are ;) 18:02:15 incidentally, I'm about to make 10+ proposals distributable! 18:02:31 wait, noooo! 18:02:35 I miscalculated! 18:02:42 NOOO 18:02:42 MY LIFE 18:02:44 DOWN THE DRAIN 18:02:50 anyway, time to make it distributable 18:03:00 who wants to bet that ais523 will intend to make it undistributable? 18:03:02 btw, ehird, are you active? 18:03:04 failing that, BobTHJ? 18:03:07 coppro: um 18:03:08 I don't know 18:03:09 I think so 18:03:18 nobody deactivated me, unless it was in the 200 messages I didn't read 18:03:21 no you aren't 18:03:34 can you submit proposals while inactive? 18:03:34 I think I did as part of my clout win 18:03:34 yes 18:04:00 "I spend one Distribu-o-Matic to make this proposal distributable." this is the syntax right>? 18:04:02 *right? 18:04:07 yep 18:04:08 that'll work 18:04:17 btw it should be Distrib-o-matic 18:04:23 clearly someone never tried to pronounce it 18:07:51 btw, we need more officers 18:07:55 in particular, a Promotor would be nice 18:08:16 Oh, I would like to have an office. But Promotor is too linked to our current broken distributability rap. 18:08:19 crap. 18:08:24 And everyone distrusts me :P 18:10:08 Distributability isn't broken right now 18:10:13 damaged, maybe, but not broken 18:10:19 propose to repeal it; I'll vote FOR 18:11:16 I don't like the idea. 18:11:43 The solution to "TOO MANY PROPOSALS AAH MY BRAIN" isn't "high barrier to using the actual nomic part of the game, and have it easy for people to stop it being distributable to boot" 18:11:52 It's "promote more moderation" 18:12:30 ok, then let's do that by repealing Distributability 18:13:35 But people would take it as "ROLLLLLLLL IN THE PROPOSALS". 18:13:45 Let's do it vai my crazy repealing proposal! :P 18:13:46 sure, for about a week 18:13:47 *via 18:14:12 you only have 7 hours go 18:14:35 coppro: ? 18:14:45 ehird: to submit before this week's distribution comes due 18:15:04 I don't wanna detract the focus from my crazy repealing :) 18:15:10 Actually, I should vote for both your proposal and mine 18:15:20 fine. I'll propose; you Distrib-u-Matic it? 18:15:22 Although that'd result in over 50 rules being repealed 18:15:28 coppro: Ehh. 18:15:41 I'm not too interested in individual repeal proposals right now. 18:15:44 There's a lot more cruft in the game than just that. 18:16:09 ehird: yes. But a lot of things (like Distributability) need to be removed with a scalpel, not an axe 18:16:25 But the scalpel comes after! :-P 18:16:32 we can do both at once 18:16:40 there are some 20-odd different repeal proposals in the Pool 18:16:43 (If my repealer gets through, you bet that the 20 repeals will shortly turn into 30 to clean everything up.) 18:16:43 coppro: Eh, fine. 18:17:33 Can you transfer cards? I am an ascetic. :P 18:20:01 ehird: yes you can 18:20:09 I'll pay the going rate in zm if you like 18:20:21 I don't believe in the IBA 18:21:47 ok 18:21:53 you should, it's pretty awesome 18:22:13 Any bank based on the same basic rate-setting as the RBoA is one I won't support. 18:22:35 what sort of rate-setting do you want? 18:22:42 Someone should make a bank based on the PBA's ideal, considering that the final text of the PBA was, uh, free-market capitalism. 18:23:09 coppro: based on market activity, scarcity... 18:23:34 ehird: the IBA is in theory - or would be, if comex bothered to update it ever 18:23:52 I guess I hallucinate those manual rate chhanges. 18:23:54 *changes 18:39:41 -!- BeholdMyGlory_ has joined. 18:44:08 "would fig I was" <-- your client line breaks strangely 18:44:32 figure that I was 18:44:41 It does not account for some length, I think; the hostname, perhaps. 18:44:47 maybe 18:44:51 And if you have the +/- thing enabled, obviously that adds a character. 18:45:17 ehird, yeah but that was indeed more than just one char cut off 18:50:01 AnMaster: how small did you get that kernel? 18:51:59 ehird, mine? Same as I said last time yesterday. Didn't bother to continue after that 18:52:05 * AnMaster looks for the size 18:53:20 apperently I compiled your kernel last 18:53:33 * AnMaster runs make clean, copies his .config and runs make 18:53:47 I'm way too lazy to make a Linux VM :( 18:53:54 ehird, same 18:53:59 I meant 18:54:01 to actually compile mine 18:54:02 :D 18:54:35 -!- FireFly has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 18:55:42 ah 18:56:02 -!- BeholdMyGlory has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 18:56:10 ehird, too busy with irl stuff to actually compile your 18:56:15 Compile my? 18:56:52 ehird, your kernel 18:56:54 if you want again 18:56:59 -!- adam_d__ has changed nick to adam_d. 18:57:03 Compile my. 19:00:32 ehird, that is what I'm too busy IRL to do yes 19:00:48 Too busy to compile my. 19:00:52 ehird, oh and mine was 331280 19:00:57 You fail at grammar, btw. 19:01:04 ehird, I said "your" 19:01:14 your kernel 19:01:17 "too busy with irl stuff to actually compile your" is not a sentence. 