00:00:51 -!- b_jonas has joined. 00:02:06 ah but I should have touched the file at least. mumble :) 00:06:03 -!- lambdabot has joined. 00:12:58 -!- Sgeo has joined. 00:13:09 -!- nisstyre has quit (Quit: bai). 00:36:11 -!- nooodl_ has joined. 00:38:13 -!- FireFly has quit (Excess Flood). 00:39:13 -!- Sgeo has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:39:13 -!- nooodl has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:39:13 -!- Froox has joined. 00:39:53 -!- FireFly has joined. 00:40:49 -!- impomatic has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:41:37 -!- sebbu has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:41:39 -!- iamcal__ has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:43:21 -!- Frooxius has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:44:31 -!- iamcal___ has joined. 00:44:40 -!- FireFly has quit (Excess Flood). 00:45:11 -!- lambdabot has quit (Write error: Broken pipe). 00:46:15 -!- tertu_ has joined. 00:47:04 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:47:04 -!- Froox has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:47:05 -!- tertu has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:47:45 -!- nortti has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:48:01 -!- Taneb has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:48:14 -!- Sgeo has joined. 00:48:15 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 00:48:24 -!- nortti has joined. 00:49:14 -!- Taneb has joined. 00:49:20 -!- FireFly has joined. 00:49:57 -!- augur has joined. 00:51:25 -!- yorick_ has joined. 00:52:21 -!- Gregor`` has joined. 00:53:54 -!- lambdabot has joined. 00:54:05 -!- Gregor has quit (*.net *.split). 00:55:15 -!- augur_ has quit (Write error: Connection reset by peer). 00:55:29 -!- yorick has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 00:59:19 -!- FireFly has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 00:59:20 -!- Sgeo has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 01:03:19 -!- FireFly has joined. 01:04:03 -!- Speed` has quit (Excess Flood). 01:04:10 -!- Speed`` has joined. 01:05:49 -!- huh has quit (Excess Flood). 01:05:54 -!- Sgeo has joined. 01:08:44 -!- iamcal___ has quit (Changing host). 01:08:45 -!- iamcal___ has joined. 01:12:35 -!- nooodl_ has quit (Quit: Ik ga weg). 01:25:29 -!- tromp__ has joined. 01:26:47 -!- Sgeo_ has joined. 01:27:04 -!- augur_ has joined. 01:28:02 -!- Phantom__Hoover has joined. 01:28:17 -!- yorick has joined. 01:29:41 -!- Effilry has joined. 01:29:44 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:29:45 -!- Sgeo has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:29:47 -!- Taneb has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:29:47 -!- FireFly has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:29:48 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:29:48 -!- yorick_ has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:29:49 -!- augur has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:29:51 -!- Taneb has joined. 01:35:36 -!- shikhout has joined. 01:38:50 -!- shikhin has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 01:38:51 -!- shikhout has changed nick to shikhin. 01:42:57 -!- MoALTz_ has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 01:43:26 -!- b_jonas has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 01:43:33 -!- b_jonas has joined. 01:43:41 -!- MoALTz_ has joined. 02:01:23 TIL you can authenticate to NickServ using a TLS client certificate 02:01:42 I just use SASL. 02:09:09 kmc: I tried that but then i switched to le insecure plaintext communications (greetings to everyone sniffing this) because my client’s upgrade feature that doesn’t drop connections can not TLS. 02:09:49 A flying squirrel was encountered on the sixth floor of a Finnish university. Photo: http://yle.fi/uutiset/todellinen_yllatys_yliopistolla__liito-orava_lensi_kuudenteen_kerrokseen/7111732 02:17:36 -!- yorick has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 02:40:07 -!- sebbu has joined. 02:40:46 -!- sebbu has quit (Changing host). 02:40:46 -!- sebbu has joined. 02:41:19 -!- Froox has joined. 02:43:47 -!- Phantom__Hoover has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 02:51:49 -!- Sgeo has joined. 02:53:09 -!- Sgeo_ has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 02:57:27 -!- conehead has quit (Quit: Computer has gone to sleep.). 03:00:05 wat http://www.reddit.com/r/Racket/comments/1z4ira/racket_psa/ 03:07:18 -!- b_jonas has quit (Read error: Operation timed out). 03:07:35 -!- b_jonas has joined. 03:12:41 -!- tromp__ has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 03:20:48 -!- tromp has joined. 03:23:52 Sgeo: heh 03:25:21 I don't even know why that was posted or what that has to do with anything 03:25:28 I don't even know what's 'heh' about it, just... wat 03:27:55 -!- nisstyre has joined. 03:28:07 echo "I don't even know why that was posted or what that has to do with anything" >wisdom/sgeo 03:28:47 Did you just overwrite my wisdom? 03:29:46 ... 03:29:58 derp 03:30:05 fun fact: this fact is not fun 03:30:10 fun fact 0 = 1 03:36:46 lol 03:42:41 * int-e is still upset about [1,1] being a singleton list. 03:42:51 o_O? 03:42:57 in ML 03:43:11 or is that an ocaml thing, I don't know. 03:43:16 Is it , the operator? 03:43:42 shachaf: it makes a tuple. In Haskell it'd be [(1,1)] 03:44:42 Oh. 03:44:44 And [1;1] would be a list of length 2. 03:44:45 A list is [1;1]? 03:44:48 Yes. 03:47:38 -!