←2010-08-17 2010-08-18 2010-08-19→ ↑2010 ↑all
00:00:07 <augur> http://videolectures.net/mlcs07_higuera_giv/
00:00:15 <augur> thus guy has a very bizarre mix of accents
00:00:32 <augur> half english of some sort, with touches of french
00:01:49 <alise> cheater99: define hugh.
00:02:15 <cheater99> out of place, young, inexperienced, and nobody takes him seriously
00:02:25 <cheater99> formerly known as 3 of 5
00:02:55 <alise> lol
00:03:06 <cheater99> <3
00:03:40 <alise> if anyone's out of place in this channel it's you, there are a few younger than me, either stupidly incorrect or irrelevant depending on what you think i'm inexperienced in
00:03:48 <alise> and i have fairly good empirical evidence against the last one.
00:09:47 -!- zzo38 has joined.
00:09:56 <zzo38> They keep moving the spider!
00:10:11 <alise> Oh dear.
00:13:31 <zzo38> .raed hO
00:14:33 <cheater99> alise: i'm glad i riled you up, there was no other point to saying that sweetie
00:15:10 <zzo38> ???
00:16:31 <alise> i'm not riled up
00:16:34 <alise> just vaguely amused
00:16:58 <zzo38> Amused from what?
00:17:11 <alise> cheater99 had a rather pathetic go at insulting me
00:17:11 <zzo38> s/from/of/
00:17:37 <zzo38> Are you still insulted? Did I insult you too?
00:17:46 <cheater99> if it was so pathetic, why did you take the time to write such a long retort?
00:17:48 <alise> I don't believe you said anything insulting ...
00:17:56 <zzo38> Neither do I.
00:17:58 <alise> cheater99: Uhh, I type pretty fast, and I have nothing better to do.
00:18:00 -!- zzo38 has quit.
00:18:15 <cheater99> nothing better to do than to answer pathetic insults, huh?
00:18:32 <alise> Yep. If I had something better to do, I wouldn't be blabbing on IRC.
00:18:38 <alise> Or responding to these questions about questions.
00:20:38 -!- Gregor-W has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds).
00:20:59 <cheater99> questions about questions, huh?
00:21:16 * cheater99 watches alise start spinning a spinner to check what question she's on
00:21:35 <alise> You know, you don't exactly seem like you have anything better to do, either.
00:24:41 -!- Zuu has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
00:25:10 -!- GreaseMonkey has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
00:25:17 <alise> pikhq: Have you seen "Star Trek New Voyages: Phase II"? It's a bit /too/ faithful to TOS; copying even its production values!
00:25:24 <alise> Except this time the film is good enough to see the cheese.
00:25:55 <cheater99> i'm reading memory alpha on the EMH
00:26:17 <alise> The Doc was the only good character on Voyager.
00:26:26 <coppro> truths
00:26:33 <alise> And he had to deal with a ship full of fools.
00:27:13 <alise> Wowwwwww, the cheese is just so great.
00:27:20 <alise> (I'm watching "World Enough and Time".)
00:27:28 <alise> I may have to stop soon.
00:27:57 <CakeProphet> :)
00:28:15 <CakeProphet> I just woke up from a meth-induced binge sleep that lasted for a week
00:28:20 -!- tombom_ has quit (Quit: Leaving).
00:28:23 <CakeProphet> I must say my teeth feel pretty bad
00:28:36 <alise> I think that's generally a pretty good sign that you should lay off the god damned meth.
00:29:15 <CakeProphet> but...
00:29:25 <CakeProphet> I can have sex for hours on meth, while programming in assembly.
00:29:37 <CakeProphet> ...but it's mainly the assembly code that turns me on.
00:29:52 <alise> I'm not even going to /start/ trying to reason.
00:30:04 <augur> alise: omg that guy
00:30:08 <augur> that guy
00:30:11 <augur> hes so french at times
00:30:15 <augur> but then at times hes so english
00:30:15 <augur> D:
00:30:25 <augur> "but you know jolly well that its not"
00:30:26 <augur> D:
00:30:36 <alise> Bonjour! Tally ho!
00:30:45 <augur> omg thats him
00:30:46 <augur> its true
00:31:01 -!- Zuu has joined.
00:31:06 <augur> he says "here" as "hyeaahh"
00:31:38 <alise> wow, this is the worst Spock ever
00:31:43 <alise> just ... the worst
00:31:55 <alise> LOL @ SCOTTY
00:32:00 <augur> where
00:32:11 <alise> augur: "Star Trek New Voyages: Phase II"
00:32:13 <coppro> alise: there are many fanfics out there that wish to disagree
00:32:20 <alise> fan-created sequel to The Original Series
00:32:20 <augur> o ok
00:32:25 <alise> very high production values for a fan creation
00:32:30 <alise> George Takei and people have been in it
00:32:42 <alise> The Trouble with Tribbles writer is doing too
00:32:43 <alise> *two
00:32:45 <alise> but despite all of this
00:32:49 <alise> it's so hilariously, hilariously bad
00:32:53 <augur> its still horrible yeah
00:33:03 <CakeProphet> has everyone attempted to watch Plan 9 from Outer Space?
00:33:09 <alise> man apparently kirk's main personality feature is wrinkling his face every two words
00:33:16 <CakeProphet> I tried... but there was too much bad and not enough hilarity.
00:33:23 <alise> it really looks like some kids pretending to be in star trek
00:33:46 <alise> "a tangle of MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS".
00:33:57 <alise> OMG
00:33:58 <alise> HAHAHA
00:34:01 <alise> THE SPACESUITS
00:34:02 <alise> ARE MADE
00:34:03 <alise> OF GLITTER
00:34:07 <alise> multi-coloured glitter
00:34:10 <alise> I am absolutely not joking
00:34:47 <coppro> hahaha
00:34:54 <alise> i have to take a screenshot
00:34:58 <alise> how can you take a screenshot with mplayer/Xv?
00:35:12 <alise> oh scrot works
00:35:16 <alise> if the whole window is visible
00:35:24 <CakeProphet> ......scrot?
00:35:31 <CakeProphet> as in... scrotum?
00:35:49 <alise> no, as in scrot
00:35:57 <alise> i repeat, lay off the meth
00:36:00 <CakeProphet> you leave an impression on a scortum?
00:36:01 <augur> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QspuCt1FM9M
00:36:03 <augur> i dont know what to make of this
00:36:20 <CakeProphet> alise: I've never heard of scrot.
00:36:24 -!- Gregor-W has joined.
00:36:30 <alise> augur: the start is awesome ambient
00:36:32 <Gregor-W> Maaaan
00:36:36 <Gregor-W> RE-CAPTCHA is so btiontic.
00:36:47 <augur> alise: the whole thing is some awesome ambient
00:36:50 <alise> Gregor-W: XD
00:36:53 <alise> coppro: http://imgur.com/uoU1V.png
00:37:10 <alise> Hikaru Sulu, wearing his anti-antimatter glitter suit.
00:37:23 <alise> augur: this is amazing
00:37:29 <alise> augur: someone do his whole album like this
00:37:30 <augur> alise: I KNOW RIGHT?
00:37:40 <alise> "Holy crap. Is this Godspeed You! Black Emperor?" --comments
00:37:41 <alise> Yes, yes it is.
00:37:45 <augur> who knew that justin bieber was actually a GOOD musical artist!
00:37:56 <alise> yeah
00:38:01 <alise> the record company just forced him to speed it up
00:38:03 <alise> you know, for the kids
00:38:06 <coppro> god dammit I hate scribd
00:38:22 <augur> damn kids
00:38:23 <alise> augur: get rid of his name and the album title, remove his facial features, and blur it to hell
00:38:25 <CakeProphet> hahaha @ comment
00:38:27 <alise> there's his original, intended album cover
00:38:45 <augur> alise: obviously
00:39:37 <alise> i seriously want to save this
00:40:13 <CakeProphet> this is supposed to be a HAPPY song and not a song you'd play at someone's funeral!!! my opinion! I really do not like it at all. Doesn't even sound like the original at all. Boo ya.
00:40:18 <CakeProphet> :)
00:40:28 <CakeProphet> ^style youtube
00:40:28 <fungot> Selected style: youtube (Some YouTube comments)
00:40:36 <CakeProphet> fungot, what do you think about this comment?
00:40:36 <fungot> CakeProphet: 5125l: oh shut up? and mark wahlberg second reason filmed in canada and that avril lavigne rockssssss a friend came by around 3:30 am and pic was frozen right on this
00:43:46 <augur> alise: im tempted now to take some classic ambient music and speed it up
00:43:48 <augur> to see what it sounds like
00:44:25 <augur> how ridiculous if Brian Eno was actually just ripping off Jimi Hendrix
00:45:03 <alise> omg, that is exactly what this sounds like that i couldn't put my finger on
00:45:03 <alise> eno
00:45:10 <augur> lol
00:45:56 <CakeProphet> so I found something that FIXES Haskell records. :)
00:46:03 <CakeProphet> called fclabels
00:46:06 <alise> CakeProphet: making them 800% slower?
00:46:18 <Gregor-W> FUCK LABELS
00:46:24 <Gregor-W> Oh, is that not what that stands for?
00:46:30 <augur> alise: im not sure tho if this is actually just justin bieber
00:46:30 <alise> augur: i will now attempt to listen to the original song by "Justin" "Bieber"
00:46:38 <alise> to compare
00:46:43 <CakeProphet> alise: no, it makes a :-> type
00:46:44 <augur> i tried listening to a version on youtube and it sounded a bit different
00:46:51 <CakeProphet> and get/set/mod functions
00:46:55 <augur> so im going to record this version and then speed it up
00:46:56 <alise> augur: that is what slowing things down generally does.
00:46:59 <alise> lol
00:46:59 <augur> :P
00:47:04 <alise> talk about loss of fidelity
00:48:04 <CakeProphet> so now the act of setting a record field can be abstracted...
00:48:12 <CakeProphet> instead of requiring the syntax.
00:48:34 <CakeProphet> setL field 3 record
00:48:59 <CakeProphet> field :: (Num a) => RecordType :-> a
00:49:04 <augur> DAVID MITCHELL
00:49:08 <augur> thats who that french guy sounds like
00:49:47 <CakeProphet> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swQAwnusJVQ
00:49:53 <CakeProphet> this song looks like a good candidate for speed-up
00:50:03 <alise> augur: i can't read david mitchell's articles, because they get read in his voice
00:50:06 <CakeProphet> the piano melody will probably sound like experimental jazz or something.
00:50:12 <Sgeo> Well, just finished the first season of SGU
00:50:13 <augur> alise: haha
00:50:14 <alise> the guardian need to put authorship credits st the /bottom/
00:50:15 <augur> i love his voice
00:50:55 <alise> Eno sort of already does that time-fucking anyway.
00:51:53 <alise> Talking Heads' "Remain in Light", produced by Eno, has all its music sped up quite a bit (but not the vocals).
00:52:19 <alise> Although that's not quite 800%. :P
00:57:01 <augur> alise!
00:57:02 <augur> http://www.mediafire.com/?aenvebe86u0d7ha
00:58:02 <alise> what is it?
00:58:10 <alise> the sped up one?
00:58:29 <augur> the slow one
00:58:30 <augur> in FULL
00:58:32 <augur> 35 minutes
00:58:46 <alise> Is it ... any less repetitive?
00:59:06 <augur> i dont know
00:59:07 <augur> lol
00:59:18 <augur> look, i didnt say justin bieber wasnt philip glass, ok
00:59:19 <augur> gosh
00:59:58 <alise> "Russian village bought by torrent site torrentreactor.net for $150,000 and renamed after it
00:59:58 <alise> Torrentreactor.net is one of the few companies that has decided to leave a permanent mark on the world map and rename a settlement after itself. The one with real houses and live inhabitants. A small russian village Gar was chosen to be renamed. It is located not far away from Seversk nuclear reactor (Russia, Tomsk region). As opposed to Google town that became the Texas «capital» for a limited period of time Torrentreactor village will retain its name f
00:59:58 <alise> orever. The price of $150,000 was announced for such «live billboard»."
00:59:59 <alise> I...
01:02:56 <augur> youve already got a town in australia named after /you/
01:02:57 <augur> :|
01:03:44 <alise> technically, that's Alice.
01:03:45 <alise> TECHNICALLY
01:05:38 <augur> omg alise
01:05:39 <augur> its true
01:05:43 <augur> it really its justin bieber
01:05:46 <augur> X_X
01:06:00 <alise> augur: now i have a task for you
01:06:02 <alise> download his entire album
01:06:06 <alise> do the same transformation to every track
01:06:13 <alise> now, find a few tracks that go together
01:06:14 <augur> i will, in a bit
01:06:15 <alise> and mix them up
01:06:18 <augur> first im speeding up brian eno
01:06:21 <alise> repeat until the whole album is mixed into a few half-hour long tracks
01:06:29 <alise> say a nice three-track, 90 minute mix
01:06:57 <augur> wow
01:06:59 <alise> so that's ~3 songs from his album per mix, you can do that
01:07:02 <alise> augur: because it's too bland on its own, see
01:07:05 <alise> the interlocking will be beautiful
01:07:10 <augur> the expansion of the song did horrendous stuff to Bieber's music
01:07:14 <alise> lol
01:07:19 <alise> it already is horrendous
01:07:22 <alise> oh you mean
01:07:26 <alise> the "speeding up"
01:07:27 <alise> :P
01:07:32 <augur> well
01:07:35 <augur> no what i mean is
01:07:46 <alise> augur: when you have those three tracks, just note their lengths, cat them together, add loooong crossfades between them, split at the same time
01:07:53 <alise> tada, Justin Bieber: Music of Form
01:07:57 <augur> the lengthening process (and then the subsequent shortening) destroyed a lot of the quality of the instruments
01:07:58 <alise> or
01:08:00 <alise> Formative Music
01:08:06 <alise> augur: what quality :P
01:08:13 <alise> Justin Bieber - Formative Music
01:08:16 <augur> well, the instruments sound like instruments :P
01:08:54 <alise> also make all the titles somehow based on mutations of his song titles
01:09:27 <alise> Cycle 1, including Usmil's Baby and Overbored
01:09:32 <alise> you're making me look up justin bieber song titles
01:09:33 <alise> why, man, why?
01:12:24 <augur> alise: im listening to some Aphex Twin sped up
01:12:31 <augur> sounds almost proper
01:13:08 <alise> augur: "Richard D. James Album" is pretty damn hyper already. :P
01:13:11 <augur> blue calx at 400% speed is almost playful
01:13:27 <alise> But I assume you mean his more ... ambient work.
01:13:32 <augur> yes
01:13:34 <augur> SAWII
01:13:53 <alise> RDJA is surprisingly /catchy/.
01:18:36 <alise> torrents are so crap :|
01:19:08 <augur> alise: im listening to a song called San Tommaso Eqed by Der Spyra
01:19:13 <augur> its very ambient
01:19:28 <augur> but sped up it sounds like it could have been a movie-classical
01:22:10 -!- Wamanuz has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
01:24:10 -!- oerjan has joined.
01:24:58 <alise> I need a Usenet link.
01:30:14 <alise> Or ten.
01:32:42 -!- kwertii has joined.
01:33:25 <pikhq> Six gigs of *MP3s*... Good god that's a large torrent.
01:36:47 -!- FireFly has quit (Quit: swatted to death).
01:38:12 <alise> Pfft, MP3s.
01:38:31 <zeotrope> augur: have you heard the analord bonus tracks?
01:38:34 <alise> Meanwhile I can't even find a decent, non-remastered FLAC rip of "Remain in Light" (mentioning things gives me this urge to acquire them).
01:38:40 <alise> That is, the only one I can find has zero seeders and is hence useless.
01:38:49 <pikhq> alise: Yeah, it's annoying, but. 77 freaking albums in a torrent.
01:39:02 <augur> zeotrope: no. does that involve buttsex
01:39:10 <alise> zeotrope: Is the rest of Analord better than Chosen Lords?
01:39:15 <alise> Chosen Lords is a bit crap.
01:39:33 <zeotrope> alise: definitely
01:39:38 <zeotrope> I liked chosen lords though
01:39:46 <alise> It was good the first time.
01:39:51 <alise> After that... bleh.
01:40:57 <zeotrope> it had only 6 songs, the analord collection is quite large
01:41:30 <zeotrope> my bad, 10
01:41:32 <alise> yeah
01:41:33 <augur> alise: apparently if you dont slow justin bieber down much (maybe a litte) but lower his pitch drastically, you get johnny cash
01:41:44 <alise> augur: except, shit johnny cash
01:41:45 <alise> right?
01:41:50 <augur> well
01:41:53 <augur> i think cash was shit anyway
01:41:53 <augur> so
01:42:03 <alise> ehh
01:42:09 <alise> his cover of Hurt was great :P
01:42:29 <alise> zeotrope: my least favourite aphex twin album though is ...I Care Because You Do
01:42:35 <pikhq> augur: Apparently, if you shoot Justin Bieber and put on a Daft Punk album you get good music.
01:42:39 <pikhq> ;)
01:42:45 <augur> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZmkFmW5LXY
01:42:46 <alise> pikhq: Unless it's Human After All.
01:42:48 <alise> Then you get Human After All.
01:42:56 <pikhq> alise: Okay, yes, fair point.
01:42:58 <Gregor-W> .....................
01:43:04 <alise> Also, http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/daftpunk/aroundtheworld.html
01:43:09 * Gregor-W listens to some Tchaikovsky.
01:43:15 <alise> Gregor-W: THAT TOO
01:43:22 <pikhq> alise: Such a fucking weird song.
01:43:27 <pikhq> alise: Also, the music video is weirder.
01:43:30 <alise> pikhq: AROUND THE WORLD AROUND THE WORLD
01:43:42 <augur> alise: that last link has now turned me on to george michael
01:43:47 <augur> who i would've never thought could be good
01:43:48 <augur> but is
01:43:52 <alise> Okay, I do actually like parts of Human After All.
01:43:53 <pikhq> Fucking Daft Punk, thinking that techno exempts them from lyrics.
01:43:56 <pikhq> :P
01:43:57 <alise> "The Prime Time of Your Life" is pretty good.