19:01:29 ehird, sure. 19:01:46 And why should I care? It is IRC. 19:01:56 And no, that is not a good reason :P 19:02:27 The sad thing is that you probably started both of those sentences with and in some ludicrous attempt to make me mad... 19:03:20 ehird, no. Not both 19:03:31 let me guess 19:03:35 Wah, there were three sentences 19:03:37 only remembered it by the second one :P 19:03:54 ehird, good catch. But no I didn't mean that either :P 19:15:52 -!- BeholdMyGlory_ has changed nick to BeholdMyGlory. 19:30:49 -!- Rugxulo has joined. 19:35:57 WHO IS EVEN A PERSON 19:36:22 huh? 19:38:42 EHIRD MAKES NO SENSE 19:38:50 YOUR FACE MAKES NO SENSE 19:39:23 THAT'S NOT WHAT YOUR MOM SAID 19:39:51 also, don't forget to respect your elders ;-) 19:42:08 but then I'd have to stop flinging shit at everyone in here 19:42:10 and what would I do then 19:42:12 *everyone in 19:42:14 FUCK 19:42:14 THIS 19:42:15 KEYBOARD 19:43:00 the Cherry? 19:43:32 ehird: fucking keyboards tends to break them 19:43:47 ohh, I thought you were making a reference to mechanical keyswitches yesterday, since the same Cherry makes most of them and I'm looking for a high-quality keyboard 19:43:48 and i was like 19:43:51 um how did you know 19:43:52 but yes 19:43:55 yes this keyboard is made by cherry 19:43:57 and fuck it 19:44:02 SimonRC: true. 19:44:07 wait, how do you know this? 19:44:21 induction 19:44:40 force and sticky liquids are bad enough on their own, never mind together 19:44:54 why have you... thought about this, SimonRC 19:45:07 it took maybe a second to do so 19:45:47 keyboards don't even have any appropriate holes. 19:45:52 IT IS A NONSENSICAL TOPIC 19:58:40 ehird, at least your mom does! 19:58:56 Almost unfunny. 19:58:59 It isn't even unfunny. 19:59:08 so bad it is good? 19:59:09 or worse? 19:59:33 It isn't anything. 19:59:40 ah that level 20:00:18 * AnMaster ponders doing a "your mom" on that line, but decides not to 20:00:42 Your mom is fat. Also a whore. 20:00:44 OH sNAP 20:00:46 WITH A CAPITAL S 20:01:18 sNAP is better 20:01:26 It's like... s-NAP 20:01:35 Instead of just a plain loud snap 20:01:36 secure NAP? 20:01:53 like, when you can take a nap and know no one will shoot at you. 20:03:13 Doesn't that require omniscience 20:03:43 ehird, yeah that is probably why it isn't very common 20:06:15 -!- sebbu2 has joined. 20:12:06 -!- sebbu has quit (Read error: 60 (Operation timed out)). 20:12:39 Virtual machines are such fun. 20:14:21 :-S 20:15:08 AnMaster: btw, does that 300 KiB kernel of yours boot? :) 20:16:22 ehird, didn't have time to test it. Nor do I now 20:16:35 and computer is turned off and in my backpack already 20:18:32 20:18:54 Stop peeing all over the place 20:18:57 did it really just install gnu emacs 20 20:18:57 ehird, what was that? space space space ... [0010] ...? 20:19:06 i'm spacing all over the place! 20:19:06 ehird, what did? 20:19:16 that mastodon linux distro thing! trying with another vm 20:19:44 That was 0x10, ^P 20:19:55 Deewiant, yes just showed what my client showed it as 20:20:00 "Data Link Escape" 20:20:08 Deewiant, how fitting 20:20:10 irssi shows it as an inverted P 20:20:21 ehird emits those every now and then. 20:20:38 Weird. 20:20:47 I can't figure out how to get irssi to put arbitrary control characters into things 20:21:49 sdgdhgsdfg 20:21:52 dsdgf 20:22:01 hmm, ^J and ^M do the same thing 20:23:05 lkjdPlsdj 20:23:06 hm 20:24:00 some control chars self-insert 20:24:13 some appear to self insert but do special things 20:24:19 and some are emacs-like commands 20:26:30 bearocracy 20:26:33 a society ruled by bears 20:27:28 that would be ursulocracy 20:27:36 but mine is a pun :( 20:27:44 yeah 20:27:51 uranocracy. 20:33:28 -!- oerjan has joined. 20:38:20 hmm, that still redirects to the voxelperfect mirror <-- i don't think that's a mirror, just an alternative hostname? 20:38:31 well, right 20:41:20 ehird, btw can you compile recent 2.6 kernels with gcc 3.x any longer? 20:47:31 oerjan: if you turned into a mansion, how would that affect your daily life? social? 20:47:31 fuck, there goes my 1 GB 20:47:47 ehird: less restaurant visits 20:47:59 more space 20:48:21 maybe i could invite people, should be an improvement 20:50:09 i think it _could_ be an improvement overall 20:51:09 _ _testing_ 20:51:27 __ _more testing_ 20:51:41 -!- calamari has joined. 20:51:46 seems underscore is identical to underlining on this terminal 20:52:28 once_more _with feeling_ 20:53:02 irssi attempts to turn underscores into unining sometimes 20:53:19 otherwise you can use ctrl-_ to turn underlining on and off 20:53:19 probably. 20:53:19 oerjan: and how would your family feel about this? 20:53:19 would you feel pressure to spend time with more house-like peers? 20:53:19 Or perhaps just the mansionic? 20:53:19 yes, that's what i was testing 20:53:24 oerjan: invite people into yourself? 20:53:26 this is a pg-13 channel, oerjan. 20:53:28 now back to the topic of you turning into a mansion 20:53:42 that _was_ on topic 20:53:43 that's irrsi 20:54:09 i guess i cannot be sure irssi doesn't use underlining for _all_ underscores 20:54:16 *irssi 20:54:30 ugh, connection is lagging 20:55:02 will disconnect soon :( 20:55:29 hm i cannot see any difference from an underscore in a shell either 20:55:35 what is up with it?