- Sprocklem has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 03:49:17 -!- Sprocklem has joined. 04:00:01 -!- tertu_ has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 04:00:27 -!- password2 has joined. 04:24:52 -!- tromp has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 04:33:06 -!- Sgeo_ has joined. 04:36:25 -!- tromp has joined. 04:37:30 -!- Sgeo has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 04:37:30 -!- Taneb has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 04:39:07 -!- Taneb has joined. 04:42:08 -!- tromp__ has joined. 04:43:29 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 04:49:08 -!- atriq has joined. 04:49:55 -!- Taneb has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 04:58:14 -!- MoALTz__ has joined. 05:02:05 -!- tromp__ has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 05:02:18 -!- b_jonas_ has joined. 05:02:40 -!- tromp has joined. 05:06:20 -!- Effilry has quit (Excess Flood). 05:06:27 ”When you look at the ingredients, if you can’t spell it or pronounce it, you probably shouldn’t eat it,” 05:06:49 -!- b_jonas has quit (Write error: Connection reset by peer). 05:06:55 yeah! fuck science! 05:07:02 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 05:07:04 sgeo: That’s an excellent measure. 05:07:04 Beyond the general silliness of that statement... I think many people can spell pretty much any word that they're looking at on a list of ingredients, at least while they're looking at it 05:07:30 I hear they’re putting DHMO into many products these days. :-( 05:08:15 -!- Sprocklem has quit (Excess Flood). 05:08:30 -!- atriq has quit (Excess Flood). 05:08:39 -!- Taneb has joined. 05:08:44 -!- shikhin has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 05:10:14 -!- Sprocklem has joined. 05:10:41 -!- Effilry has joined. 05:11:01 -!- MoALTz_ has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds). 05:15:23 -!- MoALTz__ has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 05:15:31 -!- MoALTz_ has joined. 05:16:00 -!- Taneb has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 05:16:10 -!- Taneb has joined. 05:25:13 i'd rather eat food from a farmer prepared by a chef than from a geneticist prepared by a scientist. 05:25:30 science is good at lots of things.. but their optimization function on food is whack 05:26:04 is a farmer relevant in this case? 05:26:18 How about food from a farmer given seeds by a geneticist? 05:26:30 sgeo: i'll take the non-gmo right now. 05:26:35 maybe in 200yrs i'll be fine with the gmo's 05:26:58 early adopter gets the early worms 05:27:40 fwiw, i'm not anti gmo, but i'm pretty anti all the companies pushing gmos down peoples throats while trying to conceal as much information as possible 05:27:54 they're optimizing profitability, not any useful utility function that i care about 05:28:02 -!- Sprocklem has quit (Ping timeout: 330 seconds). 05:28:04 -!- password2 has quit (Ping timeout: 330 seconds). 05:28:11 like flavor, or nutrition, for example 05:29:25 i think companies are just trying their best to make the world a better place for you and me 05:29:28 <3 05:29:37 don't be so cynical 05:29:39 you're ok, oklopol. 05:29:40 Quantity is a useful thing to attempt to maximize, and that gets accomplished at least partially, if not fully, when profit is being maximized for 05:30:01 sgeo: huh? how do you figure that profit and quality correlate. 05:30:12 quantity. 05:30:17 if you're going to complain aabout science food at least do something really bad, like factory farms 05:30:22 oh quantity, my bad 05:30:40 quantity and quality usually do correlate 05:30:42 [19:08] < Sgeo_> ”When you look at the ingredients, if you can’t spell it or pronounce it, you probably shouldn’t eat it,” 05:30:49 (although perhaps inversely) 05:31:02 bike: that seems like a reasonable thing to complain about ^^^ 05:31:12 it's true, i avoid durians, but not high fructose corn syrupt 05:31:21 since most of the things you cant pronounce werent put there for anything other than preserving shelf life to increase profit 05:31:25 I never remember the difference between inverse and converse. Just that inverse+converse=contrapositive which iff the original statement 05:31:30 or to make food look artificially more appealing than it would otherwise 05:31:35 mo like obverse, imo 05:31:55 Bike: what, the frog fractions fruit? 05:32:14 There's... an actual durain fruit 05:32:22 i like normal cane sugar.. why we gotta go with the HFCS is beyond me.. but.. i bet in the long run we'll find HFCS is not so bad for us, but that the impurities left aorund in manufacturing perhaps are... 05:32:44 at any rate, no need to rush into being an early adopter of not-well-tested chemical foods 05:32:51 Sgeo_: lol did you seriously not know 05:33:18 I think I knew at one point then forgot 05:33:32 Sgeo_: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/dd/Singapore_MRT_Fines.jpg/471px-Singapore_MRT_Fines.jpg 05:33:47 Durians are not fine. Good to know. 05:33:55 I have some disgusting durian candy 05:34:21 kmc: i assume the fine is infinite 05:34:50 i have no objection to time-tested disgusting fruit candies 05:34:57 as long as they have been well vetted :) 05:35:23 how do you tell a good durian from a bad one? 05:35:37 if durians go bad do they start smelling good? 05:35:50 -!- tromp has joined. 