01:44:25 <alise> the genres we've covered in the past hours is imrpressive
01:44:41 <alise> augur: that muse/stefani thing is totally true, btw
01:44:43 <alise> and very disturbing
01:44:46 <alise> *impressive
01:45:08 <pikhq> alise: About the only thing that's common with geek musical tastes is not limiting themselves to the current mainstream of music.
01:45:17 <pikhq> So... Yeah.
01:45:29 <augur> listening now alise
01:45:38 <alise> to what?
01:45:44 * Gregor-W <3 his restrictive musical palate.
01:46:04 <augur> alise: its kinda true yeah
01:46:08 <pikhq> Gregor-W: You merely restrict yourself to forms of music not derived from folk music traditions.
01:47:07 <alise> pikhq: http://w00tstock.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/05g-400x300.jpg
01:47:14 <alise> "Shut up Wesley!", says Wesley.
01:47:24 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
01:47:33 <pikhq> Gregor-W: You also end up limiting yourself from the sheer agony that is constructed-pop music.
01:47:34 <alise> jesus christ moth
01:47:35 <alise> stop attacking me
01:47:39 -!- augur has joined.
01:47:41 <alise> you're sitting on my screen
01:47:43 <alise> whacking into my hand
01:47:44 <alise> wtf
01:47:46 <alise> wtf moth
01:47:46 <alise> just wtf
01:47:52 <augur> alise: the main differences between muse and stefani
01:47:54 <augur> as far as i can tell
01:47:56 <augur> are
01:48:04 <alise> Be very careful with your next words.
01:48:08 <augur> stefani uses a basilect, and has a more hissy voice
01:48:19 <alise> OK, as long as you criticise Black Holes and Revelations and after you're good.
01:48:24 <pikhq> Constructed-pop is perhaps the most painful thing to listen to ever.
01:48:32 <alise> But Origin of Symmetry is above criticism, dammit.
01:48:47 <augur> which what
01:48:53 <alise> it's an album
01:48:54 <alise> by Muse
01:48:59 <augur> oh is this muse
01:49:00 <augur> ok
01:49:05 <alise> it's very good
01:52:50 <augur> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vBZrc4ZEYM&feature=related
01:53:15 <alise> Why has YouTube become the music distribution source?
01:53:29 <alise> augur: That so needs speeding up.
01:53:45 <augur> alise: because its hard to police
01:53:54 <alise> Yeah, but ...
01:53:59 <alise> It's fucking video.
01:54:01 <alise> That's ... it...
01:54:04 <augur> yeah but
01:54:04 <alise> The.
01:54:09 <alise> Fuck it,.
01:54:12 <alise> ASD
01:54:14 <alise> *Fuck it.
01:54:15 <augur> theres no equivalent to it in terms of audio
01:54:25 <alise> sdofij
01:54:25 <augur> with a bajillion videos uploaded every day
01:54:29 <augur> its hard to police for music
01:55:01 <augur> on the other hand, if there were an equivalent audio site, it'd be MOSTLY music
01:55:11 <alise> ur mom is mostly music
01:56:30 <augur> thats too nice a thing to say about my mom.
01:57:16 <alise> i think i'll just make a mental note to never make ur mom jokes in #esoteric
01:57:16 -!- wareya has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
01:57:52 <alise> :/
01:57:59 -!- wareya has joined.
01:58:11 -!- Gregor-W has quit (Quit: Page closed).
02:00:52 <Sgeo> Grooveshark exists
02:01:51 <alise> it's shit
02:02:01 <augur> grooveshark is rather shit
02:02:29 <augur> but it did have a song that was nifty
02:02:29 <augur> so.
02:02:39 <augur> also, grooveshark is legal.
02:02:44 <augur> its not music sharing in the same way.
02:05:09 -!- Killerkid has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds).
02:06:50 * Sgeo WTFs at Google Chrome update
02:07:05 <Sgeo> At least there's a nice icon telling me
02:15:08 * Sgeo learns of /r/nethack
02:18:38 -!- Killerkid has joined.
02:40:02 <alise> Bye.
02:40:03 -!- alise has quit (Quit: Leaving).
02:44:08 <Sgeo> Going to torture myself with more SGI soon
02:54:48 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
02:54:58 -!- augur has joined.
03:15:31 <pikhq> Huh. An unmatched " or ' on a logical line is undefined behavior in C.
03:15:45 <pikhq> It would be perfectly acceptable for the compiler to respond by blowing up the planet.
03:16:40 <Gregor> pikhq: OMG NEW T-REX IS LONELY COMIC
03:16:59 <pikhq> Gregor: OMG
03:17:10 <Gregor> pikhq: OMG OMG
03:34:23 -!- jcp has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds).
03:39:51 <coppro> pikhq: I know. That one is epic
03:49:52 -!- jcp has joined.
03:58:56 -!- wareya has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
04:00:06 -!- wareya has joined.
04:18:12 -!- sshc_ has joined.
04:19:38 -!- sshc has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds).
04:31:34 -!- Zuu has quit (Ping timeout: 276 seconds).
04:32:23 * pikhq is now highly upset.
04:32:48 <pikhq> The only thing I have found that does vertical text only Linux without fiddling is... OpenOffice.
04:33:49 <coppro> pango?
04:34:07 <pikhq> Pango requires fiddling.
04:34:13 -!- sshc has joined.
04:34:16 -!- sshc_ has quit (Ping timeout: 276 seconds).
04:34:16 <pikhq> Sadly, OpenOffice fucks up the details.
04:34:56 <pikhq> (「 is *technically* a half-width character with an implicit half-width space preceding it, except at the start of lines...)
04:35:29 * coppro cries
04:36:18 <pikhq> It also doesn't do hanging punctuation.
04:36:29 <pikhq> So, it does vertical *text*, but it rapes typesetting.
04:37:36 -!- Zuu has joined.
04:37:36 -!- Zuu has quit (Changing host).
04:37:36 -!- Zuu has joined.
04:38:06 <coppro> are you trying to do Japanese?
04:38:37 <pikhq> Yes.
04:38:51 <pikhq> I have yet to find anything on Linux that typesets vertical Japanese correctly.
04:42:04 <pikhq> (TeX manages to do horizontal Japanese decently)
04:44:11 -!- sshc_ has joined.
04:47:16 -!- sshc has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds).
04:49:40 -!- sshc has joined.
04:52:38 -!- sshc_ has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds).
04:53:29 -!- zzo38 has joined.
04:55:12 -!- sshc_ has joined.
04:55:21 <zzo38> They keep moving the spider!
04:57:41 -!- sshc has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds).
05:00:25 -!- wareya has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
05:01:35 -!- wareya has joined.
05:03:34 <zzo38> O, please read the follow spell (if you do not want to dye, or even if you do want to dye): http://zzo38computer.cjb.net/dnd/options/Good_Insane_Spell.s (and suggest a spell level and/or domain)
05:03:51 <zzo38> (Please note I meant if you do or not want to dye, I don't mean die)
05:05:55 -!- Sgeo has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds).
05:11:04 * pikhq fucking *hates* how absolutely nothing handles freaking two consecutive punctuation correct.
05:11:31 <pikhq> 」。, if done *right*, would be a single character in width.
05:11:32 <zzo38> pikhq: What do you expect?
05:11:46 <pikhq> zzo38: Proper Japanese typesetting.
05:12:21 <zzo38> Can TeX be made to make Japanese writing including it being done right?
05:12:30 <pikhq> Not easily.
05:14:10 <zzo38> Please tell me what level this spell could be? Could it be a 6th level spell? Or 7th level spell?
05:15:02 <coppro> zzo38: level 1d9
05:16:08 <zzo38> coppro: Rolled when?
05:17:02 <coppro> zzo38: whenever
05:17:23 <zzo38> I don't see how it could work at preparation time, but perhaps, every day. But then, that means it can be learned at any level and sometimes you will be unable to use it that day??
05:17:37 <coppro> also, a strict reading of 0% would mean that if you rolleit, then rolled, again, you would roll 4 more times
05:17:37 <zzo38> Also I think it is powerful for 1st level spell or 2nd level spell
05:17:41 -!- sshc_ has changed nick to sshc.
05:18:12 <zzo38> coppro: That is not what is meant, if you roll 0% and then 0% again, you are meant to roll 3 more times, how can I clarify that?
05:19:53 <coppro> zzo38: delete the part about rolling 0% again
05:19:57 <zzo38> (Also, for the level, I do not have a nine sided dice anyways)
05:20:13 <coppro> d10-1? :P
05:20:20 <zzo38> coppro: What if I put that part in parentheses?
05:20:27 <coppro> yeah, that would probably be good
05:20:43 <zzo38> Done. It is now in parentheses
05:21:02 <zzo38> But if the level is random, I still don't know how you are supposed to decide when, and how it will work with a random level
05:22:18 <zzo38> But if the level is random I don't like 1d9 or 1d10-1, perhaps 1d4+4 or 1d6+3 would be better, but it still not quite sure how well it can work like that
05:24:46 <zzo38> And which domain would the spell belong to? And what mantle?
05:25:30 <zzo38> Do you like this spell? How often would *you* cast this spell?
05:26:37 -!- wareya has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
05:27:06 -!- wareya has joined.
05:28:43 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
05:29:25 <zzo38> Is there anything else unclear about the spell?
05:32:48 <coppro> zzo38: Probably never, because I value my sanity
05:33:28 <zzo38> Sanity is the trademark of a weak mind.
05:34:00 <zzo38> -- Mark Harrold
05:35:07 <zzo38> (Actually I don't know who Mark Harrold is, and I don't care)
05:35:11 <zzo38> (But that's irrelevant)
05:35:25 <zzo38> Is anything unclear about the spell effect, as it is currently written?
05:35:51 <zzo38> Is the spell sufficiently balanced close enough?
05:41:49 <zzo38> (O, and also, please do not steal my stapler.)
05:42:53 <coppro> I don't know
05:43:06 <coppro> it's so silly I don't think it could be said to be balanced one way or another
05:45:06 <zzo38> I still think it is worth 6th or 7th level, though. All the costs of it will make balance about as much as Limited Wish and other spells like that
05:45:22 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: Etc.).
05:45:51 <zzo38> The spell can potentially kill you if you are not careful (and possibly even if you are careful)!
06:15:44 -!- calamari has joined.
06:27:04 -!- GreaseMonkey has joined.
06:46:59 -!- Wamanuz has joined.
06:58:34 -!- zzo38 has quit (Quit: They keep moving the spider!).
07:18:23 -!- relet has quit (Quit: Leaving.).
07:32:45 -!- kwertii has quit (Quit: bye).
07:39:02 -!- zeotrope has quit (Quit: leaving).
07:40:52 <coppro> holy crap
07:40:58 <coppro> I discovered the epicness that is 'dn' in vim
07:41:30 <coppro> (similar to 'd/foo')
07:49:46 -!- JneTOnope has joined.
07:50:03 -!- JneTOnope has left (?).
07:51:13 <Vorpal> coppro, talking of /, I just realised the phrase "spell pretty pi" is a valid sed expression
07:51:34 <Vorpal> (same meaning as s/ell /retty /i )
07:52:13 <Vorpal> it should be possible to use that general idea for some interesting obfuscation. Perhaps even sed poems
07:52:35 <calamari> sed bf interpreter?
07:52:54 <Vorpal> calamari, sounds like a good target for such obfuscation.
07:53:02 <Vorpal> alas I don't know sed quite well enough
07:53:24 <calamari> I looked the other day, didn't find one
07:53:39 <Vorpal> calamari, wait, isn't sed input bound
07:53:53 <Vorpal> at least it need one line of input to compute anything
07:53:55 <fizzie> No, you can do arbitrarily much computation per input line.
07:53:57 <Vorpal> ah
07:54:04 <fizzie> You do need one line of input, that's true.
07:54:53 <coppro> I now really really <3 the concept of motions (and I was a fan before)
07:55:26 <Vorpal> anyone know the size of the set of valid unique irc nick chars? With unique I mean counting Foo and foo as the same, since irc is case insensitive.
07:56:34 <Vorpal> my goal here is figuring out how many possible nicks of max length 16 there are
07:56:43 <fizzie> The valid characters are different for the first character than the others.
07:56:54 -!- calamari has changed nick to a234567890123456.
07:56:55 <Vorpal> fizzie, ah... yes that complicates it indeed
07:57:27 <fizzie> And it also depends on whether your server does that sort-of-standard-but-still-obsoleted case-mapping of former Finnish 7-bit encoding åäö/ÅÄÖ.
07:57:36 * Vorpal checks
07:57:55 <Vorpal> on the server I'm calculating this for: CHARSET=ascii
07:57:56 <Vorpal> so no
07:58:05 -!- a234567890123456 has changed nick to a_-.
07:58:16 <Vorpal> I own _[] on freenode :P
07:58:20 -!- a_- has changed nick to a[].
07:58:34 -!- a[] has changed nick to a^.
07:58:38 <fizzie> The legal starting characters are A-Z and these: [ ] \ ` _ ^ { | }
07:58:56 <fizzie> And then digits 0-9 in the non-starting ones.
07:59:12 <a^> so there you go..
07:59:16 -!- a^ has changed nick to calamari.
07:59:25 <Vorpal> that means for any length n the number of valid nicks are s*t^n where s is size of starting set and t is the size of the set for the rest...
07:59:28 <Vorpal> so lets see
07:59:54 <calamari> 35*45^15
07:59:56 <Vorpal> is there anything like ! except for plus rather than multiplication?
07:59:59 -!- clog has quit (ended).
08:00:00 -!- clog has joined.
08:00:09 <Vorpal> calamari, you need to include each length
08:00:18 <Vorpal> shorter than or equal to 16
08:00:20 <calamari> true
08:00:25 * Vorpal writes a sum function
08:00:43 <Vorpal> wait, got to rush, will do this when I get back
08:00:44 <Vorpal> bbl
08:00:59 -!- cheater109 has joined.
08:01:39 <fizzie> If you're in such a rush, just write the terms; there's not *that* many of them.
08:01:46 <fizzie> 35+35*45+34*(45^2)+34*(45^3)+34*(45^4)+34*(45^5)+34*(45^6)+34*(45^7)+34*(45^8)+34*(45^9)+34*(45^10)+34*(45^11)+34*(45^12)+34*(45^13)+34*(45^14)+34*(45^15)
08:01:46 <fizzie> 218487432379159386374733710
08:02:53 <fizzie> Except don't do what I do and typo that 35 as 34. :p
08:03:39 <calamari> I think I personally would have factored that out lol
08:04:04 -!- cheater99 has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds).
08:05:07 <fizzie> >>> sum([35*(45**x) for x in range(16)])
08:05:07 <fizzie> 224913533331487603621049360L
08:05:13 <fizzie> That's the Python one.
08:05:23 <calamari> 224913533331487603621049360L
08:05:28 <calamari> oh you beat me to it
08:06:16 <calamari> >>> math.log(a*35)/math.log(2)
08:06:16 <calamari> 87.539500939582467
08:07:28 <calamari> so you have approx 11 bytes of storage (assuming that's what this was for?)
08:11:14 <fizzie> Did we have that thing here?
08:11:17 <fizzie> !haskell sum (map (\x -> 35*45^x) [0 .. 15])
08:11:33 <EgoBot> 224913533331487603621049360
08:11:41 <fizzie> Slow but sure.
08:14:54 <calamari> !haskell sum (map (\x -> 2^x) [0 .. 100000])
08:15:30 <calamari> !haskell 2^100001-1
08:16:06 <coppro> have you ever written code that you actually use in something that, whenver you look at it, you are both proud and disgusted to have written it?
08:16:54 <fizzie> On the other hand:
08:16:57 <fizzie> !haskell 35*(45^16-1) `div` 44
08:16:59 <EgoBot> 199800418602876901588806552866006718196085827810836338354305854772629166492851469665497466266489930080632878889111170986003759932153123531258169427084949857503977792597473421864927008547462249585316005570624821774741712105744567803291373820537013518470358293941057152893936030496646909510865005855730416139155419434822044640859527024106615559937958502332397415435715519110434401626405904092358984585185912478419315957471163173350509915946262896124985205236
08:18:10 <fizzie> Well, it would give the same answer, but I guess EgoBot is being busy now.
08:19:14 <coppro> there it goes
08:21:57 <calamari> hate to crash the bot and run, but I need to go to bed :)
08:22:16 -!- calamari has quit (Quit: Leaving).
08:22:24 <fizzie> Perhaps it just ignored the stuff that happened while it was busey?
08:22:27 <fizzie> !haskell 42
08:22:29 <EgoBot> 42
08:22:34 <fizzie> Apparently so.
08:22:55 -!- zeotrope has joined.
08:25:06 <fizzie> !perl $s += 35*(45**$_) foreach (0 .. 15); print $s;
08:25:06 <EgoBot> 2.24913533331488e+26
08:25:13 <fizzie> That's not quite as useful, thanks to floats.
08:26:04 <fizzie> !perl use bignum; $s += 35*(45**$_) foreach (0 .. 15); print $s;
08:26:06 <EgoBot> 224913533331487603621049360
08:26:13 <fizzie> That's better.
08:30:44 <zeotrope> !j +/ (35*45^]) i. 16x
08:30:55 <zeotrope> no J, :(
08:31:26 <fizzie> !help languages
08:31:26 <EgoBot> languages: Esoteric: 1l 2l adjust asm axo bch befunge befunge98 bf bf8 bf16 bf32 boolfuck cintercal clcintercal dimensifuck glass glypho haskell kipple lambda lazyk linguine malbolge pbrain perl qbf rail rhotor sadol sceql trigger udage01 underload unlambda whirl. Competitive: bfjoust fyb. Other: asm c cxx forth sh.
08:31:42 <fizzie> Vorpal: Incidentally, CHARSET=ascii does not mean anything about the case-mapping.
08:32:06 <fizzie> Vorpal: If it says CASEMAPPING=rfc1459 it technically speaking should be using the "weird" one.
08:32:41 -!- Mathnerd314 has quit (Quit: ChatZilla 0.9.86-rdmsoft [XULRunner 1.9.2.8/20100722155716]).
08:33:36 <fizzie> Freenode seems to say that, though it might be lying. IRCnet nowadays says CASEMAPPING=ascii, which I guess means just A-Z → a-z translation.