# 20:56:20 ehird: it's hard to spend time with house-like peers if you cannot move 20:57:08 and a mansion is isolated per definition isn't it 20:57:22 `define mansion 20:57:34 * sign of the zodiac: (astrology) one of 12 equal areas into which the zodiac is divided \ * a large and imposing house \ [22]wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn 20:58:04 slooow 20:58:35 i am of course assuming i still have access to broadband... cannot make it _too_ horror-like either... 20:59:15 * SimonRC recalls a sketch parodying every makeover program at once 20:59:35 that _was_ on topic just appeared 20:59:45 they made over a 35yo bachelour into a lovely georgian mansion 20:59:46 -!- kar8nga has quit (Remote closed the connection). 20:59:50 although i guess there are dual mansions 21:00:41 up to simonrc slooow 21:00:41 did my thing about house-like peers appear when oerjan said that? 21:00:41 cause damn, i said it ages earlier 21:00:50 ehird: no 21:01:54 either ehird is not responding to pings or he is horribly lagged 21:02:09 and if he doesn't respond to pings than he _deserves_ it *MWAHAHAHA* 21:02:49 *then 21:03:15 ehird: ping 21:04:41 seems my connection has finally died.. 21:04:41 farewell 21:05:59 secrets about ducks 21:06:09 anyone here use thunderbird? 21:06:50 Yep 21:07:29 THEY ARE QUIZZICALLY LOOKING AT YOUR HOUSE 21:07:29 oerjan: pong 21:07:29 (this pong may be delayed due to stupid ISPness) 21:07:29 [20:06] oerjan: ehird: no 21:07:31 [20:06] oerjan: either ehird is not responding to pings or he is horribly lagged 21:07:33 [20:06] oerjan: and if he doesn't respond to pings than he _deserves_ it *MWAHAHAHA* 21:07:35 [20:06] oerjan: *then 21:07:37 [20:06] oerjan: ehird: ping 21:07:41 Deewiant: Yep what 21:07:49 oh 21:07:49 thunderbird 21:07:56 4 minutes or so 21:08:15 "4 minutes or so" 21:08:21 4:13 21:08:30 20 seconds or so :) 21:08:36 20:07 21:09:05 Tell me when you receive "20:07"; I sent it as soon as the clock hit 20:08, pretty much 21:09:05 (Tell me as in the time) 21:09:16 2009-10-25 22:08:36 ( ehird) 20:07 21:09:34 So we're down to sub-minute lag? (20:09) 21:09:35 irssi doesn't show seconds 21:09:37 -!- Sgeo has joined. 21:09:45 It does if you configure it to. 21:09:46 oerjan: it does if you set the right variable 21:09:50 ehird: that's what my 20 seconds meant 21:10:46 see "/set timestamp" for useful suggestions 21:11:33 well i won't, it would use up 3 chars of my precious visible left overlapped window estate 21:12:29 how about removing the colons to compensate? 21:12:41 (Received what you said at 20:09 too) 21:12:41 [20:10] Deewiant: 2009-10-25 22:08:36 ( ehird) 20:07 21:12:58 how about not really caring? 21:13:24 As you can see, my irssi timestamp is 20 characters, including the trailing space. :-P 21:13:25 [20:13] oerjan: irssi doesn't show seconds 21:13:44 ehird: up to 4 minutes again :( 21:13:55 i guess it's highly fluctuating 21:14:36 [20:13] Sgeo joined the chat room. 21:14:36 [20:13] Deewiant: It does if you configure it to. 21:14:36 [20:13] SimonRC: oerjan: it does if you set the right variable 21:14:36 [20:13] oerjan: ehird: that's what my 20 seconds meant 21:14:36 [20:13] SimonRC: see "/set timestamp" for useful suggestions 21:14:38 Do what I do, have the timestamps at the right side. 21:14:40 (Note: irssi may SUCK TOO MUCH to do this.) 21:15:32 ehird: won't work, i also use the timestamps to get an idea how long the channel has been silent 21:15:44 [20:14] oerjan: how about not really caring? 21:16:04 [20:14] Deewiant: As you can see, my irssi timestamp is 20 characters, including the trailing space. :-P 21:16:04 [20:15] oerjan: ehird: up to 4 minutes again :( 21:16:04 [20:15] oerjan: i guess it's highly fluctuating 21:16:34 ehird: have you tried connecting to a different irc server? 21:16:36 [20:13] ehird: Do what I do, have the timestamps at the right side. 21:16:36 [20:13] ehird: (Note: irssi may SUCK TOO MUCH to do this.) 21:16:36 FWIW 21:16:36 (Sent this at 20:16) 21:16:43 ehird: are you on any busy channels? 21:16:54 [20:16] oerjan: ehird: won't work, i also use the timestamps to get an idea how long the channel has been silent 21:17:25 [20:17] oerjan: Then put just the seconds at the right side! (Note: Seconds made up) [:34] 21:19:16 I can't figure out how to get irssi to put arbitrary control characters into things 21:19:20 Any connections pretend to be the Vodafone topup HTTP server, I believe. 21:19:20 I could join #ubuntu. 21:19:20 Hmm, nope. 21:19:20 ^V 21:19:21 I can connect to Freenode. 21:19:23 Making another connection now. 21:19:25 Doesn't seem to work in Colloquy. 21:19:35 SimonRC: ^V 21:20:29 oerjan: not in irssi 21:20:43 P 21:20:45 hmm 21:20:47 SimonRC: works in mine, i may have set it though 21:20:52 that is just reverse-text 21:21:01 /bind ^V escape-char or something 21:21:06 kkasdf%^&578asd 21:21:12 yeah, just reverse-text 21:21:25 Oh, probably sending to the new connection lags. 21:21:45 the CTCP pings to ehird are just over a minute 21:24:02 *tests 21:24:09 oh wait 21:24:23 * oerjan tests explicit ^A 21:26:09 SimonRC: the channel still censors many control characters though. although irssi won't notice it since it echoes your own messages itself. 