05:35:57 they're all bad because i can't pronounce the name correctly 05:36:29 earle grey + durian == durian grey tea? 05:37:25 Bike++ 05:37:55 i avoid jabuticaba in favor of nice simple niacinamide for the same reason 05:38:05 chemistry nomenclature is, imo, so easy. 05:38:15 but fruits are all this weird foreign shit. can't deal w/it. 05:39:26 would you eat an omena 05:39:27 also, fruits are like, full of chemicals? i mean most of the time you can't even figure out their relative concentrations or they vary crazily between fruits, even from the same tree! it's insane. no way i'm gonna eat that shit. 05:39:34 http://foodbabe.com/2012/07/30/why-its-time-to-throw-out-your-microwave/ 05:39:42 Is this the same person who did the Subway thing? 05:39:43 bike; avoiding fruits you cant pronounce also seems like a good policy 05:39:51 stick with what you know.. never venture outside the bubble! 05:39:57 damn right 05:40:10 ok but seriously the pronunciation thing is a stupid-ass rule. i'm out of sarcasm 05:40:31 ". For the experiment pictured above, microwaved water produced a similar physical structure to when the words “satan” and “hitler” were repeatedly exposed to the water. This fact is probably too hokey for most people – but I wanted to include it because sometimes the things we can’t see with the naked eye or even fully comprehend could be the most powerful way to unlock spontaneous healing." 05:40:47 thanks, science 05:41:31 -!- tertu has joined. 05:42:24 do they elaborate on "unlock spontaneous healing" 05:42:38 nature has a lot of chemicals in it in general. did you know that salicylic acid was originally found in a tree?? trees are just handing this stuff out! kids could get at 05:43:08 and you can't even sue trees for unsafe practices. trust me, i've tried. 05:43:16 bike: eating stuff from a source you dont know that contains ingredients you arent familiar sounds like a reasonable cause for suspicion and caution to me 05:43:42 Yep. We should be suspicious of such people. 05:43:48 then again i still tink its neat that theres a guy who lives off eating only raw lambs that he slaughters himself 05:43:51 i've only eaten food i know the source of a few times, since my family's house as a cherry tree. thus, i know for a fact it is 80% coyote shit by mass. 05:44:10 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 05:44:12 cherries are 80% coyote shit? 05:44:18 Yes. 05:44:23 i love cherries! 05:44:36 maybe you should have investigated where you were getting them first. 05:44:37 is it possible to put coyote shit into other fruits? 05:44:41 can someone offer to host the wiki so I can get out of this godforsaken channel 05:44:41 they have that ultra expensive coffee that's shit through a civet first 05:44:48 kopi kopi luwak 05:44:59 that's when you do it twice. 05:45:03 takes 4 ever 05:45:10 What happens if I eat an apple. Is the ingredient just 'apple', which I'm familiar with, or all the things that went into it? 05:45:21 And what happens if I see 'apple' on another ingredient list? 05:45:25 How deep do I have to go? 05:45:30 i demand coyote shit be put on all ingredients lists 05:45:45 sgeo: if you want to make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe 05:47:10 hah, ghcq implements orwell's telescreens 05:47:18 gchq even 06:22:15 -!- atslash has joined. 06:36:19 Garbage collection headquarters. 06:36:39 -!- nisstyre has quit (Quit: WeeChat 0.4.3). 06:38:08 While I agree that it is good practice to check input data in SQL queries, php stops those kinds of injections per default. https://github.com/BarrensZeppelin/ltglan/issues/1 06:38:53 -!- shikhin has joined. 06:41:08 -!- oerjan has joined. 06:42:17 ion: Let me guess, the uploaded fix is going to call some mysql_escape instead of using a parametrized query? 06:42:35 fizzie: In fact it seems it was. :-D 06:43:17 ;_; 06:43:56 I can't really understand why php.net's documentation on mysql_real_escape_string doesn't mention parameters. 06:44:42 Except in a late user-contributed note. 06:44:52 (Then again, this is the language with magic_quotes.) 06:45:53 A flying squirrel was encountered on the sixth floor of a Finnish university. Photo: http://yle.fi/uutiset/todellinen_yllatys_yliopistolla__liito-orava_lensi_kuudenteen_kerrokseen/7111732 <-- are you _sure_ that's not a pokemon 06:47:26 or something escaped from a manga somewhere 06:50:03 damn it had been so silent the last days i thought the building craftsmen outside had finished their work, but no. (admittedly a car was suspiciously present.) 06:51:06 hm i'm not sure craftsmen is the right word. 06:51:39 they've done a lot of digging, sawing and hammering, though. 06:52:07 ion: https://github.com/BarrensZeppelin/ltglan/commit/071e9 06:54:02 :-D 06:54:10 oh, apparently it's norwegian too 06:54:22 olsner: what is 06:54:34 oerjan: the PHP software with the bugs 06:54:43 shocking :( 06:54:51 hmm, or possibly danish 06:55:29 not sure how to tell written danish from norwegian 06:55:43 i can if you paste some 06:56:04 "Opret en bruger og log ind først. :)" 06:56:11 that's danish 06:56:33 norwegian would be "Opprett en bruker og logg inn først. :)" 06:59:48 -!- nisstyre has joined. 07:01:29 olsner: i think the general trick of "does it have single consonants where you'd expect double, and voiced consonants where you expect unvoiced" works for comparing with swedish as well? 07:03:11 dunno, I just read it and see if it's swedish or not 07:03:30 i was trying to give you a method here, olsner 07:05:10 that is, both have strange vowels to a swede, but danish has stranger consonants. 