08:33:58 <fizzie> It's just -3 to the sizes, though.
08:34:09 <fizzie> !perl use bignum; $s += 32*(42**$_) foreach (0 .. 15); print $s;
08:34:10 <EgoBot> 73173658289716097933147360
08:36:10 <fizzie> (Lunchtime now.)
08:50:38 <Deewiant> 5" +q"f2+'a4'@*+1",A@"**+'15' ")y/"6'@'Y3'@*+**+****+*******
09:00:57 -!- myndzi\ has joined.
09:05:19 -!- myndzi has quit (Ping timeout: 276 seconds).
09:20:35 -!- MigoMipo has joined.
09:23:39 -!- MigoMipo has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
09:24:01 -!- MigoMipo has joined.
09:49:44 <Vorpal> fizzie, ah so it does
09:49:49 <Vorpal> so yeah the weird mapping
09:51:11 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined.
09:52:17 <Phantom_Hoover> 15:04:37 <alise> Phantom_Hoover_: you're making me want to create an esolang inspired by that syntax ← I once tried, but that was for the export system.
09:52:40 <Phantom_Hoover> So object → module made object visible in module.
09:53:36 <fizzie> Strange that freenode, which is otherwise very modernized, still keeps the "old" case-mapping, while IRCnet, which tends to be very "conservative" sort of place, doesn't.
09:53:58 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, what old case-mapping?
09:54:42 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: IRC's legacy thing where {|} are equal to [\] in nicknames.
09:55:11 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, but that's cool!
09:55:13 <fizzie> (Since nicknames are compared case-insensitively, and those characters are åäö and ÅÄÖ in one old 7-bit Finnish encoding.
09:55:42 <Phantom_Hoover> Well, they map appropriately on my keyboard.
09:56:15 <Phantom_Hoover> map shift ['[','\',']'] = ['{','|','}']
09:56:21 <fizzie> Yes, but it's the wrong way around.
09:56:28 <fizzie> {|} are the lowercase characters.
09:56:39 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, does it matter?
09:56:53 <fizzie> Well, no, you can't actually *see* that, but it's that way in the ToUpper/ToLower tables.
09:58:00 <fizzie> Similarly ~ is lowercase ^, but that doesn't matter so much because ~ is not legal in nicknames. It might matter in some other context.
10:01:14 <fizzie> fis@iris:~$ echo åäö | iconv -t FI
10:01:14 <fizzie> }{|
10:01:21 <fizzie> Nice that iconv still has that thing, too.
10:01:36 <fizzie> (At least this version. Something I tried it on didn't.)
10:02:13 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, so you didn't have {|} in that encoding?
10:02:37 <fizzie> Yes. Not very programmer-friendly, but there's not that much "useless" characters in ASCII.
10:02:55 <fizzie> Also no [\].
10:03:35 <fizzie> I doubt anyone actually wrote code in that encoding, though. I've mostly seen it in BBSy contexts.
10:04:04 <Phantom_Hoover> What about BBSes with code?
10:04:29 <fizzie> Even there files tended to be handled separately, and moved over ZMODEM or something that does 8-bit octets.
10:06:29 <Phantom_Hoover> "8-bit octets" is a redundant tautology, isn't it?
10:07:49 <fizzie> I think I was about to say either "8-bit bytes" or "octets", and managed to produce a hybrid.
10:08:34 <Phantom_Hoover> Byctets.
10:09:21 <Ilari> Heh... I see some POS systems print product names containing ä using those [ characters...
10:09:57 <Ilari> S => Sale
10:10:14 <Phantom_Hoover> Well, no|ne can deny that it was predictable.
10:10:25 <fizzie> Oh, I was thing of a completely other four-letter S word.
10:10:42 <fizzie> (Also "piece" instead of "point".)
10:12:00 <fizzie> <span lang="fi">Mutta eiväthän ääkköset ole enää ongelma!</span>
10:32:22 <Vorpal> argh I seem to lack some kernel option for blktrace, but I can't find which one
10:32:39 <Vorpal> /sys/kernel/debug is there, but /sys/kernel/debug/block/ is not...
10:35:22 -!- tombom has joined.
10:35:34 <fizzie> BLK_DEV_IO_TRACE perhaps?
10:37:28 <Vorpal> fizzie, trying to locate it
10:37:48 <Vorpal> aha
10:38:21 <Vorpal> fizzie, is there any slowdown when not in use hm?
10:39:16 <fizzie> This is a complete guess, but I'd go with "perhaps some, but probably not much".
10:41:01 <Vorpal> right
10:41:27 <Vorpal> still I'm wondering what the heck is causing IO more or less all the time
10:42:38 <Vorpal> here we go *compiles kernel*
10:45:24 -!- MigoMipo has quit (Quit: Quit).
10:47:57 <fizzie> I think blktrace's in-kernel infra is done with the "kernel markers" thing, which I believe are pretty low-overhead when not in use, though maybe not completely invisible like kprobes.
10:53:18 <Vorpal> fizzie, great... it just displays kcryptd.... How completely useless
10:54:17 <fizzie> Can you trace at bit higher level? The dm-crypt devices are block devices too, after all.
10:54:27 <Vorpal> fizzie, I did it on /dev/mapper/root
10:54:31 <Vorpal> which is what I mount
10:55:05 <Vorpal> fizzie, it seems all writes are dumped onto flush-252:0 or kcryptd while reads go to the apps that did it
10:55:23 <Vorpal> tested by catting a large file and also by then teeing it to another file
10:55:52 <fizzie> That's a bit strange, but perhaps understandable. The actual write-to-disk act is a bit decoupled from the application requests.
10:56:24 <Vorpal> fizzie, well... my goal is figuring out what apps wake up the disk from sleep in my laptop
10:56:57 <fizzie> What if you temporarily mount it with -O sync? (This may mean horrible amount of disk-trashing and slowness, though.)
10:57:06 <Vorpal> fizzie, -O ?
10:57:08 <Vorpal> not -o ?
10:57:16 <Vorpal> but. I could try that
10:57:31 <fizzie> -o; I don't know where I remembered -O from.
10:57:43 <fizzie> It might still not catch the application, though.
10:57:59 <Vorpal> it doesn't
10:58:15 <Vorpal> oh it does in one case, but not in another one
10:59:00 <Vorpal> rsyslogd, konsole, jbd2/dm-0-8 and flush-252:0 Oh and swapper(0)
10:59:16 <Vorpal> what is swapper? it is not the swap device... so it can't be that
11:00:01 <Vorpal> fizzie, can you somehow get the file out of it? I'm using btrace with -s for per-program stats
11:00:13 -!- FireFly has joined.
11:00:55 <fizzie> I don't really know. Probably not, since it's done at the block device level; though I guess with knowledge of the file system you could reverse-map blocks back to files.
11:01:03 <Vorpal> argh
11:01:13 <fizzie> Some sort of VFS-level tracing thing sounds more suitable for this, but I'm not sure what there is on that level.
11:01:26 <Vorpal> I guess lsof should be able to help with figuring out what files are open at least
11:02:18 <Vorpal> konsole has 289 files open. Most looks like pipes and some mmaped fontconfig things, and lots of *.so
11:02:41 <Vorpal> well, I can ignore /usr, since there is nothing writable for it there
11:06:59 <fizzie> I remember looking for a nice VFS-level IO tracing tool earlier too, and I don't think I had much luck in finding one then.
11:07:36 <Vorpal> hm
11:08:01 <Vorpal> unix sockets on the file system, those wouldn't cause any writing would they?
11:08:17 <Vorpal> it's pretty much that and $HOME/.xsession-errors left after elimination
11:10:12 <Vorpal> hm lsof does not show fd flags
11:10:22 <Vorpal> as in, r, w or rw
11:10:41 <fizzie> Mhmmm, have you that thing mounted with noatime?
11:11:30 <Vorpal> fizzie, relatime
11:11:44 <Vorpal> fizzie, due to some apps screwing up with noatime
11:12:07 <fizzie> There are reasonably few of those, but I guess relatime is a good compromise anyway.
11:12:27 <Vorpal> well now I can't check any more, since it is on AC it decided to start cronjobs
11:12:42 <Vorpal> so atm all I will see is mandb
11:12:56 <Vorpal> yes I remounted without the sync flag since then
11:13:27 <fizzie> I don't see how actual write/read on a unix socket would cause any filesystem writes, but it exists as a file so perhaps metadata updates. Doesn't sound very likely.
11:15:08 <Vorpal> hm
11:15:09 <fizzie> There's that "fsnotify" thing that I think should be usable for tracing all operations over an entire filesystem (unlike dnotify/inotify where you'd have to watch each directory separately), but I'm not sure if there's sensible userland tools for it.
11:15:46 <Vorpal> heh
11:17:18 <Vorpal> fizzie, btw, do you happen to know if nvidia works with the new 2.6.35 kernel?
11:18:01 <fizzie> Haven't tried, but there's usually a patch floating out there somewhere very soon.
11:18:39 <Vorpal> well, it builds against it
11:18:44 <Vorpal> doesn't mean it works nicely though
11:19:48 <fizzie> I've been running the Ubuntu stock kernel lately on the only box I have with a monitor, so... for some reason there hasn't been any pressing need to twiddle with any settings.
11:20:07 <Vorpal> fizzie, well I'm updating on my arch linux desktop as well, and I run vanilla there
11:20:26 <Vorpal> the arch kernel only has like one or two small patches anyway
11:21:52 <Vorpal> You have mail in /var/spool/mail/arvid
11:21:56 <Vorpal> $ alpine
11:21:58 <Vorpal> Alpine finished -- Closed empty folder "INBOX"
11:22:01 <Vorpal> yeah right
11:22:08 <Vorpal> whatever sent that first notification failed
11:24:42 <Vorpal> fizzie, anyway on my ubuntu laptop I have like three separate things to build out of tree after kernel upgrade: tp_smapi (thinkpad stuff) using some "module-assistant" tool, backported and slightly patched wireless drivers (manual), virtualbox kernel module (supposedly automatic but often fails)
11:24:56 <Vorpal> (fails as in fails to run, not as in compile error)
11:26:19 -!- Vorpal has quit (Quit: ZNC - http://znc.sourceforge.net).
11:26:40 <fizzie> Someone has done something sensible to DKMS on Ubuntu, though: it used to take a horrible amount of time (multiple seconds!) on boot-up to do who-knows-what, but it no longer does. Possibly they've moved some stuff to the hooks it runs when installing new kernels.
11:29:58 -!- Vorpal has joined.
11:31:54 -!- GreaseMonkey has quit (Quit: New quit message. Entering 2006 in style.).
11:36:39 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, I sort-of noticed that.
11:36:58 <Phantom_Hoover> Although I've had a couple of boots hang lately, so...
11:44:14 <Vorpal> on desktop it is dm-1, dm-2 and dm-3 that are being written to. Those are home, var and tmp hm
11:45:33 <Vorpal> oh well, /home is irc logs... or at least part of the activity on there is.
11:49:25 * Phantom_Hoover wonders why CL's standard doesn't require tail call elimination.
11:49:58 <Phantom_Hoover> It's hardly a taxing requirement, compared to piles of mud like LOOP and FORMAT.
11:57:59 <fizzie> It might be somewhat tricky if your implementation is to compile into a higher-level language that doesn't do tail calls.
11:59:28 <fizzie> I'm thinking mostly C here. Still, I doubt Scheme's tail-call necessities have ever stopped anyone from implementing it. (I've seen non-conformant non-tail-callsy Schemes, though.)
12:00:28 <Vorpal> fizzie, C is hardly higher level compared to CL ;P
12:00:37 <Vorpal> (yeah that isn't what you meant, but that is what you said!)
12:01:07 <fizzie> I thought about clarifying, but...
12:01:17 <Vorpal> :P
12:03:45 <Vorpal> what happens if you mmap a file and then close the fd before munmapping it?
12:09:32 <fizzie> It might keep the file "open" still, much like what happens if you close a dup'd fd, but that's just a guess.
12:10:48 <fizzie> "The mmap() function adds an extra reference to the file associated with the file descriptor fildes which is not removed by a subsequent close() on that file descriptor. This reference is removed when there are no more mappings to the file." -- SUSv2, http://opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007908775/xsh/mmap.html
12:13:09 <fizzie> (I don't have the POSIX pdfs handily downloaded here at work.)
12:13:21 <Vorpal> ah
12:13:25 <fizzie> (And can never remember where they were in the web.)
12:14:25 <fizzie> http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/mmap.html apparently. It's the same text there, though.
12:14:49 <fizzie> Except that it says "shall add" instead of "adds".
12:15:07 <Vorpal> btw how does the kernel talk to hardware? I was reading dmesg after kernel upgrade and saw: "[ 0.000000] Detected use of extended apic ids on hypertransport bus", it makes me wonder how it does that
12:15:44 <fizzie> I haven't been keeping up on hardware interfaces at all.
12:15:59 <fizzie> A lot of it is memory-mapped instead of I/O ports nowadays, I believe.
12:16:00 <Vorpal> right, it was aimed at the channel in general
12:16:13 <Vorpal> fizzie, well considering hypertransport it very likely is
12:18:06 <Vorpal> wtf at "[ 0.000000] Aperture too small (32 MB) than (64 MB)"
12:18:16 <Vorpal> it said on the line above it was 256 MB
12:18:27 <Vorpal> but the wtf here was the spelling
12:18:35 <Vorpal> or more correctly the lack of grammar
12:21:41 <fizzie> That's what you get when you leave error messages up to programmers.
12:21:50 <fizzie> Especially hairy kernel programmers. (That's another tautology.)
12:23:28 -!- tombom has quit (Ping timeout: 276 seconds).
12:24:40 <fizzie> The cpu-core local APIC is talked to via a 4k memory-mapped APIC register space, and the addresses for that are set by a particular MSR. I wouldn't be surprised if it's like that for other close-to-processor things too.
12:27:26 <Vorpal> fizzie, actually I believe it might be due to Japanese programmers. Reading kernel changelog I have come to the conclusion that many Japanese programmers have a most curious grammar
12:32:14 -!- coppro has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds).
12:33:05 <Vorpal> [ 1.844705] loop: module loaded <-- um, it is compiled in XD
12:34:11 -!- coppro has joined.
12:34:11 -!- coppro has quit (Changing host).
12:34:11 -!- coppro has joined.
12:34:28 <Vorpal> coppro, your cloak, it does nothing:
12:34:32 <Vorpal> * coppro (~scshunt@nat/uwaterloo/x-gjuhzltilsfaavyu) has joined #esoteric
12:34:32 <Vorpal> * coppro has quit (Changing host)
12:34:32 <Vorpal> * coppro (~scshunt@unaffiliated/scshunt) has joined #esoteric
12:34:47 <Vorpal> well, your second one that is
12:34:55 <Vorpal> the first one I don't know, looks strange
12:37:25 <fizzie> Kernel sources are always nice reading.
12:37:37 <fizzie> if (bpp == 24) { /* sorry */ } else { ...
12:38:12 <fizzie> It's at least nice that they're sorry.
12:38:18 <Vorpal> fizzie, I still think #define SECONDS_PER_MINUTE 60 from the freebsd pc speaker driver is the best wtf from kernel sources I have seen so far
12:38:28 <Vorpal> at least it wasn't a runtime variable
12:39:01 <Vorpal> another wtf thing
12:39:03 <Vorpal> [ 5.987224] input: PC Speaker as /devices/platform/pcspkr/input/input4
12:39:13 <Vorpal> how is the pc speaker an input device?
12:40:15 <Vorpal> fizzie, oh and they fail at locking for kernel messages:
12:40:16 <Vorpal> [ 6.755112] md0:
12:40:16 <Vorpal> [ 6.755445] md2: detected capacity change from 0 to 995702931456
12:40:16 <Vorpal> [ 6.755460] md2: unknown partition table
12:40:16 <Vorpal> [ 6.794998] unknown partition table
12:40:27 <Vorpal> the first and the last line I think are the same
12:40:36 <Vorpal> only way that makes any sense at all
12:41:14 <fizzie> Might be a performance thing.
12:41:20 <Vorpal> true
12:41:31 <Vorpal> it repeats the unknown partition table for md2 several times btw
12:41:44 <Vorpal> which is quite logical, since it contains a lvm pv
12:41:56 <fizzie> And I think the speaker-as-an-input-device thing could be related to input-device-layer beeps.
12:42:34 <Vorpal> [ 31.376013] sixxs: no IPv6 routers present <-- how absurd. It is an IPv6 tunnel...
12:42:43 <Vorpal> well, the tun interface for the tunnel
12:43:36 <fizzie> You can still run addrconf over it; the message is related to that.
12:44:10 <Vorpal> fizzie, btw a strange thing I noticed when starting X, is that it resets the acoustic management thingy on the harddrives. I fail to see how.
12:44:13 <Vorpal> there is:
12:44:15 <Vorpal> [ 260.048439] ata1.00: configured for UDMA/133
12:44:15 <Vorpal> [ 260.048448] ata1: EH complete
12:44:15 <Vorpal> [ 260.236441] ata2.00: configured for UDMA/133
12:44:15 <Vorpal> [ 260.236452] ata2: EH complete
12:44:18 <Vorpal> in the kernel logs
12:44:23 <Vorpal> at that point
12:44:38 <Vorpal> this happened on 2.6.34 too
12:44:51 <fizzie> Strange. Maybe a side effect of some other hardware-initialization/query thing? Who knows.
12:45:11 <fizzie> Peeking at my boot-time dmesgs too, on the single-core Atom box: "ACPI: NR_CPUS/possible_cpus limit of 1 reached. Processor 1/0x1 ignored."
12:45:12 <Vorpal> yeah who knows
12:45:20 <Vorpal> fizzie, wtf
12:45:37 <fizzie> No idea. I don't even know if that latter index is 0-based or not.
12:45:39 <Vorpal> fizzie, my kernel is compiled without SMP support on the desktop, since it is single core and custom kernel
12:45:44 <Vorpal> fizzie, HT?
12:45:53 <Vorpal> as in Hyper Threading
12:45:56 <Vorpal> not Hyper Transport
12:46:04 <fizzie> There is HT on the Atom, at least. I don't remember about the kernel side.