21:27:18 SimonRC: actually if by "into things" you mean things other than messages, i am not so sure what it does 21:27:33 -!- calamari has quit (Connection timed out). 21:27:53 I hope nobody in here runs a Geocities site 21:29:10 all free Geocities sites disappear tomorrow 21:30:55 oh dear 21:31:07 as if there weren't enough missing ones already :-( 21:32:33 Yeah, sucks 21:32:50 -!- calamari has joined. 21:32:55 google can buy them up, obviously 21:33:11 Geocities will still exist (as a Yahoo! service), but the free part won't 21:33:30 it's not like it didn't deserve to be dragged out back and shot ... but it still had some good stuff 21:33:51 and WayBack isn't exactly reliable :-/ 21:33:51 -!- ehird has quit (Read error: 145 (Connection timed out)). 21:34:14 WHERE OH WHERE HAS MY LITTLE EHIRD GONE? OH WHERE OH WHERE CAN HE BE? 21:39:42 Rugxulo, so download them all 21:39:49 all those geocities sites I mean 21:40:07 and create an archive 21:40:28 (with opt-out functionality of course) 21:40:32 lalala 21:40:35 first of all, I wouldn't even know how, secondly I don't think its ALL worth saving 21:40:37 (to make it legal probably) 21:41:01 thirdly, they have bandwidth limits 21:41:22 Rugxulo, hm? 21:41:32 on how much your browse their site? 21:41:40 or on how much each site is browsed? 21:41:42 download limits 21:41:45 -!- calamari has quit (Read error: 60 (Operation timed out)). 21:41:45 per hour 21:41:50 Rugxulo, per site? 21:41:55 I think so, yes 21:42:07 well ok, so just run the script, and make it continue after one hour for the rest 21:42:08 IIRC, it's 5 MB per hour per site (but I could be wrong) 21:42:17 Rugxulo, is it per ip or globally 21:42:31 I think? globally 21:42:34 right 21:42:41 makes sense 21:50:08 reading tzdata package changelog is quite fun 21:50:37 -!- ehird has joined. 21:51:52 like: "Disable DST switch for Argentina tomorrow, as the Argentina government decided yesterday. Careful planning is boring." 21:53:28 We had that in here a few days ago 21:53:30 Maybe a week or so 21:53:38 JFS seems awesome, incidentally, from my research! 21:53:40 ehird, oh? Someone mentioned it already. Right 21:53:51 ehird, jfs is almost as awsome as xfs yes 21:54:00 Summary seems to be: It's like XFS, except you don't need to fear horrible death if your system crashes, and it's ever so slightly slower. 21:54:12 Also, faster at metadata operations like creating files, etc. 21:54:13 MUCH faster. 21:54:18 Also, smaller community. 21:54:29 In conclusion: JFS roolz, XFS droolz,. 21:54:33 *droolz. 21:54:36 ehird, what about ext4 then 21:54:45 Ext is soooooo orthodox. 21:55:01 Also, if I watch one more mandatory fdisk scan, I'm going to go on a killing spree. 21:55:04 EVEN HFS+ DOESN'T DO THAT 21:55:05 also I never found xfs to be slow at metadata stuff 21:55:07 and it's like 20 years old 21:55:12 AnMaster: It is, in benchmarks 21:55:13 heyo 21:55:17 Nothing in filesystems is slow perceptibly :P 21:55:19 Also, if I watch one more mandatory fdisk scan, I'm going to go on a killing spree. 21:55:20 so 21:55:28 Disable them and risk my data, yes. 21:55:31 Or use something that isn't ext. 21:55:33 right 21:55:41 ehird, and risk your data? 21:55:52 Howso? 21:56:00 XFS loses data on crashes, yes, but JFS doesn't. :P 21:56:53 ehird, so it journals file data too? 21:56:59 or ordered at least 21:57:02 like ext3 21:57:09 Both XFS and JFS are journalled. 21:57:11 (unlike ext4 was in the beginning at least) 21:57:33 -!- Oranjer has joined. 21:57:34 ehird, yes... but what exactly is. Metadata or metadata+data? 21:57:43 that is quite a large difference 21:57:44 ZFS looks interesting too... 21:57:47 I'm not sure. I believe both. 21:57:49 uhhh hey 21:57:51 SimonRC: Yes, but licensing. 21:57:54 SimonRC: And stuff. 21:57:56 It is non-mutating, I think 21:58:02 ehird, and that was what the whole "ext4 can destroy your files" stuff was about 21:58:05 JFS is usable right now, stock. 21:58:07 which means you get snapshots for free 21:58:13 AnMaster: No. 21:58:14 Apple just abandoned ZFS for Mac, so that sucks 21:58:15 AnMaster: It was about fsync stuff. 21:58:16 vs. "ext3 made developers sloppy" 21:58:20 Rugxulo: Due to legal issues. 21:58:24 ehird, yes apps not doing fsync 21:58:26 which sucks more 21:58:27 as required 21:58:37 Apple have enough cash to make a great filesystem. 21:58:38 ehird, which actually falls back on this on a low enough layer 21:58:41 if you check it out 21:59:07 ordered 21:59:07 This is the default mode. All data is forced directly out to the main file system prior to its metadata being committed to the jour‐ 21:59:07 nal. 21:59:21 from man mount 21:59:29 search for "data=journal" 21:59:34 and you will find the right line 21:59:41 -!- calamari has joined. 22:01:08 I should make my own Linux distro, also change my name to zzo38. 22:01:24 * ehird stares at stunning 1024x768, 64 thousand colour Linux framebuffer console booting 22:01:31 the colours on that Linux logo make a man proud. 