07:05:55 in a sense that is "soft" 07:06:13 oh, you meant for norwegian vs danish? I was talking about swedish/other things 07:06:37 well that's much easier :P 07:07:43 just look for åäö and lots of a in the last syllable of words 07:08:20 vs. æøå and nearly exclusively e 07:08:40 TIL danish :) is norwegian :) 07:08:48 Jafet: shocking 07:08:54 oerjan: why would i expect double consonants 07:08:59 I think ck instead of kk is swedish too 07:09:29 shachaf: i am comparing to swedish/norwegian, so you do need to know one of those first 07:09:38 shachaf: to indicate vowel length 07:09:48 olsner: yeah, also x instead of ks 07:10:05 oerjan: will english do 07:10:19 old english might? 07:10:44 shachaf: not very well, maybe for testing the other way 07:10:50 Taneb: is that what they speak in old york 07:11:12 bruker 07:11:17 how am i supposed to guess that 07:11:19 also nynorsk messes up the vowels again, the a test triggers on that too. 07:11:52 can't you just make up your minds on that whole nynorsk/bokmål thing already? 07:12:34 sorry 07:14:43 shachaf: but perhaps vaguely, if you have a commonly inherited word of the kind where english doubles the final consonant when adding an ending, then you would be more likely to find the consonant single in danish and double in swedish/norwegian. very vaguely. 07:15:23 like english stop/stopping, danish stop, swedish/norwegian stopp 07:19:09 "Agda safety: we last proved false on April 18th 2012 ." 07:20:04 :D 07:21:20 -!- FreeFull has quit. 07:21:29 when was the last time someone proved false in coq 07:22:46 No idea. I'm mostly hoping that Agda has comprehendible tutorials 07:23:56 earle grey + durian == durian grey tea? 07:24:02 * oerjan swats newsham_ -----### 07:25:42 would you eat an omena <-- probably not, sounds omenous 07:26:27 indeed 07:28:52 google pictures reveals the secret of omena 07:30:00 then google translate confirms 07:35:49 -!- shikhout has joined. 07:38:30 -!- shikhin has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 07:38:31 -!- shikhout has changed nick to shikhin. 07:40:47 http://meatfighter.com/nintendotetrisai/ is impressive 07:42:34 also i like how this subroutine AC82 implements a jump table in-line with code 07:47:26 -!- MoALTz__ has joined. 07:48:14 "So does the PHP opcode execute PHP code?" 07:50:14 -!- MoALTz_ has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 07:51:59 -!- MoALTz__ has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 08:03:06 -!- Effilry has changed nick to FireFly. 08:05:11 -!- tromp has joined. 08:06:38 `coins 08:06:41 convercoin schinedcoin lerarrowwongcoin eversitcoin falecoin condocoin ardcoin braincoin dupdoorcoin glashtfoylcoin 4dihycoin mercroncoin dificoin phedcoin lamberrectorcoin cipectcoin clubitcoin hysiacoin opecoin objectrancoin 08:07:50 Braincoins are all in your head. 08:09:29 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 08:22:03 -!- nisstyre has quit (Quit: WeeChat 0.4.3). 08:50:11 -!- vravn has joined. 09:05:08 -!- tertu has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 09:13:48 -!- conehead has joined. 09:53:24 -!- mysanthrop has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 09:57:21 -!- myname has joined. 10:03:09 -!- b_jonas_ has changed nick to b_jonas. 10:04:24 -!- conehead has quit (Quit: Computer has gone to sleep.). 10:08:47 -!- hexagon has quit (Changing host). 10:08:47 -!- hexagon has joined. 10:13:32 -!- hexagon has changed nick to [tester]. 10:13:36 -!- [tester] has changed nick to hexagon. 10:52:14 hm i install hlint and try it on my recent Tag2ResPair.hs, and the only suggestion is something i already decided against just to drop an import. 10:52:34 i guess my haskell isn't so bad. 11:10:27 http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3611536 well that clears things up. 11:12:00 that's paywalled isn't it, oh well http://pastebin.com/rNydqGG7 11:12:16 that was a pretty loud ad too 11:16:01 -!- boily has joined. 11:18:50 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: leaving). 11:19:05 @massages-loud 11:19:05 You don't have any messages 11:22:27 -!- douglass1 has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds). 11:33:46 -!- atslash has quit (Quit: Leaving). 11:45:33 -!- atslash has joined. 11:55:59 @messages-lewd 11:55:59 You don't have any messages 11:58:13 -!- atslash has quit (Quit: This computer has gone to sleep). 12:03:22 -!- boily has quit (Quit: IEUAAAAAAAAAAAH!). 12:39:22 -!- atslash has joined. 12:42:50 -!- MindlessDrone has joined. 12:44:41 -!- Slereahphone has joined. 12:46:01 -!- atehwa_ has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 12:49:58 -!- Slereahphone has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 12:50:21 -!- Slereahphone has joined. 12:52:21 -!- Bacta has joined. 12:54:41 How would you implement the loop construct for Brainfuck? 12:55:09 +[...+]? 12:55:40 oh, last + is not even necessary 12:55:53 -!- tertu has joined. 12:55:54 i may not get the question, though 12:56:29 I'm writing a quick and dirty interpretter in Python :) 12:56:59 Basically when you have a [ you need to record it so you can jump back to it if the cell value is non-zero 12:57:12 Trying to think of a nice way of implementing that bit 12:57:50 push the adresse of [ on the stack 12:58:25 pop at ], jump at poped position if cell is not zero 12:58:39 That's exactly what I just read on Stackoverflow just now too 12:58:41 Thanks :) 13:00:25 If your interpreter doesn't involve module re and eval, it isn't dirty 13:00:53 also, use bitshifting 13:01:00 `coins 13:01:03 trastrecoin backcoin bromereturniceredcoacherelairequecoin fracktrcoin catchcoin hanisorecoin cleacoin hydricucoin freimaccoin markgrassuscoin unweakcoin lord!cpucoin karacoin dingintercalambdocoin scoledcoin c-logycoin mdpncoin smahocoin infuchcoin haifausiocoin 13:02:44 cpucoin can only be mined by cpus 13:03:45 I am half CPU on my mother's side 13:04:39 (Quiz: what distro do bitcoin miners use?) 13:15:14 -!