12:46:15 <Vorpal> well that would explain it
12:46:19 <Vorpal> it ignored the second core
12:46:21 <Vorpal> err
12:46:23 <Vorpal> second thread
12:47:01 <fizzie> I wouldn't think hyperthreading to show up as a separate processor in ACPI though, but I guess it might.
12:49:36 <fizzie> ata2.00: ATA-0: ELITE PRO CF CARD 16GB, Ver2.19K, max UDMA/100 -- the poor man's SSD.
12:49:53 <fizzie> (There's a compact flash card inside.)
12:51:22 <fizzie> I don't have a pcspeaker input device, but I have this other sort of beep: input: HDA Digital PCBeep as /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1b.0/input/input2
12:51:26 -!- Flonk has joined.
12:51:41 <Flonk> Hi hi
12:51:51 <Phantom_Hoover> Aha, Flonk!
12:51:52 <fizzie> Hi lo.
12:52:00 <Phantom_Hoover> Lo lo.
12:52:07 <Phantom_Hoover> Lo hi.
12:52:10 <Flonk> :D
12:52:16 <Phantom_Hoover> Grey sequence¬
12:53:09 <fizzie> Heh, CPUID strings from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPUID -- "AMDisbetter!" - early engineering samples of AMD K5 processor
12:53:27 <fizzie> Then they went with the boring AuthenticAMD, but I guess it at least is still a ripoff of GenuineIntel.
12:55:07 <Vorpal> fizzie, that is less UDMA than my sata drives
12:55:11 <Vorpal> they are UDMA/133
12:55:24 <fizzie> Hey, it's a compactflash card; cut it some slack.
12:55:33 <fizzie> It's not like it's going to saturate the bus anyway.
12:56:00 <Vorpal> fizzie, a bit strange on my thinkpad, DVD is UDMA/133, hdd is UDMA/100
12:56:02 <Vorpal> that's absurd
12:56:13 <Vorpal> on my desktop the dvd is UDMA/33, but then it is also PATA
12:59:06 <fizzie> The sensible way around on this work-workstation.
12:59:21 <fizzie> ata1.00: ATA-8: Hitachi HDP725016GLA380, GMBOA5BA, max UDMA/133; ata2.00: ATAPI: PLDS DVD+/-RW DH-16A6S, YD11, max UDMA/100.
13:00:54 <fizzie> "agpgart-intel 0000:00:00.0: detected 32764K stolen memory". Hey, who's been stealing my memory?!
13:01:15 <fizzie> Or possibly the IT folks here have been installing stolen goods into the boxen.
13:01:54 <Vorpal> fizzie, what sort of GPU? It should perhaps be shared video memory?
13:02:42 <Vorpal> from thinkpad:
13:02:45 <Vorpal> [ 0.758976] agpgart-intel 0000:00:00.0: Intel Mobile Intel® GM45 Express Chipset
13:02:45 <Vorpal> [ 0.759959] agpgart-intel 0000:00:00.0: detected 32764K stolen memory
13:03:02 <Vorpal> well strange it says agpgart, I'm 99% certain it is PCIe
13:03:15 <Vorpal> well,*
13:04:18 <fizzie> It's some Intel integrated, I guess.
13:05:40 <fizzie> Intel "Q45/Q43", whatever it's like
13:15:24 -!- oerjan has joined.
13:19:35 <Phantom_Hoover> sebbu2!
13:20:46 <sebbu2> maybe ?
13:22:44 <Phantom_Hoover> Maybe Sebbu2!
13:23:00 <sebbu2> ?
13:23:07 <Phantom_Hoover> Just sebbu2!
13:23:27 <Phantom_Hoover> Just sebbu2 >>= return!
13:23:30 <oerjan> <Vorpal> is there anything like ! except for plus rather than multiplication?
13:23:39 <oerjan> triangular numbers
13:23:40 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, sum?
13:24:07 <Phantom_Hoover> There's no special notation, because there's a nice closed form.
13:24:19 <oerjan> aka n(n+1)/2
13:24:54 <oerjan> i think i may have seen /\n (/\ here being a triangle)
13:25:15 <Phantom_Hoover> <Delta>n?
13:25:25 <Phantom_Hoover> Although that already means something else.
13:25:36 <oerjan> yeah
13:26:06 <oerjan> also binomial coefficient n+1 over 2
13:26:07 <Phantom_Hoover> DAMN YOU, GTK!
13:26:34 <fizzie> Here the question was more about the sum of a geometric series, $ \sum_{k=0}^n 35*45^k = 35 \frac{45^{k+1} - 1}{45 - 1}$.
13:26:45 <Phantom_Hoover> It REFUSES to acknowledge my .XCompose!
13:26:49 <oerjan> ah
13:26:50 <fizzie> Uh, with n = 15.
13:27:26 <fizzie> For some reason I hadn't realized EgoBot has a handy !perl too.
13:27:44 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, .XCompose?
13:27:48 <Vorpal> hm
13:27:56 <Vorpal> does that work in any other app?
13:28:02 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, yeah, xterm.
13:28:02 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: Did you try the XIM thing?
13:28:09 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, how curious. File a bug?
13:28:18 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, no, because I wasn't able to work out what it was.
13:28:44 <fizzie> Vorpal: "It's not a bug, it's a feature." GTK+ has a hardcoded compose table, and they know it already.
13:29:33 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, what was that about the geometric series?
13:30:17 <fizzie> The XIM thing is to stick export GTK_IM_MODULE="xim" into some suitable place, but it also means you might lose some GTK-specific input finery.
13:30:58 <Vorpal> fizzie, argh
13:31:02 <fizzie> What was what about geometric series?
13:31:08 <Vorpal> fizzie, why do they hard code it
13:31:13 <Vorpal> how can that be a feature?
13:31:29 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, I mean that formula you gave above.
13:31:53 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: Well, it's true, isn't it?
13:32:04 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, I think so.
13:32:05 <Vorpal> fizzie, and what GTK specific input stuff would one lose?
13:32:33 <Phantom_Hoover> It looks correct according to what I can remember of the finite calculus.
13:32:37 <fizzie> Vorpal: The hardcoded table is (or was, when it was made) an improvement over X's default tables; and I guess they wanted it also to be locale-*in*sensitive, to be more harmonious across locales.
13:33:03 <Vorpal> fizzie, that seems backwards. Besides it is afaik missing pi and many math symbols
13:33:11 <Vorpal> which are the ones I'm actually interested in on compose
13:33:31 <fizzie> So is/was the X table, I think.
13:33:32 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, that is exactly why I want to shoot the people who did it.
13:33:59 <Phantom_Hoover> "We're going to hardcode the compose table and leave all the interesting symbols out!"
13:34:26 <fizzie> And there's a GTK-specific unicode composition thing; ctrl-shift-u + string of hex digits with ctrl-shift held down composes a Unicode character. There might be more stuff for more complicated languages, I don't know about that.
13:36:11 -!- tombom has joined.
13:38:27 <Vorpal> fizzie, compose p i would be nice
13:38:38 <Vorpal> and so on
13:40:02 <Vorpal> fizzie, but what will I be missing with xim?
13:41:46 <fizzie> Whatever you get with SCIM, which I think is what it uses otherwise. I have no idea what that is, since my language is so trivial to input.
13:41:58 <fizzie> At least that Unicode thing I mentioned, I think.
13:43:12 <fizzie> Orrrr... or is it so that the hardcoded composite table is only in GTK_IM_MODULE=gtk-im-context-simple. It could be so, too.
13:43:19 <CakeProphet> !simpleacro
13:43:24 <CakeProphet> I am a man from the future.
13:43:36 <EgoBot> BLS
13:44:48 <CakeProphet> Boring Lomography System
13:47:10 <Phantom_Hoover> !simpleacro
13:47:12 <EgoBot> JLLVV
13:47:36 <Phantom_Hoover> John Lewis Low Value Verisimilitude.
13:47:37 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: From what I can tell, in a 'buntu system you should use "im-switch -s default-xim" to make a user-specific "default Gnome and Qt to use XIM" setting.
13:47:42 <fizzie> (Haven't tried that.)
13:48:17 <fizzie> It seems to mangle some environment variables that xinit sets, but I don't know how the user-level customizations happen.
14:00:00 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds).
14:01:12 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined.
14:02:20 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, im-switch didn't work.
14:02:38 <fizzie> You did restart your X, right?
14:02:47 <Phantom_Hoover> Yep.
14:02:55 <Phantom_Hoover> That's why I left the channel.
14:03:05 <fizzie> Well, you ping-timeouted.
14:03:35 <Phantom_Hoover> Yeah, XChat seems to have problems with handling quits gracefully.
14:04:19 -!- tombom has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds).
14:04:33 <fizzie> You could echo $GTK_IM_MODULE in a xterm to see if it even managed to put that variable in. Oh, and also to run a GTK app manually with that, something like "GTK_IM_MODULE=xim xchat", and see if the textfields there understand .Xcompose.
14:04:51 <fizzie> (If not, then I don't have many leftover suggestions.)
14:05:32 <Phantom_Hoover> Well, it's stopped working in xterm as well.
14:05:44 <Phantom_Hoover> You've made things WORSE
14:06:05 <Phantom_Hoover> Wait, aha!
14:06:33 <Phantom_Hoover> Launching xterm from gnome-terminal doesn't work, but it does when I use alt-f2.
14:07:35 <Phantom_Hoover> So yeah, it's GTK_IM_MODULE.
14:07:56 <fizzie> Heh-eh. And the manual variable-setting?
14:08:38 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, works.
14:08:57 <Phantom_Hoover> Now I need to make it be set when GNOME starts, though.
14:10:28 <fizzie> Well, gnome-session startup scripts source ~/.gnomerc before starting, so you can put an export command there.
14:11:01 <Phantom_Hoover> What syntax does that need?
14:11:11 <Phantom_Hoover> export GTK_IM_MODULE=xim?
14:11:14 <fizzie> It's ran with ".", so just write export GTK_IM_MODULE=xim there.
14:11:43 <fizzie> If you want to undo whatever im-switch messed up, you can remove the ~/.xinput.d directory it makes. I don't think there should be anything else than im-switch's mess in there. (But maybe rename it for one X restart before outright deleting it.)
14:12:22 <Phantom_Hoover> Oh, it seems to have done things with en_US.
14:12:31 <Phantom_Hoover> I am, naturally, using en_GB.
14:15:39 <fizzie> Hhheh. You can try that "-z all_ALL" flag to im-switch if you feel like it.
14:42:07 -!- augur has joined.
14:46:12 -!- Slereah_ has joined.
14:46:26 -!- Slereah_ has quit (Client Quit).
14:47:17 -!- BeholdMyGlory has joined.
14:47:56 -!- chickenzilla has quit (Quit: Changing server).
14:50:15 -!- chickenzilla has joined.
14:55:20 -!- sftp has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
15:01:22 -!- Killerkid has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds).
15:04:00 -!- sftp has joined.
15:08:08 -!- augur has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds).
15:09:15 -!- derdon has joined.
15:14:08 -!- Killerkid has joined.
15:23:48 -!- cpressey has joined.
15:25:11 <cpressey> Gregor: I got music! Finally! Thanks for your advice.
15:30:47 -!- relet has joined.
15:34:50 <Vorpal> cpressey, found a nice soundfont?
15:35:13 <cpressey> Vorpal: The "Chorium" one Gregor suggested sounds fine
15:35:17 <Vorpal> hm
15:35:21 <Vorpal> cpressey, isn't that piano only?
15:35:25 <Vorpal> or was that another one
15:35:49 <cpressey> Vorpal: I hope not, otherwise that piano sounded a lot like a bassoon.
15:36:14 <Vorpal> cpressey, hah :P
15:36:37 <Vorpal> cpressey, how large is the file? Over 100 MB right?
15:36:55 <cpressey> Vorpal: I don't remember. Probably. It took a while to download.
15:37:58 <Vorpal> cpressey, is it too much to hope for that you are good at decoding routing tables?
15:38:10 <Vorpal> I'm trying to make sense of my ipv6 routing table.
15:38:14 <cpressey> Vorpal: Yes, it's too much to hope for.
15:38:16 <Vorpal> ah
15:45:29 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds).
15:53:07 -!- Flonk_ has joined.
15:55:24 -!- Flonk has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds).
15:55:25 -!- Flonk_ has changed nick to Flonk.
16:03:30 -!- augur has joined.
16:04:06 <cpressey> I love how the standard icon for "save" in our culture is still the 3-1/2" floppy disc...
16:09:28 -!- cpressey has quit (Quit: Leaving.).
16:13:43 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
16:14:17 -!- augur has joined.
16:14:33 -!- Vorpal has quit (Quit: ZNC - http://znc.sourceforge.net).
16:16:59 -!- Vorpal has joined.
16:24:39 <Gregor> http://gizmodo.com/5614433/this-is-the-first-imax-3d-porn-movie-yes-imax-3d-porn "I don't know how many people would like to watch a gigantic penis waving in 3D a few centimeters from their faces"
16:26:16 <Vorpal> hah
16:26:32 <Vorpal> Gregor, I invoke Rule 34 on IMAX itself!
16:34:57 <zeotrope> 3d money shot?
16:51:13 <Zuu> Gregor, not a penis, but maybe a boob :>
16:56:00 -!- augur has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds).
17:04:47 -!- tombom has joined.
17:10:12 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: Good night).
17:25:43 -!- BeholdMyGlory has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds).
17:50:51 -!- Sgeo has joined.
17:51:50 <Vorpal> I have a macbook here that claims it get an ip from dhcp from the wrong segment
17:57:26 -!- Sgeo has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds).
17:57:51 -!- Sgeo has joined.
18:14:06 -!- Vorpal has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds).
18:15:11 -!- Vorpal has joined.
18:21:02 <Vorpal> <Vorpal> I have a macbook here that claims it get an ip from dhcp from the wrong segment <-- fixed by restarting router -_-
18:23:43 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined.
18:34:01 -!- sftp has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
18:35:38 -!- cpressey has joined.
18:37:32 -!- cpressey has left (?).
18:43:15 -!- sftp has joined.
18:46:02 <Phantom_Hoover> What's the current state of the art in cracking SHA512?
18:48:25 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, last I checked it was "har har, good luck"
18:48:33 <Vorpal> try google
18:48:43 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, tried. Brute force was all.
18:48:51 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, that would take forever
18:48:59 <Phantom_Hoover> And the first brute forcer to come up was in Perl.
18:49:12 -!- sftp has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
18:49:16 <Phantom_Hoover> Is Perl even compiled in any form?
18:50:17 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, as far as I heard it is likely your CPU will be gone due to decay before you break the SHA512 by brute force on current state of the art PCs.
18:50:22 <pikhq> Bytecode.
18:50:43 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, even for relatively short strings?
18:50:48 <Vorpal> and that was assuming some reasonably optimised implementation in C iirc
18:51:13 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, well I think it was for an 650 MB ISO in that case
18:51:15 <Phantom_Hoover> Well, I suppose for passwords it would have to be.
18:51:20 <Phantom_Hoover> Oh, for an ISO?
18:51:53 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, well yes, but even assuming passwords it is probably going to take way too long to be feasible, assuming passwords are shorter than ISOs in general :P
18:52:11 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, hm why are you asking this?
18:52:24 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, just curious.
18:52:26 <Vorpal> besides for passwords it will probably be salted
18:52:40 <Phantom_Hoover> No passwords are involved.
18:57:30 -!- cal153 has quit (Ping timeout: 260 seconds).
19:00:51 -!- zeotrope has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds).
19:01:43 <fizzie> Perl's "bytecode" is also not very low-level: the parsing is done, but the bytecode form is a (bit optimized) parse tree; it's pretty far from something like JVM bytecode. (Or Perl 6 and the Parrot VM, for that matter.)
19:03:13 <Vorpal> fizzie, or llvm
19:03:27 <Vorpal> even further from that
19:04:58 -!- sftp has joined.
19:05:28 <fizzie> There used to be a separate, experimental set of tools for compiling to the bytecode separately, loading and executing it, as well as a translation to C, but those were dropped from the Perl 5.10 distribution.
19:05:39 <fizzie> "perlcc, the byteloader and the supporting modules (B::C, B::CC, B::Bytecode, etc.) are no longer distributed with the perl sources. Those experimental tools have never worked reliably, and, due to the lack of volunteers to keep them in line with the perl interpreter developments, it was decided to remove them instead of shipping a broken version of those. The last version of those modules can be found with perl 5.9.4."
19:09:08 <fizzie> You can run something like perl -MO=Concise -e '$a = $b+42;' to see a bit what the bytecode looks like.
19:10:07 <Vorpal> wow
19:10:16 <Vorpal> never seen this heavy rain before
19:13:01 -!- zeotrope has joined.
19:16:35 <pikhq> fizzie: Few interpreters have low-level bytecode.
19:17:22 <fizzie> Perhaps that is so. I have no clue what Python gets mangled to, for example.
19:17:33 <pikhq> More typically, you're just wanting to make interpreting faster than walking a parse tree.
19:20:04 <fizzie> Python's bytecode seems to be for a rather low-level stack-based VM.
19:20:13 <pikhq> Hmm.
19:20:35 <fizzie> Based on the opcode list at http://docs.python.org/library/dis.html anyway.
19:21:03 -!- cpressey has joined.
19:21:15 <fizzie> On the other hand, the BASIC's I've known mostly just tokenize commands and that's about it.
19:22:08 -!- cal153 has joined.
19:27:20 <Phantom_Hoover> Are there any CPUs with native support for complexes?
19:27:22 <cpressey> What's so slow about walking a (threaded) parse tree? The only thing I can think of is that it's bulkier and so will have worse cache performance.
19:27:40 <Phantom_Hoover> SSE plausibly might, but I can't recall any single instruction for it
19:29:37 <cpressey> Phantom_Hoover: I don't think it does.
19:29:59 <fizzie> Your generic SIMD that can do 128-bit values as pairs of two 64-bit double-precision floats will obviously help in manipulating complex numbers, though.
19:32:30 <Phantom_Hoover> Well, (a+bi)(c+di) = ac-bd+bci+adi
19:32:40 <pikhq> cpressey: It's bulkier, has worse cache performance, and often has more requisite branching.