22:02:05 ehird, oh? 22:02:08 "JFS journals metadata only, which means that metadata will remain consistent but user files may be corrupted after a crash or power loss. JFS' journaling is similar to XFS where it only journals parts of the inode." 22:02:09 Oh well. 22:02:11 Who cares! 22:02:26 ehird, well that is what all high performance ones does 22:03:08 [["It's easier said than done." 22:03:09 ... and if you don't believe it, try proving that it's easier done than said, and you'll see that "it's easiser said that 'it's easier done than said' than it is done", which really proves that "it's easier said htan done".]] 22:03:09 — fortune 22:03:09 Oww, my head. 22:03:11 *than 22:03:14 (Typed out from a VM.) 22:03:22 ehird, hahah 22:03:40 quite nice. 22:03:58 I should install fortune maybe 22:04:07 Slackware+xfce: Putting the floppy drive on the desktop since 2009. 22:04:24 (Immediately, all 3 users of floppy disks pipe up with a complaint.) 22:04:37 hm does it really fit onto a floppy? 22:04:42 No. 22:04:45 right 22:04:47 It fits on something like 6 CDs. 22:04:58 * ehird is using Slackware in a VM, except he only had the first two disk ISOs, so it's the first two disks of slackware 22:05:02 * AnMaster downloads uclinux 22:05:02 It runs XFCE just fine! 22:05:14 AnMaster: DOESN'T COUNT FOR THE GAME 22:05:18 Although I do wonder if uclinux is usable on a desktop 22:05:24 ehird, I didn't say it would 22:05:25 Anyway, at least my distro wouldn't be cookie-cutter! 22:05:34 No kernel modules, no dynamic linking! 22:05:42 No hideously convoluted filesystem structure! 22:06:28 (JFS by default? :P) 22:06:35 (No swap by default!) 22:06:45 I think DeLi uses uclibc 22:07:04 Delhi Linux. 22:07:18 no, DeLi 22:07:55 -!- immibis has joined. 22:08:12 um. uclinux != uclibc :P 22:08:48 (though close) 22:08:58 uClinux is a kernel, yes. 22:09:05 But can it boot desktops? 22:09:30 ehird, define desktop 22:09:30 oops, sorry ... misread 22:09:34 "The main design goal of JFS was to provide fast crash recovery for large filesystems, avoiding the long filesystem check (fsck) times of older Unix filesystems." 22:09:37 AnMaster: Modern desktop. 22:09:38 Computer. 22:09:40 x86. 22:09:42 Maybe even _65. 22:09:43 ehird, ah x86 22:09:44 *64 22:09:44 right 22:09:49 don't know 22:09:51 Bog-standard modern peripherals. 22:09:52 will check 22:09:55 (uClinux still has an MMU if you want it, right?) 22:10:04 ehird, mmu is optional I think 22:10:10 and it looks quite complex 22:10:23 AnMaster: re JFS safety lag time: 22:10:27 "X window system with KDE, GIMP, Nvu, and text editor all with open files, plus a shell script that inserted records into a MySQL (ISAM) table. The script I wrote was an infinite loop, and I let it run for a couple of minutes to make sure some records were flushed to disk." 22:10:30 "About 3 seconds to replay the journal log. All open files intact, database intact with a few thousand records inserted, but the timestamp on the table file had been rolled back one minute." 22:10:45 mhm 22:10:48 (2 seconds for both console+text editor with 1 file, X+KDE+GIMP+Nvu+editor in xterm, all with open files) 22:10:51 for the console: 22:10:52 About 2 seconds to replay the journal log. Changes I had not saved in the editor were missing but the file was intact. 22:10:57 and the other X: About 2 seconds to replay the journal log. All open files were intact, unsaved changes were missing. 22:11:01 so some stuff missing then 22:11:02 right 22:11:08 Barely anything. 22:11:35 AnMaster: Remember that even ext doesn't recover all that stuff with its years-long fscking. 22:11:49 So 3 seconds to recover all of that, and be a much, much faster filesystem than ext*... impressive. 22:13:45 -!- Rugxulo has left (?). 22:14:22 Hmm, apparently you can't shrink JFS partitions, just grow them. 22:14:53 Oh, but someone made a tool to shrink them, apparently. 22:15:17 ehird, ext doesn't recover by fsck 22:15:23 actual journal recovery is quite fast 22:15:32 Well, yes, but that 3 second figure is for JFS's actual fsck. 22:15:34 it is just it fscks every n mounts 22:15:42 2-3 second fsck. 22:15:48 ehird, sounds like it didn't do a throughout job :P 22:15:58 with verifying all structures 22:16:19 Have your ext fscks ever done anything more? A well-designed filesystem doesn't mean a cheating filesysteem. 22:17:53 ehird, well it never detected any errors 22:18:02 -!- immibis has quit ("On the other hand, you have different fingers."). 22:18:11 so it is just like we say in Sweden "bälte och hängslen" 22:18:20 -!- immibis has joined. 22:18:21 * AnMaster looks for a translation for the third word 22:18:42 ah yes suspenders. 22:19:02 so it means "belt and suspenders" 22:19:37 how can I make ChatZilla auto-identify? 22:19:46 immibis: Set a server password. 22:19:48 Works for Freenode. 22:19:53 Otherwise, set up a command to be run on connect. 22:19:54 Very low-tech. 22:20:49 okay...but I can't find where to set a server password 22:21:54 It's somewhere. 22:22:10 immibis: Oh, and you can disable the obnoxious show-highlights-in-the-server-tab thing, too. 22:25:53 It seems that Slackware includes only the vital packages on the first two disks — you know, like both vim and emacs. 