- yorick has joined. 13:19:39 -!- Slereahphone has quit (Quit: Colloquy for iPhone - http://colloquy.mobi). 13:23:25 -!- Slereahphone has joined. 13:28:59 "bromereturniceredcoacherelairequecoin" 13:32:39 -!- Sgeo_ has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 13:37:44 -!- shikhin has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 13:39:29 -!- Slereahphone has quit (Quit: Colloquy for iPhone - http://colloquy.mobi). 13:39:59 what? brome-return-ice-red-coacher-e-la-i-re-que-coin? 13:40:05 nice 13:41:24 -!- Slereahphone has joined. 13:42:03 `coins 13:42:06 attacoin cunticoin ooederivitespringlencoin hargfcoin eviatefuccefcoin docurcoin rufacoin confimicoin emoontcoin coiucoin eviacoin goto++coin jumpcoin excelumcoin coolcoin fungecoin dcrabcoin hachcoin gemacoin miegnecoin 13:44:14 -!- mekeor has joined. 13:45:12 -!- shikhin has joined. 13:45:19 Even though the sound of it is something quite too conjoin 13:53:26 oo! eder vite springlen coin 13:53:36 hargfcoin 13:54:55 Jumpcoin! Coolcoin; attacoin. 13:55:10 -!- shikhout has joined. 13:55:31 -!- shikhin has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 13:55:31 -!- shikhout has changed nick to shikhin. 13:55:48 fungecoin probably has multiple dimensions 13:57:47 attacoin sounds tidy. 13:58:20 (but it might be an aggressive oin) 13:58:28 here's some I got from a language model I trained to Hungarian: csúrdacoin ecoin vincssncoin surocoin acoin jajcoin tömdelcoin ídcoin megcoin acoin eecoin mothcoin nomagcoin rircoin szoúszobcoin kelyóezörgyecoin magosjántakcoin 13:58:33 ogyitlamcoin boncoin opjácoin szetdicoin verkedcoin asláncoin szukbakjadsucoin fuzcoin mellbfcoin nepolorcoin dértentcoin enecoin kércoin erszecoin nakámcoin keddemcoin fuzjánbájtódcoin saraszcoin haldalcoin lagycoin rondcoin téleletcoin acoin dölbelelcoin taláncoin piszracoin bemcoin éstakcoin semcoin lelecoin holcoin vércoin szorötcoin iniscoin hermetincoin acoin agáryjecoin röspepfcoin mapnancoin közgemcoin zrcoin 13:59:23 -!- password2 has joined. 13:59:38 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 14:01:28 -!- Bike has joined. 14:10:57 -!- Froox has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 14:12:13 You can switch languages with `coins directly. 14:12:15 `coins --italian 20 14:12:17 coprinticoin escecoin colancilecoin rimentatocoin invecchicoin dipandogliacoin stavacoin uscollecoin pesecoin esplosecoin famentòcoin giunghicoin venereretecoin vertunacoin dubitersocoin sturbiterecoin seremmocoin rececoin tumultiacoin prosciatocoin 14:12:23 `words -l 14:12:24 valid datasets: --eng-1M --eng-all --eng-fiction --eng-gb --eng-us --french --german --hebrew --russian --spanish --irish --german-medical --bulgarian --catalan --swedish --brazilian --canadian-english-insane --manx --italian --ogerman --portuguese --polish --gaelic --finnish --norwegian --esolangs \ default: --eng-1M 14:12:43 To any of those; the default is --eng-1M --esolangs. 14:13:02 `words --ogerman 14:13:04 rückkoppen 14:13:13 `coins --ogerman 10 14:13:14 standbestecoin bergrößecoin dikanneratenkworatcoin exekulattgruppecoin maschafecoin schwencoin stersatzcoin heanfangriftcoin eingengengeleuchencoin angcoin 14:13:32 At least bergrößecoin sounds q. impressive. 14:14:36 Entgegengegangen is a German word that looks p. silly when written out in cursive. 14:15:41 -!- Slereahphone has quit (Quit: Colloquy for iPhone - http://colloquy.mobi). 14:16:14 My god Brainfuck is slow 14:16:21 Or maybe it's my implementation 14:16:26 Is kw even a valid sound in german 14:16:27 -!- impomatic has joined. 14:17:17 I can't find any examples, not even in loanwords like http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superkalifragilistischexpiallegetisch 14:19:09 -!- Frooxius has joined. 14:19:15 heh 14:19:29 Jafet: It might have come from an abbreviation like Nkw. 14:19:39 -!- Slereah has joined. 14:20:17 maybe it's multiple words, like dikanner-atenk-worat-coin 14:20:29 though atenk is suspicious 14:21:00 tenk seems like a syllable that a computer might imagine to be valid 14:21:29 If it's character trigrams, like I remember, it won't have that much context. 14:22:41 Just needs .. "ate" "ten" "enk" "nkw" "kwo" "wor" .. to exist at least once in the dictionary in order for that to be possible to generate. 14:24:25 Bacta is observing the classic tradeoff between implementation complexity and performance. 14:24:53 And both nkw and kwo do appear: http://sprunge.us/jRWe 14:25:05 (Compounds, all.) 14:26:11 I would imagine that most german words are compound, due to combinatorics 14:26:56 kw wouldn't make sense in german, you would write qu 14:28:13 Jafet: There are no optimizations I can make to this code either... 14:28:59 -!- password2 has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 14:30:21 ^bf ++++++++++++++[>++++++++>+++++++>++++++++>++<<<<-]>>.>++.<-.++++++++.<--.>---.>+++.<---.<---.>>>++++.<<++++++.>--.>.<.<++++++.>>.<.<<+.>.>++++. 