19:32:58 <pikhq> Making it slower by constant factors.
19:34:44 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: TI's TMS320C64x+ has complex-multiply (of two pairs of signed, packed 16-bit values; it's a 16-bit fixpoint thing) opcodes, but it's not exactly a traditional "CPU", rather a DSP thing.
19:35:47 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, I think you could do it on SSE with a small number of instructions.
19:35:53 <cpressey> pikhq: Well, "requisite branching"... in a parse tree, you always get an absolute(ish) pointer to the next node. In a flat-memory VM, you can ++ an offset to get to the next instruction. I guess it does take slightly longer to load up the absolute pointer, than it does to increment and resolve the offset.
19:36:21 <pikhq> cpressey: Small constant factor.
19:36:54 <pikhq> The more *noticable* changes from bytecode are probably because that allows for optimisation.
19:37:12 <pikhq> Well. I guess you can directly optimise a parse tree, but that's a bit harder.
19:38:05 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: Sure, and probably even less instructions with the new fused-multiply-add instruction sets ("a = a*b + c", basically) they've talked about. (And PPC has that particular operation, though I'm not sure if their SIMD extension, AltiVec, has.)
19:38:42 * Phantom_Hoover is trying to work out what the instructions would be
19:39:46 <fizzie> That TI DSP is also a.. was it a 8-way VLIW thing, so you could most likely do it in reasonably few cycles, even if there'd be several "instructions". Probably two, since you can do two general multiplications per cycle.
19:41:48 <Phantom_Hoover> Does SSE even give you the ability to work with packed doubles?
19:42:00 <Phantom_Hoover> I can't find any mention of mulpd.
19:43:43 <fizzie> SSEn, for some number of n > 1, does, IIRC.
19:44:22 <fizzie> There's a MULPD listed in this overview.
19:44:46 <fizzie> "The MULPD instruction is an SSE2 instruction."
19:44:50 <fizzie> Okay, so n >= 2.
19:45:14 <cpressey> pikhq: Interesting. At any rate, bytecode doesn't seem to help CPython's speed much (compared to rb and perl which I hear are more parse-tree like.) lua and erl use a register machine model instead of a stack machine, and they both claim to have better performance because of it.
19:46:05 <Vorpal> fizzie, but SSE2 is the baseline nowdays
19:46:09 <fizzie> Parrot is a register-style VM too.
19:46:10 <Vorpal> all x86-64 has SSE2 at least
19:46:21 <Vorpal> fizzie, aren't most fast VMs that?
19:46:51 <pikhq> cpressey: Stack machine's simpler, register machine's simpler to optimise.
19:46:58 <Vorpal> cpressey, also erl? don't you mean beam?
19:47:00 <fizzie> I don't know about that; aren't most fast VMs JITting sort of thing?
19:47:18 <Vorpal> well, that is even faster
19:47:18 <cpressey> Vorpal: Pedant.
19:47:25 <Phantom_Hoover> So anyway, we need to have ac, ad, bc and bd to multiply two things.
19:47:30 <Vorpal> cpressey, I prefer pendant ;P
19:47:30 <Phantom_Hoover> s/things/complexes/
19:49:02 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, ac ad? HERETIC!
19:49:02 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: You might find SHUFPD helpful; like the name says, it shuffles the halves around.
19:49:13 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, you are using multi-letter variables!
19:49:23 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, uh, no.
19:49:25 <Vorpal> for something as mathematical as multiplication
19:49:34 <Phantom_Hoover> It's multiplication.
19:49:49 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, you mean (a+bi)*(c+di), thus a, b, c and d?
19:49:54 <cpressey> m * u * l * t * i * p * l * y
19:49:56 <Phantom_Hoover> Yes.
19:50:08 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, see, no need to resort to multi-letter variables
19:50:24 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, it's to indicate the necessary multiplications.
19:50:52 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, oh, those looks like variables though
19:50:53 <Vorpal> hm
19:50:57 <Phantom_Hoover> (a+bi)(c+di)=ac-bd+adi+bci
19:51:05 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, yeah where did the i go there?
19:51:23 * cpressey stores i in a 64-bit register while no one is looking
19:51:35 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, you need to keep track of the i. You could end up with them canceling each other out
19:51:53 <cpressey> Vorpal: Are you familiar with complex numbers?
19:52:07 <Vorpal> cpressey, yes, and I'm referring to multiplying with conjugate
19:52:10 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, i*i=-1. You should REALLY know that.
19:52:19 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, yes indeed
19:52:45 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, I don't get what your problem is.
19:53:24 <Phantom_Hoover> (a+bi)(a-bi)=a^2+b^2
19:53:32 <Phantom_Hoover> No problem.
19:53:37 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, ah I see what you did there, you are discussing this on a rather lower level, while I'm thinking of symbolic manipulation like a CAS
19:53:49 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, yes.
19:53:55 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, that explains everything
19:54:11 <Phantom_Hoover> It would work in a CAS!
19:54:19 <Phantom_Hoover> Your point still makes no sense!
19:54:37 -!- ais523 has joined.
19:55:15 * Sgeo is Henry the VIIth he is
19:55:18 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, Phantom_Hoover, yes but it would be nonsensical not to treat it as ac-bd+adi+bci so you could remove terms symbolically in case it turned out that was possible. Such as ac=bd for example
19:55:27 <Sgeo> erm, VIII
19:55:33 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, bbl
20:01:18 -!- cpressey has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
20:03:18 -!- cpressey has joined.
20:05:51 <cpressey> Most languages where you define named functions, it's like they have dynamic scope (for those function names). Especially if you can change them. I'm thinking Scheme's "define" here...
20:07:30 -!- cal153 has quit.
20:08:06 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, define is *for* dynamic scope.
20:08:39 <Phantom_Hoover> let is for lexical scope.
20:10:07 -!- cpressey has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds).
20:10:40 <Phantom_Hoover> Well, assuming define is similar to CL's def* operators.
20:11:43 <Vorpal> cpressy: erlang and haskell use lexical scope for functions iirc
20:11:47 <Phantom_Hoover> Ack, it doesn't.
20:12:11 <Phantom_Hoover> But you can just use let for functions in Scheme.
20:12:16 -!- cal153 has joined.
20:12:49 <Vorpal> you can use a function before it is defined in erlang after all, as long as it is declared further down in the file everything is OK
20:12:53 <Vorpal> same goes for haskell iirc
20:12:54 <Vorpal> not for C
20:13:26 <Phantom_Hoover> Oh, in the sense that it only works if you've defined it earlier in the first file?
20:13:31 -!- cpressey has joined.
20:13:52 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, how do you mean "dynamic scope" here?
20:13:58 <cpressey> Interwebs so flaky today
20:14:22 <cpressey> Phantom_Hoover: dynamic binding of names. instead of lexical binding.
20:14:37 <cpressey> It's not really dynamic. I'm not explaining it well.
20:14:48 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, well, you can use let to make lexically scoped functions in Scheme anyway.
20:14:49 <Vorpal> <Vorpal> cpressy: erlang and haskell use lexical scope for functions iirc
20:14:53 <Vorpal> <Vorpal> you can use a function before it is defined in erlang after all, as long as it is declared further down in the file everything is OK
20:14:53 <Vorpal> <Vorpal> same goes for haskell iirc
20:14:53 <Vorpal> <Vorpal> not for C
20:14:59 <Vorpal> assuming that is the sense you meant
20:15:19 <Vorpal> cpressey, that is one way to interpret what you mean
20:15:25 <Vorpal> another would be runtime dynamic
20:15:31 <Vorpal> as in bash or elisp
20:15:42 <cpressey> Vorpal: that's not how I see it
20:15:49 <Vorpal> which doesn't apply very well to any compiled-to-low-enough-level language
20:15:56 <Vorpal> cpressey, then what do you mean
20:16:04 <cpressey> Vorpal: never mind
20:16:22 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, do you mean dynamic-as-in-elisp?
20:18:11 <Sgeo> A part of it boils down to "When someone saves your life, you belong to that person. She saved your life. Let's respect local customs!"
20:18:28 <Sgeo> (3rd episode of Stargate Infinity)
20:20:45 <Sgeo> And... internal inconsistency
20:21:16 <Sgeo> One or two episodes ago, the bad guys would apparently find it easy to keep chasing through the Stargate, but now it's difficult to determine last dialled addresses
20:21:33 <Sgeo> (The latter is more canonical in Stargate-verse, but SGI is very uncanonical anyway)
20:31:15 <Vorpal> Sgeo, what
20:31:21 <Vorpal> Sgeo, this is completely out of context
20:31:33 <Sgeo> Stargate Infinity
20:31:40 <Sgeo> third eisode
20:31:44 <Vorpal> "<Sgeo> A part of it boils down to" <-- part of what?
20:31:57 <Sgeo> the episode's plot
20:31:59 <Vorpal> Sgeo, yes but you used "it" without defining what "it" referred to
20:32:01 <Vorpal> before
20:32:27 <fizzie> It was a forward-referring it. Don't be so linear!
20:32:36 <Vorpal> har har
20:50:54 <FireFly> Hrm
20:51:02 <FireFly> Vorpal, why the nick change?
20:53:40 <Phantom_Hoover> Is there an SSE instruction to add the two doubles in an xmm register and store the result in the low quadword?
20:54:44 <Phantom_Hoover> Or to negate the second double in a register?
21:00:51 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: HADDPD sort-of does it. HADDPD xmm1, xmm2/mem128 adds the two doubles of xmm1 and stores the result in low half of xmm1; but it also adds the two doubles of xmm2/mem128 and stores that result in high half of xmm1, so you lose that half if you needed it for something.
21:02:16 <Phantom_Hoover> Well, basically, if xmm0 is (a,b) and xmm1 is (c,d) I want xmm0 to be (a-b,c+d)
21:02:19 <fizzie> As for the negation, I don't know about that, but you can ADDSUBPD xmm1, xmm2/mem128 to simultaneously do xmm1:high += xmm2:high and xmm1:low -= xmm2:low, which is sort-of the same as ADDPD but with the second argument negated.
21:16:13 <cpressey> Phantom_Hoover: I don't know elisp. What Scheme does is definitely a kind of dynamic scope for "define", though. (Even though it's touted as a "lexically scoped Lisp" -- that doesn't apply to "define".)
21:16:29 -!- augur has joined.
21:16:53 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, can you give me a code snippet to demonstrate what you're getting at?
21:17:06 <Phantom_Hoover> Just to clarify.
21:17:51 <cpressey> Phantom_Hoover: http://pastie.org/1100763
21:18:02 <Vorpal> <FireFly> Vorpal, why the nick change? <-- why not
21:18:07 <cpressey> No "Scheme" markup on pastie.org. But there is "Go". Peasants!
21:18:19 <Phantom_Hoover> Pheasants!
21:18:23 <Vorpal> anyone has any experience with cross compiling the linux kernel here?
21:18:33 <FireFly> Vorpal, dunno, haven't noticed it before
21:18:50 <Vorpal> FireFly, well yeah, it is reasonably new
21:18:53 <FireFly> Or rather, hadn't*
21:18:58 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, what's out of place there?
21:19:19 <cpressey> Phantom_Hoover: "k" is dynamically scoped.
21:19:29 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, in the sense that r can reference it?
21:19:53 <cpressey> In the sense that its meaning within r varies, yes.
21:20:07 <cpressey> r does not "capture" k.
21:21:09 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, well, it couldn't really work otherwise.
21:21:50 <Phantom_Hoover> Well, it could keep the reference, but that's probably not what you'd expect.
21:21:56 <Sgeo> Does Common Lisp really suck that bad?
21:22:04 <Phantom_Hoover> Sgeo, no, of course not.
21:22:11 <Phantom_Hoover> What gave you that impression?
21:22:30 <Phantom_Hoover> It's far from perfect, but it's a pretty good language, all in all.
21:23:21 <cpressey> Phantom_Hoover: What I expect is that if a language touts itself as being "lexically scoped"... well, whatever.
21:23:37 <cpressey> What I expect doesn't matter.
21:24:10 <Warrigal> For me, the easiest scoping to understand is no scoping.
21:24:23 <Sgeo> Woo, just won apples2apples!
21:24:25 <Vorpal> scheme > CL though
21:24:25 <Warrigal> Want a local variable? Find an object and attach a property to it.
21:24:35 <Warrigal> And, uh, it's really, really easy to make global variables.
21:24:45 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, it's lexically scoped in the sense that if you call a function inside a let block or similar construct, then that function can't access any of the variables in that block.
21:24:46 <Warrigal> Eew. I no longer like no-scoping.
21:24:58 <Vorpal> Warrigal, why?
21:25:10 <Warrigal> Because it makes it really, really easy to make global variables.
21:25:32 <Sgeo> Newspeak is pretty much the opposite, right?
21:25:35 <Vorpal> Warrigal, I thought you meant that was a bonus? though I agree it is horrible
21:26:30 <cpressey> Phantom_Hoover: I realize that. It's also dynamically scoped in the sense that if you call a function after a define, that function does access the names that you just (re)defined.
21:26:50 <Warrigal> Also, sometimes, scoping is pretty obvious. For example, function parameters should obviously be available to the function body.
21:27:19 <Phantom_Hoover> cpressey, well, yes. It has both.
21:28:01 <Warrigal> Now, how about Unlambda-style scoping? Variables are not allowed. Your program must consist entirely of built-in constants and literals.
21:28:04 -!- zeotrope has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds).
21:28:25 <Phantom_Hoover> Warrigal, there is no scoping in UL.
21:28:46 -!- zeotrope has joined.
21:29:15 * cpressey starts singing that Bon Jovi song about "where the streets have no name"
21:29:50 <cpressey> Or is that U2?
21:30:17 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: I make no claims for this to be optimal, but here's one way: http://sprunge.us/XLYL -- you could perhaps get rid of some shuffling.
21:30:25 <cpressey> I think it's U2. The Bon Jovi song has some line about "the streets are the same, only the names have changed"
21:30:37 <Vorpal> cpressey, what are the examples of non-dynamically scoped languages then
21:30:42 <Vorpal> cpressey, haskell? erlang?
21:30:50 <cpressey> Vorpal: Haskell
21:31:05 <Vorpal> cpressey, erlang is too excluding hot-swapping of modules
21:31:27 <Vorpal> cpressey, which is really kind of out-of-band compared to scoping
21:31:29 <Sgeo> Maybe I should learn Erlang at some point
21:31:30 <cpressey> Vorpal: that's why I didn't say Erlang
21:31:39 <Sgeo> I think I tried once
21:31:46 <Vorpal> cpressey, but I claim that is like unloading a *.so and then loading another
21:31:46 <Sgeo> Kind of gave up caring about it
21:31:56 <Vorpal> cpressey, haskell supports plugins and such
21:32:02 <Vorpal> thus dynamically scoped
21:32:31 <cpressey> Vorpal: OK, all languages that support that are dynamically scoped in this sense, then,
21:32:49 <fizzie> (It's a bit depressing that the actual ops (three: mulpd, mulpd, addsubpd) are fewer than move-around instructions (four: movddup, unpckhpd, 2*shufpd).)
21:32:53 <Vorpal> cpressey, yes, and in the sense that haskell is not dynamically scoped, so is erlang not
21:33:24 <cpressey> Vorpal: Yes - was I not clear when I said "all languages"?
21:33:41 <Vorpal> cpressey, well, there could be languages not supporting this
21:33:58 <Warrigal> Phantom_Hoover: I'm using "scoping" metaphorically.
21:34:05 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, OK.
21:34:06 <cpressey> Vorpal: Yes - was I not clear when I said "all languages" *in the phrase* "all languages that support this"?
21:35:06 <Warrigal> Unlambda has no variables; thus, an Unlambda-scoped language is a language that has no variables.
21:35:47 <Vorpal> cpressey, well I just wanted to point out that erlang is in fact as statically scoped as haskell. Then I replied to "all languages"
21:35:50 <fizzie> Maybe horizontal add/sub could help in the shuffling, though perhaps not so much since there's only one of each, and haddpd/hsubpd always performs at least two adds/subs.
21:36:12 <Vorpal> cpressey, actually, there is a useful notation of "static in the sense of haskell and erlang"
21:36:37 <Vorpal> cpressey, in both cases plugins/hot-swap-upgrades can be considered out of band activities
21:36:47 <Vorpal> that is not really part of the actual language and it's syntax
21:38:04 <cpressey> Vorpal: I assume you mean "notion". Calling it an "out-of-band activity" is just a form of handwaving imo.
21:38:35 -!- augur has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
21:38:41 <Vorpal> cpressey, err yes notion
21:38:52 -!- augur has joined.
21:38:56 <Vorpal> cpressey, and no it isn't really hand waving
21:39:44 <Vorpal> cpressey, it is not something which is done during normal operation, you need to perform some kind of loading of a new compiled file
21:39:50 <cpressey> Vorpal: Erlang processes are purely functional. Oh, you're using the process dictionary? Well, that's out of band.
21:40:07 <Vorpal> cpressey, well, I think there is a difference there. Oh also ETS
21:40:39 <cpressey> The point is, I can pick anything, call it "out of band" and not "normal", and say anything I want about the rest.
21:40:42 <Vorpal> cpressey, and I do not consider erlang to be pure. Pure with a few exceptions yes, but that doesn't make pure
21:41:07 <Vorpal> cpressey, well, it is out of band in much the same way as hardware replacement is. On a server with hot swap
21:41:18 <Vorpal> cpressey, also be careful when hotswapping cpus
21:41:21 <Vorpal> they can be quite hot
21:41:27 <cpressey> Vorpal: DULY NOTED
21:41:42 <Vorpal> cpressey, oh and easy to damage too
21:42:07 <Vorpal> cpressey, I never hot swapped one myself but I watched someone do it
21:42:12 <Vorpal> I was rather scared
21:44:14 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: On the other hand, no-one is *forcing* your complex numbers to have the order (real,imag) in memory. You can save one shuffle (thanks to the addsubpd "direction") if you just keep your doubles the other way around: http://sprunge.us/KQCc
21:44:39 -!- augur has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds).
21:44:49 -!- matrix has joined.
21:46:49 -!- matrix has left (?).