22:26:22 Oh, and both Firefox and Seamonkey. 22:29:47 vim and emacs are tiny compared to some apps 22:30:12 Yes, but including both Firefox AND Seamonkey? 22:30:29 ehird, heh. what the hell is on the rest of those disks then? 22:30:40 Blackjack and hookers? 22:30:54 (An office suite of some sort?) 22:31:51 Annoying how xfce only includes tools to configure itself, not the system. 22:33:56 It doesn't seem to want to talk to my network. 22:35:59 ehird, oh? just use ifconfig or whatever 22:36:06 and what about the text config files 22:36:09 I'm used to that :P 22:36:31 See, the nice thing about Gnome is that I don't have to fuck around with that bullshit. 22:36:39 (Says the person playing with Slackware.) 22:37:17 Also, ifconfig just gives lo. 22:38:46 ehird, ifconfig -a 22:38:46 then 22:38:52 to show all possible interfaces 22:39:09 True, that gives an eth0. 22:39:23 ifconfig eth0 up, no luck. 22:39:27 It works, but Firefox doesn't load. 22:40:03 ehird, dhcp? 22:40:08 if so set that up 22:40:11 and dns 22:40:16 you know. Nothing hard 22:40:18 trivial stuff 22:40:40 ehird, how does slackware normally config the network? 22:40:40 Yeah, I know. 22:40:49 Trivial stuff that there's NO REASON THAT I HAVE TO DO. 22:41:14 You know, busywork. Automatable manual labour. i.e., what computers were DESIGNED TO AVOID. 22:42:11 ehird, hey if you selected slackware you have to bite the bullet 22:42:28 That's why it's in a VM and not my disk. 22:42:36 ehird, well then. Stop complaining 22:42:45 You're the one who's replying. 22:43:48 ehird, thats what your mom said. 22:44:16 ow my finger 22:45:23 ehird, keyboard? 22:45:29 Hmm, JFS2. 22:45:32 what the hell is it with you and keyboards. 22:45:36 AnMaster: No, just the nail. 22:45:53 Wonder if JFS2 was ported to Linux. 22:46:32 Nope. 22:47:07 ehird, what nail 22:47:12 THE nail? 22:47:15 if so. where is it 22:48:18 fingernail. 22:49:55 I wonder why people stopped using lilo. 22:50:48 ehird, um, because it was a lot of work to remember to rerun lilo every time you updated the kernel? 22:50:55 and it was a bit awkward to use 22:51:08 Um, GRUB has to be run too. And how so? 22:51:23 /etc/ilo.conf seems just as simple as grub.conf to me. 22:51:25 *lilo.conf 22:51:57 ehird, not for kernel upgrade 22:52:15 and how did you edit command line arguments for lilo from the prompt? You know, for when things went wrong 22:52:19 Well, at least, I'm pretty sure Ubuntu does that. Anyway, that's silly; it's one line in the package manager to do it. 22:52:29 Also, not sure. I'd have to look it up. 22:53:33 ehird, http://lwn.net/Articles/89772/ is interesting 22:53:36 It just seems to me that lilo is a lot simpler than GRUB, and it isn't in "ONLY BUG FIXES LOL USE OUR MASTURBATORY GRUB 2 CRAP" mode like GRUB 1 is. 22:53:38 on this topic 22:54:57 "GRUB has a more powerful, interactive command line interface." // silly bloat that doesn't belong in a bootloader 22:55:10 ehird, so... you hate freebsd bootloader then? 22:55:14 "LILO stores information about the location of the kernel or other operating system on the Master Boot Record" // simple, as it should be. the distro should obviously automatically update lilo on kernel upgrades 22:55:14 it even has forth 22:55:18 AnMaster: Did I say that? 22:55:27 I just said that that feature is silly bloat that doesn't belong in a bootloader. 22:55:33 ehird, well, extrapolation :P 22:55:57 "a mis-configured LILO configuration file may leave the system unbootable" 22:55:58 Why are you changing the lilo configuration yourself without double-checking it works? This is just carelessness. It's easy to break GRUB too. 22:56:21 "Unlike LILO, GRUB has a web site." 22:56:21 Ooh, GRUB has its useless website! I hereby swear off LILO forever. 22:56:31 Not a very convincing article. 22:56:37 ehird, indeed 22:56:46 ehird, I didn't argue for grub or lilo myself 22:56:49 LAWL WHY DONT WE JUST COMPILE EVERYTHING IN. CONFIG FILES ARE T3H SUCK. 22:57:01 -!- MizardX has quit ("reboot"). 22:57:02 pikhq: You will note that I said none of that. 22:57:11 Or anything for similar idiocy. 22:57:25 I'm just saying that if you put stuff in the bootloader configuration file — yes! You may break your bootloader. 22:57:28 I actually think that "broken menu.lst is possible to work around" is quite an useful feature 22:57:33 "I, personally, believe that [both are] a grave injustice, because the boot loader is the most important software of all. I used to refer to the above systems as either 'LILO' or 'GRUB' systems." 22:57:34 — GRUB developer 22:57:45 ehird, yes 22:57:46 ("So, if you ever hear people talking about their alleged 'GNU' systems, remember that they are actually paying homage to the best boot loader around: GRUB!") 22:57:46 indeed 22:57:50 Pretty sure it's joking. 22:57:55 ehird, so am I 22:57:56 ... Boot loader, must important? That's fucking retarded. 22:58:00 If it's not, that's some pretty unprecedented hubris. 