14:30:22 brainfuck is so slow 14:30:25 That seemed p. fast. 14:30:45 brainfuck isn't slow at all 14:30:54 Brainfuck has no random access memory 14:31:01 Hence it is pretty fucking slow 14:31:11 problem is, it needs pretty many commands to achieve stuff 14:31:43 Slereah: huh? 14:31:47 Hah! But there are optimizations you can perform if you want to do more analysis of the source before you interpret it 14:32:23 i wrote a brainfuck interpreter in assembly, it wasn't slow at all 14:32:27 -!- Slereah__ has joined. 14:32:31 Fuck 14:32:36 [15:31:34] I wonder, are there any optimized bf compilers? 14:32:37 [15:31:45] Like translating ++++++++++++++ into pointer + whatever 14:32:37 [15:31:51] And such things 14:32:42 Yes. 14:32:52 There are quite many optimizing bf compilers. 14:32:59 Pretty much every brainfuck compiler that isn't a golf entry 14:33:31 Another standard optimization is for loops that have no net tape movement 14:34:21 https://code.google.com/p/esotope-bfc/ is one well-known optimizing compiler. 14:34:27 I'm assuming you can't do any parallelism given it's shared "memory"? 14:35:29 -!- Slereah has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 14:35:54 Shared memory is not the problem for parallelism, the single instruction pointer is. 14:36:13 -!- Slereah has joined. 14:36:16 -!- Slereah has changed nick to Slereah_. 14:36:18 You can do a multitape BF 14:36:19 Or just multihead 14:36:22 Was I saying 14:36:51 -!- Slereah__ has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 14:37:03 Although 14:37:48 If you are concerned about high performance in brainfuck, though 14:38:51 -!- ais523 has joined. 14:39:47 If you have parallel brainfuck on a single tape 14:39:47 What happens when you have to branch! 14:39:47 What if one tries to put in a 0 and the other encounters a ] 14:39:47 How else will I code Crysis in Brainfuck otherwise 14:39:47 I'm gonna need a pretty good Brainfuck video card 14:41:15 Slereah_: try some extended brainfuck that lets you escape to native code, or a buggy brainfuck interpreter that doesn't check tape limits and lets you get control by smashing the stack or something 14:42:13 The best idea would probably be not brainfuck 14:42:17 -!- oklopol has quit (Quit: Leaving). 14:42:42 That situation doesn't sound any different from plain old shared-memory parallelism you get on, you know, regular multicore computers. 14:43:04 What happens? MESI happens. 14:49:29 -!- Slereah_ has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 14:52:00 I had a sudden thought 14:52:09 are brainfuck derivatives the same sort of concept as monad tutorials? 14:58:57 You mean, are they analogous to analogies? 15:00:53 ouch 15:01:49 I meant more along the lines of "new person discovers «Haskell/esolangs», struggles for a while, thinks they understand «it/them» after some thought, writes a «monad tutorial/BF derivative»" 15:10:52 So a reverse shibboleth, if there is such a thing. 15:13:57 -!- nisstyre has joined. 15:15:27 -!- nooodl has joined. 15:21:11 -!- AnotherTest has joined. 15:27:40 -!- Sprocklem has joined. 15:29:48 -!- yorick has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 15:42:50 -!- callforjudgement has joined. 15:44:32 -!- ais523 has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 15:47:39 -!- yorick has joined. 15:49:11 -!- tertu has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 15:58:38 -!- tertu has joined. 16:00:49 -!- yorick has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 16:07:51 -!- callforjudgement has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 16:08:08 -!- callforjudgement has joined. 16:21:10 -!- Bacta has quit (Quit: Leaving). 16:29:25 -!- callforjudgement has quit. 16:42:24 -!- mekeor has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 16:51:14 -!- douglass_ has joined. 17:02:02 -!- Sprocklem has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 17:03:30 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 17:09:29 -!- tertu has quit (Ping timeout: 269 seconds). 17:10:26 -!- FreeFull has joined. 17:21:12 -!- oerjan has joined. 17:28:22 -!- Slereah_ has joined. 17:42:44 -!- Slereah_ has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:47 -!- AnotherTest has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:48 -!- Frooxius has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:48 -!- impomatic has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:49 -!- atslash has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:51 -!- myname has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:53 -!- chaiomanot has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:55 -!- FreeFull has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:55 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:56 -!- douglass_ has quit (*.net *.split). 17:42:58 -!- nisstyre has quit (*.net *.split). 17:43:00 -!- Bike has quit (*.net *.split). 17:43:01 -!- MindlessDrone has quit (*.net *.split). 17:43:04 -!- shikhin has quit (*.net *.split). 17:47:18 -!- shikhin has joined. 17:48:31 -!- shikhin has changed nick to shikhin_preserve. 17:49:31 -!- shikhin_preserve has changed nick to shikhin. 17:50:41 -!- MindlessDrone has joined. 17:50:41 -!- atslash has joined. 17:50:41 -!- 23LAAD5BZ has joined. 17:50:41 -!- nisstyre has joined. 17:50:41 -!- Phantom__Hoover has joined. 17:50:41 -!- AnotherTest has joined. 17:52:16 -!- Phantom__Hoover has changed nick to Guest53101. 17:52:43 -!- impomatic has joined. 17:53:30 -!- douglass_ has joined. 