21:47:16 <Vorpal> fizzie, what does addsubpd do?
21:47:26 <Vorpal> fizzie, also couldn't this be done better with SSE3 perhaps?
21:48:00 <fizzie> Vorpal: Given [a,b] in dst and [c,d] in src, it does dst <- [a+c,b-d]. Adds the high halves and subs the low ones.
21:48:24 <Vorpal> fizzie, how did they come up with that one
21:48:42 <fizzie> It's a reasonable thing!
21:49:00 <fizzie> And actually ADDSUBPD (as well as HADDPD/HSUBPD/MOVDDUP) *are* SSE3 instructions. Oh well.
21:49:46 <Vorpal> fizzie, so why not use them
21:50:11 <fizzie> I just did.
21:50:22 <fizzie> "More specifically, instructions to add and subtract the multiple values stored within a single register have been added. These instructions simplify the implementation of a number of DSP and 3D operations."
21:50:34 <Vorpal> heh
21:50:38 <Vorpal> fizzie, use 3dnow
21:50:39 <fizzie> They even mention complex numbers.
21:50:40 <Vorpal> just because
21:50:42 <fizzie> "MOVDDUP, MOVSHDUP, MOVSLDUP - These are also used for complex numbers, and can be helpful for wave calculation like sound."
21:51:28 <fizzie> I don't think 3DNow! (let's at least have the name right) even does double-precision.
21:51:32 <Vorpal> MOVSHDUP <-- Move Shadup?
21:51:38 <Vorpal> as in shut uå
21:51:39 <Vorpal> up*
21:51:48 <fizzie> "Move Single-Precision High and Duplicate".
21:51:59 <Vorpal> I prefer move and shut up :P
21:52:12 <Vorpal> prevents any MCE for 5 clock cycles ;P
21:52:40 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, it seems like such a stupid thing to leave out...
21:52:41 <fizzie> These at least have semi-pronounceable mnemonics; the packed-integer-data ops are sometimes worse. PUNPCKLQDQ?
21:53:08 <Phantom_Hoover> Packed Unpack Low Quad Double Quad?
21:53:52 <fizzie> "Unpack and Iterleave Low Quadwords" is what the title says, but...
21:54:33 <Vorpal> hahah
21:54:36 <fizzie> s/Iter/Inter/
21:54:55 <Vorpal> anyway SSE3 is a good baseline, unless you aim to support very old system
21:54:59 <Vorpal> in which case you want SSE
21:55:05 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, still a pure C fallback is best
21:55:07 <fizzie> PUNPCKLQDQ: pronounced pun-pucky-lucky-ducky.
21:55:15 <Vorpal> in case of you run on a pentium or such
21:55:18 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, ^
21:55:22 <Vorpal> or a non-x86 system
21:55:36 <fizzie> I don't think this was for anything serious+
21:56:07 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, why?
21:57:27 <fizzie> They instructions keep on getting more and more specialized, the larger numbers you put after SSE.
21:57:57 <fizzie> SSE4.1: "MPSADBW: Compute eight offset sums of absolute differences (i.e. |x0-y0|+|x1-y1|+|x2-y2|+|x3-y3|, |x0-y1|+|x1-y2|+|x2-y3|+|x3-y4|, ...); this operation is extremely important for modern HDTV codecs, and (see [5]) allows an 8x8 block difference to be computed in fewer than seven cycles."
21:58:19 <fizzie> They did add some dot products in, though.
21:58:24 <Phantom_Hoover> fizzie, so they have such pointless things as that, yet not even cmult?
21:58:25 -!- fungot has quit (Read error: Operation timed out).
21:58:25 -!- FireFly has quit (Read error: Operation timed out).
21:58:25 -!- yiyus__ has quit (Read error: Operation timed out).
21:58:25 -!- CakeProphet has quit (Read error: Operation timed out).
21:58:26 -!- FireFly has joined.
21:58:38 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, is this just some private software?
21:58:50 -!- yiyus has joined.
21:58:51 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, shame on you for not releasing it then.
21:58:51 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, it's no software at all.
21:58:53 -!- CakeProphet has joined.
21:59:07 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, what? are you taking up our time for something pointless that isn't esolangs
21:59:18 <Phantom_Hoover> I just can't see why it's overlooked like this in favour of ridiculously specific instructions.
21:59:39 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: Also single-instruction CRC32.
22:00:30 <Vorpal> fizzie, what is really needed is adding some 256 bit SIMD registers
22:00:35 <Vorpal> unless they done that already
22:00:39 <Vorpal> then go for 1024-bit
22:00:48 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, they're going to in the near future.
22:01:03 <Vorpal> oh my
22:01:26 <Phantom_Hoover> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Vector_Extensions
22:01:31 <fizzie> Yes, with the clever mnemonic YMMn; it's one more than X, after all.
22:01:51 <Phantom_Hoover> "Further extensions to 512 or 1024 bits are expected in the future"
22:02:19 <Phantom_Hoover> Wow, they can ignore the quaternions, octonions and the sedenions as well.
22:02:33 <fizzie> Yeah, ZMMn for the 512-bit registers, but what will they call the next set?
22:02:59 <Phantom_Hoover> [MMn?
22:03:03 <fizzie> ÅMMn, if they follow the usual Finnish alphabet order. Wow, that'd be the awesome.
22:03:14 <Vorpal> how does ipv6 autoconfig select ips
22:03:46 <Ilari> Hey, where did fungot go?
22:03:49 <pikhq> fizzie: Considering typical x86 naming conventions, RZMMn
22:04:11 <Phantom_Hoover> Or ezmmn.
22:04:25 <Phantom_Hoover> E-zimmin'
22:04:27 <Vorpal> <Phantom_Hoover> Wow, they can ignore the quaternions, octonions and the sedenions as well. <-- um aren't they like rarely used these days?
22:04:35 <Vorpal> matrix stuff is what I would expect
22:04:36 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, true.
22:05:00 <Phantom_Hoover> I suspect the sedenions have never been used for anything.
22:05:11 <fizzie> Vorpal: There's IPv6-ICMP router-advertisement messages which gives the network prefix, and the low 64 bits are usually built from the MAC address.
22:05:13 <cpressey> fizzie: Supra-ASCII opcode mnemonics WOULD be awesome.
22:05:58 <pikhq> Perhaps to make things more confusing, 新MMn.
22:06:10 <cpressey> And: liberation for sedenions NOW!
22:06:23 <cpressey> % fist
22:07:13 <Vorpal> fizzie, aha, from mac
22:07:17 <Vorpal> fizzie, well that explains it
22:07:25 <Vorpal> fizzie, how comes we haven't yet run out of MACs btw
22:09:38 <coppro> because they are buig
22:09:43 <coppro> (2^48)
22:09:57 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, 6-byte vs. 4-byte.
22:10:04 -!- GreaseMonkey has joined.
22:13:44 -!- alise has joined.
22:15:00 <alise> Cat names. Go!
22:15:26 <coppro> /bin/cat
22:15:35 <alise> Hilarious, but unpronounceable.
22:15:43 <coppro> "slashbinslashcat"
22:15:59 <alise> I do not think that name will be effective for the cat. :P
22:16:30 <alise> Maybe I'll call one Felix 2: Electric Boogaloo and the other Shaggy Dog.
22:17:03 <fizzie> It's not full 48 bits, or free-form either; the first octet has two flag bits, and the entire first half is the manufacturer ID, leaving just 2^24 = 16M devices with any one ID.
22:17:32 <alise> fizzie: Brief context?
22:17:39 <coppro> alise: mac addresses
22:17:56 <alise> 1 Infinity Loop, Cupertino, CA.
22:18:00 <alise> You're welcome!
22:18:01 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, Doctor Destructo!
22:18:06 <alise> *Infinite
22:18:14 <coppro> fizzie: but two different manufacturers could issue machines with the same "ID"
22:18:21 <coppro> and their addresses would be different
22:18:41 <Phantom_Hoover> The world needs more supervillain cats!
22:19:02 <fizzie> Sure, but it still means each different manufacturer will eat 2^24 device IDs, even if they only make a few. (Okay, so you won't get an organization ID if you only make a few, but *still*...)
22:19:17 <Vorpal> alise, speaking of cat, I implemented the (to my knowledge) first POSIX cat in an esolang.
22:19:27 <Vorpal> alise, save for -u which can't be done in befunge
22:19:37 <alise> Vorpal: How utterly exciting.
22:19:44 <alise> I have always wanted to see that.
22:19:51 <fizzie> (Incidentally, 3Com already has 41 organizational identifiers.)
22:20:12 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, I implemented it long before.
22:20:27 <Vorpal> alise, it is also the first befunge program with a GPL header that I know of. And I did that only because it was a first. Otherwise I would have done BSD probably.
22:20:28 <alise> Yes, but you're not quite as exciting as AnMaster!
22:20:36 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal is just in a state of denial.
22:20:39 <alise> Vorpal: Oh wow, I can barely contain how amazing this is.
22:20:43 <Vorpal> alise, Phantom_Hoover's claim is not backed up by any evidence :P
22:20:46 <Vorpal> just saying
22:20:47 <alise> Please have my fposix_babies.
22:20:58 <Vorpal> oh yeah forgot you hate posix
22:21:01 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, I posted the damn interpreter and program online"
22:21:02 <Vorpal> *shrug*
22:21:12 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, only after I did it
22:21:14 <Vorpal> as far as I know
22:21:26 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, true, but I WROTE the program years ago.
22:21:36 <GreaseMonkey> Phantom_Hoover: link or gtfo
22:21:42 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, that is what you say, and it is a HQ9+ish language
22:21:53 <Vorpal> as it is, it can only do cat
22:21:57 <Phantom_Hoover> GreaseMonkey, http://esolangs.org/wiki/User:Phantom_Hoover
22:22:15 <Phantom_Hoover> But that's not the first implementation I wrote.
22:22:21 <GreaseMonkey> hmmkay
22:22:30 <Vorpal> GreaseMonkey, as for mine: http://sprunge.us/UcYL
22:22:38 <GreaseMonkey> nope
22:22:40 <Phantom_Hoover> Implementation of cat, not the language.
22:23:14 <GreaseMonkey> befunge-98, of course...
22:23:26 <Vorpal> GreaseMonkey, well yes, I couldn't parse arguments or do file IO without that
22:23:37 <Vorpal> GreaseMonkey, I don't know any other esolang which allows that
22:24:01 <GreaseMonkey> Vorpal: there's perl
22:24:02 <Vorpal> GreaseMonkey, actually b98 + FILE would have been enough, but STRN makes thing less painful
22:24:06 <alise> Vorpal: Do you realise that your accomplishment is an utterly pointless waste of time; a trivial, uninteresting program that proves and demonstrates nothing written in a language already known to have decent support for this kind of stuff, such that your only accomplishment is arranging commands in a two-dimensional grid, which you have not even done, as it fails to even look aesthetically pleasing? Also, you misspelled "triple".
22:24:09 <Vorpal> GreaseMonkey++
22:24:11 <alise> Have a nice day.
22:24:35 <Vorpal> alise, do I look like I care about your opinion
22:24:43 <Vorpal> thanks for the comment correction however
22:24:50 <GreaseMonkey> alise -= 0.5\
22:24:50 <alise> Vorpal: You did when you excitedly told me all about it.
22:24:53 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, the words "pointless" and "waste of time" are not to be uttered on this channel.
22:24:58 <GreaseMonkey> s/\\/;/
22:25:09 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: Look, look, I wrote cat in a language that's just like Befunge but it has an if loop instead of a while loop!
22:25:15 <GreaseMonkey> Phantom_Hoover++
22:25:21 <Vorpal> GreaseMonkey, agreed
22:25:30 <alise> There's a reason this channel is #esoteric, not #pointless. That reason is that esoteric things are pointless /and/ interesting.
22:25:44 <Vorpal> alise woke up on wrong side of the bed (might be Swedish only idiom, not sure)
22:25:49 <Vorpal> oh the*
22:25:51 <GreaseMonkey> it's an achievement
22:25:51 <Vorpal> on*
22:26:00 <GreaseMonkey> <Vorpal> alise woke up on wrong side of the bed (might be Swedish only idiom, not sure) <-- wow, we have that idiom too
22:26:03 <ais523> alise: Befunge has while loops?
22:26:05 <Vorpal> alise, so you don't find it interesting, who cares
22:26:12 <alise> ais523: Erm, I meant brainfuck.
22:26:14 <ais523> sure, it has loops in general, but if and while aren't separate constructs
22:26:22 <ais523> and in BF, that would be impressive
22:26:26 <alise> Vorpal: You seemed to care enough to bug me about it; the only point of this could be to generate a positive response from me
22:26:29 <Vorpal> ais523, no, I wrote the pseudo code for it with goto
22:26:31 <ais523> given that an if-version of BF would be impossible to loop in
22:26:34 <ais523> Vorpal: that's cheating
22:26:35 <Vorpal> that says a lot
22:26:42 <Vorpal> ais523, how so?
22:26:43 <alise> So, you care about my opinion, as long as it coincides with yours, thus boosting your already overinflated sense of ego due to writing this program.
22:26:46 <Phantom_Hoover> ais523, impossible to write POSIX cat in BF.
22:26:48 <Vorpal> ais523, writing pseudo code first is not cheating
22:27:07 <Vorpal> ais523, it was just a way to figure out the best way to do it in befunge
22:27:19 <ais523> oh, I mean you can't add GOTO to BF and still call it the same lang
22:27:19 <Vorpal> specifically the argument parsing
22:27:27 <Vorpal> ais523, I talked about befunge
22:27:30 <Vorpal> not braunfuck
22:27:30 <Sgeo> Oh, alise is awake
22:27:33 <Vorpal> brainfuck
22:27:37 <ais523> Phantom_Hoover: really? without command-line args, you can cat everything, including NUL, if you have more than 8 bits and EOF=-1
22:27:46 <alise> Sgeo: I've always been awake. You know, the unit and all.
22:27:51 <Vorpal> ais523, and yes you can add it to befunge. It is called SUBR
22:28:11 <Phantom_Hoover> ais523, true.
22:28:58 <cpressey> Wait, I just looked at the source now. This so-called POSIX-compliant cat is only "mostly POSIX-conforming". What?
22:29:22 <cpressey> What's the point of "mostly" conforming to a standard?
22:29:30 <Vorpal> cpressey, because of -u
22:29:37 <Vorpal> cpressey, read list at end of source
22:29:43 <Vorpal> cpressey, those are limitations of befunge-98
22:29:47 <Vorpal> nothing I can do about them
22:29:51 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, so? You can configure the terminal.
22:29:56 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, what?
22:29:58 <cpressey> Vorpal: So your cat *isn't* POSIX compliant.
22:30:05 <alise> Yay! You wrote a program whose only point is to confirm to an authorityless standard, and didn't even manage to do that.
22:30:06 -!- leBMD has joined.
22:30:07 <Vorpal> cpressey, it is as far as it is possible
22:30:23 <leBMD> Greetings, programmers of the esoteric variety.
22:30:27 <Vorpal> cpressey, and -u would depend on value returned by y
22:30:31 <Vorpal> cpressey, for the flags
22:30:32 -!- wareya has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
22:30:44 <Vorpal> cpressey, if you want the other value change implementation ;P
22:30:53 <Vorpal> I could add a check that errors out of the buffering is wrong
22:30:55 <cpressey> Vorpal: There are probably hundreds of implementations of 'cat' in esolangs that are "as POSIX-compliant as possible" for the languages they're done in.
22:31:28 <Vorpal> cpressey, then you can say this is the most posix compliant one
22:31:29 -!- wareya has joined.
22:32:01 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, I think you'll find mine is POSIX-complianter.
22:32:08 <leBMD> What language are you talking about?
22:32:15 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, yeah that you released after
22:32:17 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, Befunge-98.
22:32:20 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, you are just being silly
22:32:20 <leBMD> oh, ok
22:32:23 * Sgeo finished depict
22:32:25 <Sgeo> depict1
22:32:30 <Sgeo> with some spoilers >.>
22:32:32 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, so? It's actually POSIX compliant, though.
22:32:33 <Vorpal> cpressey, and the first one in befunge-98 that is as posix compliant as possible
22:32:39 <alise> POSIX-compliant cat in Brainfuck: ,[.,]
22:32:46 <alise> It's as compliant as possible, because Brainfuck can't read files.
22:32:47 <Vorpal> alise, not true :P
22:33:01 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, in what sense?
22:33:04 <leBMD> I'm workign on a text adventure in it, and gosh it takes a bit to type out the parsing routine
22:33:12 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, in what?
22:33:18 <leBMD> Befunge-98
22:33:36 <Vorpal> leBMD, the mostly posix cat is at http://sprunge.us/UcYL
22:33:44 <Vorpal> cpressey, btw not even gnu cat implements -u
22:33:50 <leBMD> I've got it to read N, n, S, s, E, e, W and w, but I can't quite figure out how to do strings.
22:33:54 <Vorpal> no cat I found on any of my systems does it
22:34:02 <leBMD> and I mean string input, not output.
22:34:06 <Vorpal> cpressey, and the argument parsing is of no practical significance
22:34:27 <Vorpal> cpressey, since the null string is not a valid filename
22:34:44 <Vorpal> cpressey, thus in practise it makes no difference
22:34:45 <Phantom_Hoover> "-u
22:34:45 <Phantom_Hoover> Write bytes from the input file to the standard output without delay as each is read. "
22:34:52 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, yes 1p says that
22:35:05 <Phantom_Hoover> What does that even require?
22:35:07 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, but I checked GNU, FreeBSD and NetBSD cat's
22:35:09 <Sgeo> PSOX could always help...
22:35:17 <fizzie> leBMD: The easy way is to just use STRN fingerprint functions.
22:35:19 <Vorpal> Sgeo, not for this
22:35:20 <Phantom_Hoover> Surely it doesn't require unbuffered IO in terminals?
22:35:33 <leBMD> STRN fingerprint?
22:35:44 <leBMD> I've been doing character input
22:35:47 <Vorpal> Sgeo, it can't turn line buffered IO into unbuffered IO
22:36:11 <Phantom_Hoover> I mean, cat -u file vs. cat file: what is the difference?
22:36:14 <leBMD> hm, maybe I don't know as much about 98 as I thought.