22:58:08 pikhq: The whole quote seems to be a joke: 22:58:09 Some people like to acknowledge both the operating system and kernel when they talk about their computers, so they might say they use 'GNU/Linux' or 'GNU/Hurd'. Other people seem to think that the kernel is the most important part of the system, so they like to call their GNU operating systems 'Linux systems'. I, personally, believe that [both are] a grave injustice, because the boot loader is the most important software of all. I used to refer to the above 22:58:11 systems as either 'LILO' or 'GRUB' systems. Unfortunately, nobody ever understood what I was talking about; now I just use the word 'GNU' as a pseudonym for GRUB. So, if you ever hear people talking about their alleged 'GNU' systems, remember that they are actually paying homage to the best boot loader around: GRUB! 22:58:12 Okay, then. 22:58:15 :) 22:58:19 If it's not, wow. 22:58:32 Booting Linux is, what, 100 lines of code? :P 22:59:55 "The -R command line option is also very useful when you have a dual boot system, for quick shutdown from one system (e.g. Linux) to reboot into another (e.g. Windows) without the timed out delay waiting for the user to select which system to boot." 22:59:58 Ooh, that's a nice lilo thing. 23:00:07 Could make a desktop icon for the other OS. 23:00:22 Just have it elevate to root with a graphical thingummie, do the LILO -R, and reboot. 23:00:41 Apparently there's a patch for GRUB, and it might have got in since 2004, I guess. 23:02:07 ehird, is it really that useful? 3 second delay? 23:02:11 -!- MizardX has joined. 23:02:14 and uh, arrow key, enter 23:02:27 It's good to have. 23:02:34 Sure, if you just have Linux and Windows it doesn't matter too much.. 23:02:37 *much. 23:02:40 But some people have 4, 5 OSs. 23:02:46 ehird, I would say eye-candy because it isn't exactly that. But similar 23:02:53 ehird, hm. I want such a large harddrive :P 23:02:54 Um, no? 23:03:00 For one, people use it for unattented kernel upgrades on servers. 23:03:05 In the comments of that article. 23:03:31 *unattended 23:03:48 ehird, there is a better way for that in grub. Fallback kernel. And if the new kernel reboots it will fall back on the old if you haven't manually set it to the newer one 23:03:49 So it's a command with a minor practical use for users with quite a few OSs, major practical use for server administrators, requires little code, doesn't bother those who don't need it, and has little opportunity for failure. 23:03:51 So what's the problem? 23:03:53 that is, fallback savedefault 23:03:57 ehird, on grub if you have a messed up configuration that stops you booting, you can boot linux manually from the grub command prompt 23:04:00 AnMaster: And lilo's is more general andd simpler. 23:04:16 immibis: I know that, and it's silly. 23:04:38 First, lilo balks if your configuration file is invalid when you run it. Secondly, don't put stuff in the configuration file unless you double-check it first. Failing that, just pop in a live USB stick. 23:04:44 I mean, sure, minor usage, but still. 23:04:46 It's not a huge thing. 23:04:59 ehird, so what is so much *better* with lilo than grub? 23:05:55 AnMaster: Compiling in configuration to the bootloader? :P 23:06:00 More minimalist, doesn't have the creaky default behaviour of put-stuff-in-unallocated-sectors that GRUB does, is simple, is not in GRUB's ridiculous "bug-fix only mode because we have a new child and its name is GRUB 2". 23:06:01 pikhq, well yes 23:06:20 ("More minimalist, […] is simple" Guess I'm not a minimalist!) 23:06:36 Also, it can boot LVM partitions, from what I gather. 23:06:39 "is not in GRUB's ridiculous "bug-fix only mode because we have a new child and its name is GRUB 2"" <-- so someone actually adds new features to lilo? 23:06:49 So you don't need a regular /boot partition. 23:07:03 AnMaster: I don't know, but the GRUB maintainers clearly don't like maintaining GRUB 1. 23:07:17 well true 23:07:25 LILO's last release was in 2007, so it's not really that dead. 23:07:25 ehird, XD 23:07:26 (That is quite a while, but it *has* been in development since 19992.) 23:07:29 it's 2009 now 23:07:31 *1992 23:07:31 late 2009 23:07:45 They should just release every year changing the copyright date if they don't have any meaningful changes to make. 23:07:51 and booting lvm is nice. What if the lvm partition with the kernel moves around? 23:07:54 what happens then 23:08:05 or the kernel ends up split over multiple disks 23:08:07 Don't know. 23:08:18 Read the manual or whatever. 23:08:41 brb 23:10:00 ehird: why are you comparing lilo to grub 1? why not compare lilo to grub 2? 23:10:01 AnMaster: With Lilo, shit breaks. 23:10:20 Even if the device number happens to change. 23:10:37 With GRUB, mu, because it can't do LVM. 23:10:38 in my limited experience, grub 2 just automatically detects all the kernels and writes the config file I want 23:10:43 SimonRC: because nobody uses grub 2. 