17:55:54 -!- Slereah_ has joined. 17:59:42 -!- nisstyre has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 17:59:42 -!- Guest53101 has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 17:59:43 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 17:59:44 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Changing host). 17:59:44 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 18:03:59 -!- nisstyre has joined. 18:04:15 -!- MindlessDrone has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 18:04:15 -!- impomatic has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 18:04:52 -!- atslash has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 18:06:11 -!- atslash has joined. 18:07:58 -!- Bike has joined. 18:31:00 -!- MindlessDrone has joined. 18:51:04 -!- Phantom__Hoover has joined. 18:52:01 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 18:54:44 -!- nisstyre has quit (Quit: bai). 18:56:50 `help 18:56:50 Runs arbitrary code in GNU/Linux. Type "`", or "`run " for full shell commands. "`fetch " downloads files. Files saved to $PWD are persistent, and $PWD/bin is in $PATH. $PWD is a mercurial repository, "`revert " can be used to revert to a revision. See http://codu.org/projects/hackbot/fshg/ 19:13:07 @ask zzo38 What do you think of the subroutine AC82 documented in http://meatfighter.com/nintendotetrisai/ 19:13:07 Consider it noted. 19:13:47 p. cool subroutine imo 19:19:06 -!- shikhin has quit (Read error: No route to host). 19:19:58 -!- shikhin has joined. 19:20:11 i wonder if compilers for modern architectures ever do that 19:22:26 -!- Sprocklem has joined. 19:23:32 That's clever 19:28:08 ARM has these table branch instructions (TBB / TBH) that you can use for a similar thing, by using the program counter (r15) as the table base 19:28:20 and this is what gcc 4.6 does, according to http://gcc.godbolt.org/ 19:29:32 but even then it's only a 1 or 2 byte relative branch; for an arbitrary target you still need to branch to a branch instruction 19:32:21 Is there any particular benefit in sticking the jump table targets "inline", except maybe some cache locality matters for combined data/instruction ones? 19:33:08 -!- impomatic has joined. 19:34:18 you don't have to load the address of the jump table 19:35:32 I'd think that on x86-64 you could do just lea rX, [rip]; jmp [rX + K + 8*rY] followed by the table contents. 19:36:54 The call-pop construct gets criticized because it breaks the hardware-optimized return stack used for branch-predicting ret's targets. 19:37:08 yeah 19:37:10 (I assume that's not an issue on the 6502.) 19:37:17 i suspect not :) 19:38:00 though somebody has probably designed a superscalar OOE 6502 just for laffs 19:39:36 `as86 lea rbx, [rip]; jmp [rbx+8*rax+4] 19:39:37 488d1d00000000ff64c304 19:41:03 Oh, the rip-relative form always has a 32-bit displacement attached to it, I guess. :/ 19:43:58 Well, you can move that 4-byte displacement into it, at least. But it's still one whopper of an instruction (pair). 19:50:13 7 bytes isn't that big by the standards of x86 instructions :) 19:52:02 -!- miguel has joined. 19:52:31 hola alguna chica londa x aki 19:52:34 linda 19:53:33 -!- shikhout has joined. 19:54:02 `bienvenido miguel 19:54:03 miguel: ¡Bienvenido al centro internacional para el diseño y despliegue de lenguajes de programación esotéricos! Por desgracia, la mayoría de nosotros no hablamos español. Para obtener más información, echa un vistazo a nuestro wiki: http://esolangs.org/. (Para el otro tipo de esoterismo, prueba #esoteric en irc.dal.net.) 19:54:27 -!- miguel has left. 19:54:33 <`^_^v> he was just looking for a hot girl 19:54:43 <`^_^v> i dont think he cared about programming languages 19:54:58 indeed. `bienvenido is so efficient. 19:56:38 -!- shikhin has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 19:56:39 -!- shikhout has changed nick to shikhin. 19:57:06 * oerjan briefly wonders if oteric means something suspicious in es-pañol, but google doesn't know about it 19:57:21 including with -o/a appended 19:58:14 -!- MindlessDrone has quit (Quit: MindlessDrone). 19:59:05 what is the "x" meant to stand for in that sentence 19:59:51 was wondering about that too. i was guessing "exista" or thereabouts 20:00:02 -!- tertu has joined. 20:00:27 that's a stretch for "equis" 20:00:34 <`^_^v> x is slang for por 20:00:37 but I'm not a spanish speaking 14 year old in search of a chica linda 20:00:55 huh 20:01:20 well he said "aki" so obviously he doesn't care about spelling 20:01:24 sure 20:01:44 <`^_^v> because x is like multiplication and 2 x 2 is pronounced dos por dos 20:01:44 -!- conehead has joined. 20:01:50 i don't exactly know spanish chatting slang 20:02:09 <`^_^v> i only know from video game servers 20:02:20 um what's equis supposed to mean 20:02:30 <`^_^v> spanish people really like ragnarok online 20:02:52 <`^_^v> mexican i mean 20:03:27 Guys 20:03:39 How can I fuck around in x86-64 20:03:39 oerjan: spanish name for the letter "x" 20:03:49 Slereah_: how do you mean 20:03:56 Like a virtual machine that boots on some program in x86-64 that I write 20:03:56 kmc: oh 20:04:10 Slereah_: you want to run code without an OS? 20:04:15 Yes. 20:04:19 it's... complicated 20:04:28 i'm gonna dump some links at you 20:04:40 Or at least a non-obtrusive OS 20:04:49 Like MS DOS for ol' timey x86 20:05:02 http://templeos.org/ 20:05:07 be careful what you wish for 20:05:14 :D 20:05:18 http://wiki.osdev.org/Main_Page http://www.returninfinity.com/pure64.html http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/6.828/2012/ 20:05:28 elliott : COME ON MONKEY PAW 20:05:42 Thanks. 