22:36:31 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, I think it is unbuffered on both stdin and stdout for -u
22:36:47 <Vorpal> I could add a fingerprint which did it of course :P
22:37:16 <Vorpal> leBMD, implemented a 98 interpreter yet? I found that is the best way to learn the language
22:37:21 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, so why doesn't GNU cat have it?
22:37:34 <leBMD> No, not yet.
22:37:35 <fizzie> leBMD: There are these fingerprints you can load with (; they define commands for uppercase letters. STRN has line-based string input and output. But it's completely possible to do without, of course, especially if you need that little input.
22:37:38 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, *shrug*
22:38:03 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, find me a modern cat which does. MAAAYBE solaris is my guess. Of course you could dig up an old one which did
22:38:26 <leBMD> Okay, I maight do that.
22:38:31 <leBMD> might*
22:38:34 <Vorpal> leBMD, that is a lot of work however
22:38:45 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, in any case, on a fully POSIX-compliant system, my cat program is POSIX compliant.
22:38:49 <Vorpal> leBMD, I wrote cfunge. Took me... over a year I think.
22:38:57 <Vorpal> leBMD, with all the fingerprints I support
22:39:03 <Vorpal> not continuous of course
22:39:04 <alise> leBMD: BTW, CCBI 2 is better.
22:39:05 <leBMD> for general directions, I've just been copying and subtracting UTF-32 numbers for the characters, and then doing a _ or |
22:39:09 <alise> (Someone's gotta evangelise.)
22:39:10 -!- sshc has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds).
22:39:20 <leBMD> I've been using ccbi
22:39:22 <Vorpal> alise, no evangelising please :P
22:39:35 <Vorpal> also I never claimed ccbi2 was bad
22:39:42 <alise> Vorpal: You're evangelising.
22:39:49 <Vorpal> alise, no, I didn't
22:39:49 <alise> You're just being more subtle about it.
22:39:52 <Vorpal> alise, read again
22:40:04 <Vorpal> alise, I said implementing befunge98 was a great way to learn it
22:40:12 <Vorpal> and that when I wrote mine, cfunge, it took x time
22:40:12 <alise> Yes, you are, you wanted leBMD to recognise your achievement in creating cfunge.
22:40:21 <Vorpal> alise, you are paranoid
22:40:30 <Vorpal> utterly so
22:40:39 <alise> --says AnMaster.
22:40:46 <Vorpal> you see evangelists around every corner
22:40:47 <Phantom_Hoover> You're both horrible people. Can we move on?
22:40:47 <alise> It's not paranoia. Even if I'm wrong it's definitely not paranoia.
22:40:53 <Vorpal> alise, yeah since I'm paranoid, that says a LOT
22:40:53 -!- sshc has joined.
22:40:53 <alise> That isn't what paranoia is.
22:41:07 <Vorpal> alise, sure it is, not the tinfoil variant, true
22:41:13 <Vorpal> but paranoia for evangelists
22:41:22 <alise> Please look up "paranoia". Thanks.
22:41:44 <Vorpal> sigh.... why are you so annoying today?
22:41:47 <cpressey> leBMD: It's impossible to learn *funge-98 fully, if you include extensions, because there's no limit to them.
22:42:00 <leBMD> ok.
22:42:01 <Vorpal> stop trolling, and yes you are. Quite subtle
22:42:15 <leBMD> I've just been using plain ol' funge, without extensions.
22:42:42 <Vorpal> cpressey, true. When using JSTR I needed to look up the argument order
22:42:44 <alise> Vorpal: If I called you paranoid, would you even understand what irony is?
22:42:54 <alise> It's an important first step on the road to recognising the irony in situations.
22:43:00 <Vorpal> alise, those are not connected
22:43:08 <Vorpal> alise, and I fully admit I'm paranoid
22:43:13 <Vorpal> I never claimed anything else
22:43:16 <leBMD> ...
22:43:26 <alise> Interesting. So paranoia is a reason to dismiss me, but not a reason to dismiss you?
22:43:35 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, Vorpal SHUT UP.
22:43:47 <leBMD> You know, arguments on the internet are like the special olympics.
22:43:49 <alise> I would, but, you know, it's kind of fun.
22:43:58 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, STOP.
22:44:05 <Vorpal> alise, if I call you paranoid it says a lot, since I'm paranoid as well.
22:44:09 <Vorpal> leBMD, haha :D
22:44:12 <Phantom_Hoover> This channel is not for you to amuse yourself by arguing.
22:44:16 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, and no it isn't fun
22:44:19 <Vorpal> it is just annoying
22:44:21 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, that was at BOTH of you.
22:44:29 <Phantom_Hoover> Vorpal, then STOP RESPONDING.
22:44:33 <Vorpal> actually *puts alise on special list of client*
22:44:39 <alise> Vorpal: You haven't answered my question, only avoided it.
22:44:49 <Vorpal> there, no more messages from alise
22:44:51 <alise> I wonder if he realises that I like him not responding to my messages.
22:45:01 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, yes do not feed the trolls and so on
22:45:05 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, not always that easy
22:45:13 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, then WHY ARE YOU EXPLICITLY ADDRESSING HIM?
22:45:36 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, shut up, do not feed the troll ;P
22:45:48 <leBMD> CAPS LOCK IS CRUISE CONTROL FOR COOL.
22:46:24 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: Because it's fun to eke out new pieces of hilarious stupidity from him.
22:46:34 <alise> They flow with ease if you know how.
22:46:55 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, again, this channel is not for your amusement.
22:47:10 <leBMD> I wonder if it's possible to make a roguelike in funge, complete with proceedurally-generated map...
22:47:10 <Phantom_Hoover> Fight with Vorpal in a PM if you want to,
22:47:17 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, yes.
22:47:18 <fizzie> Phantom_Hoover: Yes, it's for SERIOUS BUSINESS.
22:47:36 <ais523> leBMD: same with any TC language
22:47:46 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: But that's less fun, because you don't get the odd other person adding a sarcastic slight against AnMaster without him noticing.
22:47:46 <leBMD> well, true.
22:47:50 <ais523> if you mean "would it be particularly difficult in Befunge", I don't think so
22:48:00 <alise> (Not that I'm naming names. Phantom_Hoover. leBMD. Uh, I guess I'm naming names now. fungot. EgoBot.)
22:48:03 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, well, you'd probably have a few problems with curses, for the reasons Vorpal stated above.
22:48:07 <leBMD> I wonder how you would go about reprinting the map with each new movement.
22:48:18 <alise> cfunge rejects any program containing the sequences "fuck" or "shit"
22:48:24 <alise> this can be problematic
22:48:31 <alise> Okay, that was lame.
22:48:38 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, well, you could always just reprint the map.
22:48:54 <Phantom_Hoover> If the IO is fast enough, it could look pretty good.
22:48:57 <leBMD> but how would I go about displaying the difference in character position?
22:49:22 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, you have the stuff to go on the screen in memory.
22:49:30 <leBMD> maybe I could have it check for @, and the if you say, hit "h" then it would locate @, replace it with . and print @ to the left.
22:49:32 <fizzie> You could also manually output widely-enough-supported cursor control codes.
22:49:47 <Phantom_Hoover> When something changes, alter the buffer, then print it all to the terminal.
22:49:52 <alise> leBMD: presumably it would maintain the state internally
22:49:59 <alise> then handle displaying it separately
22:50:06 <leBMD> true.
22:50:47 <leBMD> maybe it would save the map to a file, and then display it with you in the spawn point, and then go on a sort of grid-system to figure out how to change the display.
22:50:55 <leBMD> Boy, this sounds like a lot of work.
22:50:56 <alise> Erm.
22:50:58 <alise> Why use a file?
22:51:02 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, no.
22:51:03 <alise> Befunge has memory, you know.
22:51:12 <Phantom_Hoover> Befunge is ideal for this, actually.
22:51:12 <leBMD> well yeah
22:51:27 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: Not *that* ideal...
22:51:31 <Phantom_Hoover> Just demarcate a section of fungespace for the screen buffer, then print it
22:51:32 <leBMD> but, wouldn't it be a little rought workign with the map on the stack?
22:51:37 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: Well, perhaps.
22:51:44 <alise> leBMD: So put it at a position instead.
22:51:45 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, fungespacefungespacefungespace
22:52:04 -!- derdon has quit (Read error: Operation timed out).
22:52:10 <leBMD> gah, I feel like a noob. Are you talking about printing the map onto the source?
22:52:28 <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, in Befunge, the code space is readable and writable.
22:52:35 <leBMD> I know.
22:52:50 <leBMD> I've just never made it self-alter before, so I don't know it's full potential.
22:52:56 <Phantom_Hoover> So you can just have an 80x24 rectangle somewhere, and then write to that.
22:53:06 <alise> leBMD: look at the p/g instructions
22:53:13 <leBMD> ok
22:53:14 <alise> http://quadium.net/funge/spec98.html
22:54:52 <leBMD> And this is where I'm more familiar with 93. When it says "relative to the storage offset" what does that mean?
22:54:57 <Phantom_Hoover> You could even put the screen buffer so that a runtime display of fungespace would be the IO in itself.
22:55:29 <cpressey> leBMD: You can just ignore that part to start.
22:55:37 <leBMD> ok.
22:55:44 <cpressey> leBMD: The idea is that p and g work like they do in 93.
22:55:49 <leBMD> ok.
22:56:14 <Vorpal> <Phantom_Hoover> Fight with Vorpal in a PM if you want to, <-- nah, I ignored all, not just channel
22:56:29 <Vorpal> <Phantom_Hoover> leBMD, well, you'd probably have a few problems with curses, for the reasons Vorpal stated above. <-- NCRS?
22:56:52 <Vorpal> leBMD, using the NCRS fingerprint you have basic curses
22:56:53 <Phantom_Hoover> National Corvette Restorers Society
22:57:05 <Vorpal> Phantom_Hoover, NCURses
22:57:07 <Vorpal> in fact
22:57:09 <Vorpal> a fingerprint
22:57:21 <Vorpal> pretty sure ccbi supports it too
22:57:36 <FireFly> Guess the language: (![]+[])[+[]]+([][![]]+[])[+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]]+(!![]+[])[+!![]]+(!![]+[])[+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]]+(![]+[])[+[]]+(![]+[])[+[]+!+[]+!+[]]+(+!![]/+[]+[])[+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]]
22:57:43 <fizzie> If it's NCRS, how can it be "NCURses"?
22:57:57 <Vorpal> fizzie, err right
22:58:05 <Vorpal> fizzie, NCuRSes
22:58:06 <Vorpal> or
22:58:07 <alise> Because Befunge-110 introduces NCUR, the new, revised edition of NCRS!
22:58:12 <Vorpal> NCuRseS
22:58:20 <alise> Brought to you by CCBI Enterprises.
22:58:21 <Vorpal> fizzie, those both works
22:58:26 <alise> Erm.
22:58:28 <alise> cfunge Enterprises.
22:58:29 <alise> XD
22:58:36 <cpressey> FireFly: Ooh! Um... Ada?
22:58:38 <Vorpal> FireFly, underload?
22:58:45 <Vorpal> wait no
22:58:47 <Vorpal> not underload
22:58:55 <FireFly> Nope
22:59:02 <Ilari> Heh: Current estimated "IPv4 doomsday": 31st May 2011 (285 days from now).
22:59:02 <leBMD> >> it's been too long since I used vim.
22:59:02 <FireFly> JavaScript!
22:59:06 <Vorpal> FireFly, what?
22:59:09 <FireFly> Yup
22:59:11 <alise> FireFly: (+![])
22:59:15 <alise> That is the name of the language.
22:59:17 <Ilari> ~224635k addresses left.
22:59:20 <alise> FireFly: heh
22:59:23 <FireFly> js> (![]+[])[+[]]+([][![]]+[])[+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]]+(!![]+[])[+!![]]+(!![]+[])[+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]]+(![]+[])[+[]]+(![]+[])[+[]+!+[]+!+[]]+(+!![]/+[]+[])[+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]+!+[]]
22:59:23 <FireFly> firefly
22:59:31 <alise> Ilari: Those sure are being used up quickly.
22:59:36 <Vorpal> FireFly, how does that work
22:59:57 <alise> because ![] = false
22:59:58 <Vorpal> <Ilari> ~224635k addresses left. <-- that *sounds* like a lot
22:59:59 <alise> + coerces to number
23:00:03 <FireFly> It uses implicit casting from empty arrays to booleans, and then from booleans to integers (by adding booleans together)
23:00:04 <alise> false = 0
23:00:08 <FireFly> and then index strings like "undefined" and "false"
23:00:11 <alise> [] = as boolean = true = as number = 1
23:00:14 <alise> so ![] + [] = 1
23:00:14 <FireFly> indexes*
23:00:28 <FireFly> ![]+[] is the string "false"
23:00:31 <alise> Oh.
23:00:32 <alise> Hm.
23:00:33 <alise> Right.
23:00:36 <Vorpal> haha
23:00:39 <alise> FireFly: Very impressive.
23:00:41 <FireFly> (![]+[])[+[]] is "f"
23:00:51 <Vorpal> FireFly, 1-based index?
23:00:58 <FireFly> Nope, zero-based
23:01:00 <alise> No, +[] = 0, presumably.
23:01:01 <FireFly> +[] is 0
23:01:03 <FireFly> plus false
23:01:03 * Sgeo WTFs at Javascript
23:01:04 <Vorpal> ah
23:01:21 <Sgeo> It has to be an esolang, right?
23:01:22 <Phantom_Hoover> This is why I hated it.
23:01:32 <Sgeo> Not used in the real world?
23:01:35 <Vorpal> FireFly, so what about letters not in "undefined", "false" or "true"
23:01:40 <ais523> JavaScript's actually a pretty nice language
23:01:41 <Phantom_Hoover> Sgeo, consider 1[argv] in C.
23:01:41 <alise> JavaScript has some niceness; it's quite Schemey.
23:01:44 <Vorpal> FireFly, like v
23:01:48 <FireFly> We also have "Infinity"
23:01:48 <Phantom_Hoover> It's perfectly legal.
23:01:49 <alise> But the coercion rules are insanity.
23:01:54 <Vorpal> FireFly, what about the letter v
23:01:55 <ais523> I think in pretty much any nice language, you're going to get ridiculounessness like that too
23:01:57 <FireFly> And you can do "[Object object]" if you cheat and use {}
23:02:12 <FireFly> Can't think of a way to get v, I think
23:02:13 <Sgeo> Name some ridiculousness in Scheme or Smalltalk
23:02:13 <Ilari> That date is presumably when IANA runs down to 5 unassigned /8s and proceeds to assign one of them to each of the five RIRs.
23:02:21 <Vorpal> FireFly, aww, can't spell my nick then
23:02:29 <Vorpal> FireFly, can't you just add the char code?
23:02:31 <Vorpal> or something
23:02:33 <Vorpal> from the bools
23:02:34 <alise> Sgeo: the interaction of CALL-WITH-CURRENT-CONTINUATION and UNWIND-PROTECT.
23:02:34 <Ilari> And then IANA is out of unassigned address blocks.
23:02:40 <FireFly> Well, you'd have to use String.fromCharCode then
23:02:42 <Sgeo> unwind-protect?
23:02:47 <FireFly> And that wouldn't look as nice :P
23:02:56 <alise> Sgeo: If you ask that question, you're not competent enough in Scheme to implicitly claim its perfection. :p
23:02:56 <Vorpal> FireFly, ah
23:02:58 <Vorpal> FireFly, :/
23:02:59 <ais523> Ilari: assigning 1/8 was really a wake-up call for the world
23:03:03 <ais523> but they just went back to sleep again
23:03:06 <Sgeo> I think I can guess
23:03:15 <alise> Sgeo: You probably guess wrong.
23:03:17 <FireFly> Vorpal, there's probably plenty of strings one can use, that I haven't thought about
23:03:29 <alise> Sgeo: Also, "map" can either be safe to use with CALL-WITH-CURRENT-CONTINUATION, or tail recursive.
23:03:31 <Sgeo> alise, something vaguely akin to try/catch, or Smalltalk's ensure?
23:03:35 <alise> Not both.
23:03:58 <alise> Sgeo: But actually, it can technically be both; it just can't only do one iteration through the list.
23:04:03 <Vorpal> ais523, there is one isp in Sweden which provides native ipv6 according to SixXS. It is aimed at large company offices only
23:04:09 <Vorpal> no way I could get it
23:04:10 * Sgeo blinks
23:04:13 <alise> SISC's developer refers to this as "Tail-recursive, resistant to call/cc interference, O(1*n); pick two."
23:04:27 <alise> SISC picks the first two because it's a correctness nazi.
23:04:43 <Vorpal> ais523, it's sad
23:04:51 <Vorpal> ais523, I have a sixxs tunnel of course
23:04:51 <ais523> alise: couldn't you determine statically whether call/cc could interfere, or not?
23:04:55 <Vorpal> using it for freenode atm
23:05:00 <ais523> and optimise based on that
23:05:03 <alise> <Sgeo> alise, something vaguely akin to try/catch, or Smalltalk's ensure? ;; "Vaguely"; but it's much more complicated.
23:05:18 <ais523> Vorpal: IIRC, the person in charge of sixxs considers using an IPv6 tunnel for IRC to be unethical, or illegal, or something
23:05:23 <ais523> nobody really understands why
23:05:28 <alise> ais523: Perhaps. It'd never be 100% effective -- EVAL -- and it'd still fail on one of them in the worst case.
23:05:32 <Vorpal> ais523, sounds like whole-program optimisation would be useful there (wrt call/cc)
23:05:34 <cpressey> ais523: Static analysis? In Scheme? Surely you jest.
23:05:38 <alise> ais523: Besides, nobody uses the call/cc interaction, usually.
23:05:42 <Vorpal> ais523, no he doesn't
23:05:47 <alise> As far as I know its use is confined almost entirely to test suites.
23:05:51 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, what is the nature of the call/cc interaction?
23:05:57 <ais523> cpressey: well, you can statically-analyse everything to some extent
23:06:03 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: complicated.
23:06:08 <cpressey> ais523: Yeah, I'm not totally serious.