23:10:48 BRB 23:10:49 um, I do 23:10:50 *brb 23:11:02 debian unstable does 23:11:04 With GRUB 2, it groks LVM. 23:12:30 oddly this debian despite being a product of 2009 doesn't use GUIDs for mounting stuff 23:14:01 SimonRC, great. Because I had to change that on my ubuntu laptop. UUIDs break with encrypted root + crypttab 23:14:57 but it can be hard to know what the kernel is going to call a partition in situations in which you can't boot the kernel 23:15:00 hmm 23:15:16 actually, there might be enough stuff in the initrd to find out 23:15:39 the initrd is rather neat; it even has an editor in it 23:15:55 back in the day it would have counted as a well-equipped unix system 23:16:10 except for lack of compiler I suppose 23:19:28 SimonRC, initramfs you mean 23:19:33 initrd != initramfs 23:19:47 um, maybe 23:19:55 what's the difference? 23:20:13 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Initrd 23:20:24 there is a comparsion there 23:20:42 comparison* 23:24:22 anyway 23:24:32 grub 2 is even more bloated :) 23:24:36 and is the developers' plaything 23:24:46 ehird, sounds great then 23:25:00 you like unstable, bloated software? 23:25:17 ehird, yes if you don't ;P 23:25:22 (no, not really) 23:25:31 i really hate using windows 3.0 as a main OS 23:25:33 QUICK, AnMaster 23:25:33 DO IT 23:25:43 :P 23:25:50 "Real memory management, to make GNU GRUB more extensible." 23:25:54 GRUB 2: Now with memory management. 23:25:59 ehird, oh but you hate me agreeing with you 23:26:09 so. Thus I agree windows 3.0 is painful 23:26:10 "Graphical interface." 23:26:19 GRUB 2: Please, spend all your time in me. 23:26:22 ehird, sounds like EFI++ 23:26:26 You don't want to boot those OSs. I have everything they have! 23:26:30 "Scripting support, such as conditionals, loops, variables and functions." 23:26:54 Now! Use an AI to decide which OS to boot! 23:26:54 It's the feature you've all asked for! 23:26:57 port firefox to it 23:27:00 In conclusion: lol grub 2 suxz 23:27:02 *sux 23:27:30 are those things really downsides? 23:27:31 grub 1 is nice though 23:27:39 Bloat is a downside. 23:27:49 ehird, then freebsd bootloader is bloated 23:27:51 does it actually matter on modern machines? 23:27:52 The fact that what I quoted constitutes a large part of GRUB 2's feature list means that they aren't spending time on important things 23:27:55 since it supports AMS forth 23:27:57 LIKE ACTUALLY MAKING A DECENT BOOTLOADER 23:28:23 what dose it not do that you want it to? 23:28:24 AnMaster: That may be so. 23:29:12 Why is it better than LILO? Does it add anything useful over it? The thing that's been mentioned is LVM support, i.e. bringing it in line with LILO. 23:29:29 And bloat is definitely a downside, so that's a point against it. 23:29:57 ehird, I find that the "possible to recover from error" to be a pretty good reason. 23:30:03 for grub1 at least 23:30:08 grub2 I don't know 23:30:10 SimonRC is specifically telling me to do LILO vs grub2. 23:30:25 Yes, that is one advantage of grub 1, however, IMO, it is not a big one, and LILO has other points in its favour. 23:30:35 does lilo automatically get informed when you install a new kernel, so it gets used on next reboot? 23:30:43 ehird, IMO it *is* a big one 23:30:44 But GRUB 2? GRUB 1, plus bloat, plus LVM support, which lilo has. 23:30:53 AnMaster: I have argued against that. But sure, give that point to GRUB 1. 23:31:05 SimonRC: Yes, if your package manager tells it afterwards. 23:31:10 ok 23:31:14 Oh, it doesn't? Sounds like your distro is populated by GRUB users. 23:31:23 like when kernel ended up seeing it has hd0,0 but grub as hd1,0. Easy to recover. Oh and I tried lilo back then too. It ended up with same issue 23:31:25 It's not really fair to lilo that the distros don't do it. 23:31:32 it was "is pata or sata disk hd0" 23:31:34 basically 23:32:20 well, my experience is that I install grub 2 and it just works (here) 23:32:30 I lack the knowlege to say much more 23:32:53 (mwahaha disarm the opponent with false humility, making him look bad) 23:32:58 lawl 23:33:04 oops did I actually type that? 23:33:06 ignorance is not the same as humility :P 23:33:16 With a distro that supports calling it automatically (probably not many nowadays), and not putting random stupid shit into the config file, lilo should just work too. 23:33:31 well, use lilo then 23:33:49 I forget who was on the lilo side 23:34:04 not me 23:34:07 I'm on the grub1 side 23:34:15 odd 23:34:31 Everyone uses GRUB 1, dude. :P 23:34:33 Also, I'm on the lilo side. 23:35:04 I just realised that I was all boo, lilo is old and crufty, yay, GRUB is awesome and then I realised that GRUB had some points I don't like about it and I couldn't actually reason why GRUB was better, so I investigated. 23:35:16 And it turns out that lilo might actually be better, so yeah. It's just me investigating common dogma. 23:36:27 elilo can boot efi iirc 23:36:30 but that isn't lilo 23:36:33 it is elilo 23:36:36 so a fork iirc 23:37:29 elilo is just lilo for EFI./ 23:37:31 *EFI. 23:37:37 It's basically the only native EFI loader. 23:37:51 Funny, though, to have the bloated GRUB2-ish EFI boot into the minimalist lilo. 23:38:59 heh yeah 23:39:06 ehird, can't grub2 handle EFI iirc? 23:39:11 And your toaster. 23:39:18 ehird, and your mom 23:46:56 * SimonRC goes away 23:47:35 RIP SimonRC ????—2009 23:59:19 night ⤥ 23:59:52 you're still here, AnMaster