23:06:10 <Vorpal> ais523, he considers it for the sake of getting fancy rdns to be silly
23:06:10 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: read the spec; I don't know it off by heart because it's complicated.
23:06:11 <Sgeo> Are there any Lisps with decent standard libraries?
23:06:19 <ais523> Vorpal: ah, that makes more sense
23:06:25 <alise> Sgeo: arc :P
23:06:26 <cpressey> ais523: Sort of referring to my "oh no it's dynamically scoped" lament from earlier.
23:06:26 <Sgeo> I don't want to have to do Scheme/PSOX
23:06:32 <Vorpal> ais523, and one or two POPs limit it
23:06:33 <alise> (Yes, but you don't want to use them.)
23:06:53 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, does it entail weirdness when you call/cc inside map?
23:07:02 <alise> Sorry; it's DYNAMIC-WIND in Scheme.
23:07:12 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: Not DYNAMIC-WIND
23:07:14 <Vorpal> ais523, and host can't apply here, I have a cloak, and even without it, *@<blah blah>.se.sixxs.net is not very fancy
23:07:16 <alise> That's a separate issue.
23:07:27 <Vorpal> where <blah blah> is a bit I cut out due to being paranoid :P
23:07:55 <alise> Vorpal's computers are so insecure that he refuses to even reveal his IP address.
23:08:02 <leBMD> who here uses vim to edit in befunge?
23:08:13 <Vorpal> ais523, the faq on irc is at http://www.sixxs.net/faq/misc/?faq=irc
23:08:19 <Vorpal> ais523, if you are interested, check it
23:08:20 <alise> leBMD: I think Deewiant, author of CCBI, uses vim.
23:08:24 <leBMD> ok.
23:08:29 <Vorpal> ais523, go log read to find the url
23:08:37 <ais523> Emacs picture-mode is nice for Befunge
23:08:40 <ais523> Vorpal: I don't particularly care
23:08:42 <Vorpal> leBMD, I recommend emacs with picture-mode, that way you can write in all cardinal directions
23:08:50 <leBMD> I'm trying to remember the :command that allows me to move my cursor freely
23:08:50 <ais523> why do people seem to assume that everyone cares about all their links?
23:08:51 <Phantom_Hoover> "(display "Map is call/cc safe, but probably not tail recursive or inefficient.")"
23:09:06 <Phantom_Hoover> Surely s/in//
23:09:09 <leBMD> I tried M-x-picturemode, but it didn't let me write >.
23:09:10 <Vorpal> ais523, well you were discussing it :P
23:09:18 <cpressey> !scheme (display "hi")
23:09:19 <alise> Phantom_Hoover: but probably (not tail recursive) or inefficient
23:09:20 <Vorpal> what?
23:09:28 <coppro> ais523: do you filter all messages containing links?
23:09:28 <cpressey> We don't have a Scheme interpreter here?
23:09:30 <cpressey> Pity.
23:09:32 <Vorpal> !help
23:09:33 <EgoBot> help: General commands: !help, !info, !bf_txtgen. See also !help languages, !help userinterps. You can get help on some commands by typing !help <command>.
23:09:34 <alise> cpressey: But which one to pick? :P
23:09:39 <alise> cpressey: Clearly it should be OkloScheme.
23:09:39 <Vorpal> cpressey, it MIGHT just be sluggish
23:09:44 <leBMD> like, I would put in ">" and it wouldn't put it on the file.
23:09:44 <alise> We don't, btw.
23:09:51 <Phantom_Hoover> alise, ah.
23:09:54 -!- Gregor-W has joined.
23:09:56 <ais523> alise: have you not made Ponzi Scheme yet?
23:09:57 <Phantom_Hoover> OkloScheme?
23:10:05 <ais523> leBMD: that seems weird
23:10:07 <Gregor-W> Is everyone having a nice, olboxy day today?
23:10:08 <alise> ais523: no, I'm not sure I even will
23:10:09 <cpressey> ais523: OMG.
23:10:13 <ais523> are you sure you aren't using crazy keybindings?
23:10:13 <Vorpal> !befunge98 http://sprunge.us/UcYL UcYL
23:10:16 <Vorpal> I wonder if that work
23:10:17 <Phantom_Hoover> It's not on Google; it doesn't exist.
23:10:17 * coppro needs PonziScheme
23:10:21 <alise> cpressey: Name is taken.
23:10:21 <Phantom_Hoover> Q.E.D.
23:10:23 <alise> coppro: Name is taken.
23:10:23 <Vorpal> iirc it does download urls
23:10:24 <Vorpal> hm
23:10:25 <cpressey> ais523: That was an oerjan-worthy pun.
23:10:26 <alise> It's mine, MINE!
23:10:27 <alise> ALL MINE!
23:10:27 * Phantom_Hoover → sleep
23:10:30 <Vorpal> guess it saves it to different filename
23:10:31 <alise> cpressey: It's also my pun.
23:10:32 <alise> MINE!
23:10:35 <ais523> cpressey: it's alise's pun, not mine
23:10:37 <Vorpal> !help
23:10:37 <EgoBot> help: General commands: !help, !info, !bf_txtgen. See also !help languages, !help userinterps. You can get help on some commands by typing !help <command>.
23:10:43 <Vorpal> !help languages
23:10:44 <EgoBot> languages: Esoteric: 1l 2l adjust asm axo bch befunge befunge98 bf bf8 bf16 bf32 boolfuck cintercal clcintercal dimensifuck glass glypho haskell kipple lambda lazyk linguine malbolge pbrain perl qbf rail rhotor sadol sceql trigger udage01 underload unlambda whirl. Competitive: bfjoust fyb. Other: asm c cxx forth sh.
23:10:48 <cpressey> ais523, alise: OWNERSHIP OF PUN DULY NOTED
23:11:08 <alise> cpressey: It's a Knuth-style process; I thought of the name "Ponzi Scheme", then decided I had better write The Perfect Scheme and call it that.
23:11:41 <coppro> alise: fair enough. But I need it, so you better deliver.
23:11:47 <cpressey> alise: Name Comes First. It's the Only Way.
23:11:48 <Vorpal> cpressey, well since plt-scheme → racket... *shrug*
23:11:49 <fizzie> SixXS folks are also sometimes very bizarre; I have a friend who did some IPv6 userspace routing stuff as his master's thesis, and in the evaluation of that had a tunnel; for the crime of making a sixxs-compatible tunnel client he got his account and forum-discussions deleted.
23:12:00 <alise> coppro: Okay. First, you give me a lot of money.
23:12:04 <fizzie> See http://www.sixxs.info/ for sordid details.
23:12:05 <Vorpal> fizzie, what
23:13:03 <alise> Vorpal's gods; they disapparate.
23:13:04 <fizzie> There were some other similar stories; can't locate them right now.
23:13:19 <leBMD> hm, I forgot. How do I change which direction I'm typign in in picture-mode?
23:13:37 <Vorpal> fizzie, how strange
23:14:56 <leBMD> Typing*
23:15:22 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds).
23:16:40 <leBMD> nevermind.
23:19:45 <fizzie> Vorpal: In the interests of full disclosure, his "conflict" was mostly with one of the two SixXS founders; on the other hand, he did get a friendly and appropriate email conversation going on with the other founder; and I personally remember that one as an easygoing guy from the ipng.nl (SixXS predecessor) times, so... Still, bizarroids.
23:20:03 <Vorpal> fizzie, yeah...
23:21:08 -!- leBMD has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
23:22:06 <fizzie> Here's another bit: http://www.habets.pp.se/sixxs.net-sucks.php
23:23:43 <Vorpal> fizzie, that user is a bit whiny in the original email. Oh and with dynamic tunnels you can't lose points
23:24:19 <fizzie> And "kill the user account with a 'stop whining'" message is an appropriate response?
23:24:27 <Vorpal> fizzie, no
23:24:59 <Vorpal> fizzie, anyway I can't find any other tunnel in Sweden that provides a /64 or larger
23:25:05 <Vorpal> so no good alternatives for me
23:25:11 <fizzie> Oh, there are no alternatives, that's true.
23:25:15 -!- GreaseMonkey has quit (Quit: New quit message. Entering 2006 in style.).
23:25:19 <fizzie> There's another hate-page at http://en.linuxreviews.org/SixXS -- of course there's huge bias in this sort of stuff, but still, it's a bit disconcerting that they have so many of 'em.
23:25:36 <Vorpal> fizzie, freenet6? well I tried it, lag was horrible. Wrote that in sixxs application iirc
23:25:39 <alise> "politically correct".
23:25:45 <alise> Don't they mean incorrect?
23:26:23 -!- ais523 has quit (Remote host closed the connection).
23:28:14 <Vorpal> fizzie, I wonder if my phone supports ipv6 btw... hm
23:28:23 <Vorpal> well I know it gets ipv4 normally
23:28:29 <FireFly> Vorpal, actually, after some talking in ##javascript, there seems to be a way to get v
23:28:30 <Vorpal> no way to check
23:28:35 <Vorpal> FireFly, and what is that?
23:28:38 <FireFly> Though it's a bit long
23:28:48 <fizzie> The stock N900 kernel doesn't have IPv6 enabled, but of course you can stick in a new one.
23:28:51 <FireFly> Build the word "filter", index an array with it, and then the output would be:
23:28:56 <FireFly> function filter() {
23:28:56 <FireFly> [native code]
23:28:56 <FireFly> }
23:29:00 -!- leBMD has joined.
23:29:01 <FireFly> From there you can fetch v
23:29:08 <leBMD> that was odd.
23:29:08 <pikhq> Why in the world would anyone make a device that doesn't support IPv6?
23:29:11 <Vorpal> FireFly, why filter, why not just f?
23:29:19 <alise> FireFly: <3
23:29:25 <Vorpal> oh it won't be native code then
23:29:26 <Vorpal> right
23:29:26 <FireFly> Vorpal, filter is a standard function in JS
23:29:34 <FireFly> it'd just be undefined
23:29:34 <pikhq> I mean, IPv4 has 2 years left, tops.
23:29:37 <Vorpal> FireFly, so, can you spell my nick with it then?
23:29:48 <alise> Talk about ego!
23:30:03 <Vorpal> pikhq, ... you are joking right? My phone is about 2 years old
23:30:06 <Vorpal> and not state of the art
23:30:24 <pikhq> Vorpal: Yes, but IPv4 is moribund technology.
23:30:39 <Vorpal> pikhq, did that stop anyone from not supporting it?
23:30:44 <Vorpal> pikhq, look at the internet today
23:30:51 <Vorpal> I don't think my router supports ipv6
23:30:51 <FireFly> " ()-INO[]abcdefijlnorstuvy{}"
23:30:54 <FireFly> Would be the alphabet
23:31:01 <pikhq> Vorpal: No, I mean: IPv4 will be *unusuable* in 2 years, tops.
23:31:06 <Vorpal> FireFly no p :(
23:31:08 <FireFly> No p, it seems
23:31:16 <Vorpal> pikhq, I know
23:31:32 <Vorpal> pikhq, so yay lets make ipv4 and then sell another in 2 years
23:31:41 <Vorpal> pikhq, there is a reason for ipv4-only
23:32:04 <Vorpal> pikhq, do you have native ipv6 yet?
23:32:05 <Vorpal> I don't
23:32:40 <pikhq> Vorpal: No, because ISPs are fucking idiots who seem to fail to realise that *their service will break* unless they do a complete switch to IPv6 starting two years ago.
23:33:08 <Vorpal> pikhq, yes....
23:33:13 <Vorpal> pikhq, it's all so tragic
23:33:25 <Vorpal> pikhq, what will happen I wonder
23:33:30 <Vorpal> everything will obviously break yes
23:33:35 <Vorpal> but then what
23:33:43 <leBMD> ok, so right now I'm putting a roguelike on the table. Do you guys have any suggestions for good beginner *funge-98 practice?
23:33:50 <Vorpal> pikhq, I believe we will have some interesting times ahead
23:34:02 <pikhq> We will start seeing hosts that cannot be accessed on IPv4. Starting not long after the IPv4 IANA allocations are finished.
23:34:05 <Vorpal> pikhq, I'm sure people will sue about this in US
23:34:11 <Vorpal> it is only to be expected
23:34:30 <cpressey> leBMD: Practice for a roguelike? How about Sokoban?
23:34:48 <Vorpal> cpressey, ... hm?
23:35:00 <pikhq> As it is, yeah, it will be a rough transition.
23:35:02 <Vorpal> cpressey, oh, not as practise for the rouge like
23:35:11 <Vorpal> but in befunge98 coding
23:35:21 <pikhq> Because by the time IPv4 allocations become impossible, we won't be on IPv6.
23:35:37 <pikhq> *sigh*
23:35:54 <Vorpal> pikhq, my old OS9 box only does ipv4
23:36:01 <Vorpal> oh well, will still work on LAN
23:36:12 <Vorpal> and that is all it really needs
23:36:25 <cpressey> Vorpal: More that if you implement Sokoban, you've done a lot of the groundwork for writing a (presumably more complex) roguelike. Wasn't totally certain if that was what leBMD was asking.
23:36:42 <Vorpal> cpressey, ah
23:37:12 <Vorpal> cpressey, and also you would have the sokoban levels from nethack within easy reach
23:37:21 <Vorpal> cpressey, easy in a modular language like befunge ;)
23:37:21 <leBMD> how about something slightly easier than sokoban. I'm still trying to wrap my head around getting something on the screen to "move".
23:37:37 <Vorpal> leBMD, use the NCRS fingerprint
23:37:46 <leBMD> though that is an idea for future things.
23:37:49 <Vorpal> leBMD, then gotoxy thingy to overwrite old thing with space
23:37:53 <Vorpal> and write the new one elsewhere
23:37:56 <cpressey> leBMD: robotfindskitten? :)
23:37:58 <Vorpal> leBMD, that is how you move something
23:38:32 <leBMD> I'll see about his fingerprint, though I've never used fingerprints before. Is there a list of commands for it?
23:38:58 <Ilari> Ok... X server limited to 100GB VM space...
23:39:41 <Vorpal> Ilari, whaaat
23:39:44 <Vorpal> Ilari, 100 GB?
23:40:12 <Vorpal> leBMD, hm let me locate NCRS docs
23:40:21 <leBMD> that would be nice.
23:40:34 <leBMD> right now I'm checking the specs to see how to load a fingerprint.
23:40:45 <Vorpal> leBMD, it used to be at http://www.imaginaryrobots.net/projects/funge/myexts.txt
23:41:06 <alise> pikhq: Hey, do you know if Quod Libet has a boost-volume plugin?
23:41:15 <pikhq> alise: No, I don't know.
23:41:30 <Vorpal> leBMD, not in web archive
23:41:43 <leBMD> ok.
23:42:09 <Ilari> Normal process VM size limit (set by processor) is either 128TiB or 256TiB...
23:42:12 <alise> pikhq: Darn.
23:42:35 <alise> ah, there we go
23:42:36 -!- FireFly has quit (Quit: swatted to death).
23:43:08 <Vorpal> leBMD, found a local copy
23:43:23 <Vorpal> leBMD, this defines JSTR SGNL and NCRS http://sprunge.us/AQBP
23:43:30 <Vorpal> leBMD, don't know who implements SGNL
23:43:31 -!- zeotrope has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds).
23:44:18 <Ilari> Vorpal: The 100GB limit is to prevent X server from using too much VM space...
23:44:34 <Vorpal> Ilari, yes... but 100 GB is insanely large
23:44:38 <leBMD> woah, I just saw a picture of a program made using TURT, and I had no idea that you could have graphic output!
23:44:43 <Ilari> Vorpal: This machine has only 56GB total RAM+Swap available.
23:44:51 <Vorpal> Ilari, wow, I want that
23:44:55 <Vorpal> Ilari, how much of it is RAM?
23:44:58 <Ilari> 8.
23:45:05 <Vorpal> Ilari, you have that much SWAP!?
23:45:06 <Vorpal> why
23:45:08 <alise> Ilari: Upgraded, huh?
23:45:28 <Vorpal> leBMD, if it was the TURT quine, it is buggy
23:45:49 <leBMD> but it does graphics!
23:45:58 <Vorpal> leBMD, it assumes you do not implement that lowering and raising the pen leaves a dot
23:46:17 <leBMD> Here I was thinking that most all esoteric languages only did terminal.
23:46:23 <Vorpal> leBMD, cfunge, efunge and ccbi1 outputs TURT to .svg, no idea what ccbi2 does
23:46:31 <leBMD> k
23:46:31 <Ilari> alise: A while ago...
23:46:32 <Vorpal> leBMD, there are many, piet for example
23:46:42 <Vorpal> leBMD, that uses an image as input
23:46:50 <Vorpal> leBMD, there are some which do image output too
23:46:56 <Vorpal> isn't there a 3D one too
23:47:27 <leBMD> I know that piet does INPUT of images, I made a forum for it. :P
23:47:43 <leBMD> I just didn't know that there was a language which allowed for output.
23:48:35 <Ilari> alise: There are messages to this channel referring to this machine already in April...
23:49:28 <alise> Ilari: Well, you don't talk much.
23:49:38 <alise> Ilari: Bit of a major upgrade from your previous box, though. :P
23:50:12 <Ilari> I got one with 8GB ram because RAM will become bottleneck first and I don't want to upgrade again very soon...
23:51:07 <alise> What CPU?
23:51:21 -!- nooga has joined.
23:51:31 <Ilari> model name : Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU 860 @ 2.80GHz
23:53:07 -!- Flonk_ has joined.
23:54:18 -!- tombom has quit (Quit: Leaving).
23:55:11 -!- Flonk_ has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer).
23:55:42 -!- Flonk has quit (Ping timeout: 260 seconds).
23:55:54 <alise> Ilari: Nice.
23:56:02 -!- Flonk has joined.
23:56:14 <alise> I ought to get around to upgrading my setup, too.
23:56:19 <Ilari> 2x1TB HDDs.
23:56:22 <alise> I know what to get, at least, since I've made component lists for others.
23:56:26 <alise> Ilari: No SSD?
23:56:31 <Ilari> Nope. :-/
23:58:53 <leBMD> when a fingerprint needs conditions such as cursor position, it takes the arguments off the stack, right?
←2010-08-17 2010-08-18 2010-08-19→ ↑2010 ↑all