20:05:44 I guess http://www.templeos.org/Wb/Accts/TS/Wb2/TempleOS.html is the slightly less useful link now 20:05:48 er 20:05:50 less useless. 20:06:02 Slereah_: what means "obtrusive"? you can write x86-64 assembly for Linux pretty easily, and it's much less work to make something cool than doing it on "bare metal" 20:06:06 I do like coding in x86, but I do want to try out some x64 too 20:06:35 For a start it has more bloody registers. 20:06:44 kmc : Doesn't the OS block a bunch of things? 20:07:02 in some sense an OS is the opposite of obtrusive... it provides the illusion of a machine much simpler and more capable than the "real thing" 20:07:05 Slereah_: like what? 20:07:20 Access to ports, parts of the memory, self modifying code 20:09:08 you can usually opt into self-modifying code 20:09:21 (it's disabled by default for security reasons) 20:09:23 Direct access to hardware, yes (for some values of), but that's only a problem if you really fancy writing drivers. 20:09:37 I want 20:09:40 ULTIMATE POWEEEER 20:09:59 you will find that things are fantastically complicated and it will be an extreme amount of effort to make anything work at all 20:10:07 I am aware! 20:10:09 I don't mean to discourage you but you should know what you're getting into 20:10:19 Well I am already coding things in x86 20:10:33 the "platform" is far more complex than the instruction set itself 20:10:47 an OS hides that complexity and gives you a simple more friendly platform 20:10:51 simple osdev isn't really that difficult, just very tedious and annoying 20:11:25 I just kinda like trying to do things from the ground up 20:11:48 http://davidad.github.io/blog/2014/02/18/kernel-from-scratch/ Slereah_ 20:11:52 Slereah_: get to the silicon mines then ;) 20:12:07 There's no silicone mines! 20:12:11 It's all sand and shit 20:12:23 silicone and silicon are not the same ._. 20:12:26 Bike: nice 20:12:37 Ah yes 20:12:41 (In english, at least) 20:12:46 In French, silicone is silicone 20:12:51 And silicone is silicium 20:12:54 is here where i mention that the Czochralski process is really cool 20:12:54 silicon* 20:13:00 one problem is that the BIOS (which is basically an OS/library in ROM) becomes much harder to access once you leave real mode 20:13:15 which makes doing any kind of I/O a lot harder 20:13:21 Although I wouldn't mind building my own little computer, I don't think I could build much 20:13:21 "aren't you sposed to use UEFI now" 20:13:30 Because of scale issues 20:13:44 Slereah_: you might like those MIT courses 6.828 and 6.004 20:13:53 in the former you write large parts of a kernel 20:13:58 What kind of computer can you build from off the shelf electronic components? 20:14:00 in the latter you design a processor at the logic gate level and then optimize it 20:14:17 They're way too fucking big to do much with 20:14:41 Although 20:14:47 Maybe I could make a tiny Brainfuck computer 20:14:53 You can get computers from shelves. 20:14:54 Bam. 20:14:56 you can find many projects online of people building computers from discrete logic chips 20:15:02 they are usually simple 8-bit things 20:15:13 but you can make a "real CPU" with arithmetic, branching, etc. 20:15:18 I know 20:15:39 I heard somebody actually breadboarded the 6.004 processor at one point 20:15:53 which is like a 32-bit version of the Alpha (simplified further I'm sure) 20:15:55 Is that a torture method where they drown you in dough? 20:16:01 haha 20:16:54 why was my first thought on hwo to explain breadboards 'well, imagine a cribbage board, and' 20:16:57 anyway I strongly recommend learning x86-64 assembly in friendly userspace before you try to write an OS 20:17:08 also you might want to write most of the OS in a higher level language anyway 20:17:28 Who said anything about an Os 20:18:01 Also yeah I guess I might want to just write some stuff in C and then half-compile it and look at the assembly file 20:18:16 And modify it some 20:18:17 If you're writing without one, whatever you write is arguably an OS. 20:18:23 Slereah_: have you seen http://gcc.godbolt.org/ 20:18:49 Well I don't plan to do any threads or file management or spinning skulls 20:19:00 kmc : Thanks! 20:19:01 if you don't have any spinning skulls then what's even the point? 20:19:16 clearly you should write an OS designed for GPUs 20:19:22 be sure to try the "Colourise" button 20:20:04 http://www.gifmix.net/gif.php?image=skull-gifs/TOTENKOPF047.GIF 20:20:19 http://www.mytinyphone.com/uploads/users/cacique/101455.gif 20:20:20 Oh man 20:20:23 I do miss the 90's 20:26:05 And silicone is silicium 20:26:07 Yes, the web is certainly worse off now that every page doesn't have a http://www.jadefrolics.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/under-construction-sign-animated1.gif in it. 20:26:09 and here it's 'kisel' 20:26:33 The whole silicon/e thing in english took me a while to understand 20:26:53 "kisel (plural kisels): A dessert, an acidulated jelly, made by cooking fruit or berry juice, milk or water, and flour, common in Slavic and Baltic countries as well as Finland." 20:26:58 fizzie : Also the little gif of a letter going into an enveloppe and into a mailbox 20:28:03 Silicon is, for whatever reason, "pii" in Finnish. 20:28:23 pee 20:29:01 (Also the same as π.) 20:29:12 Looks like the etymology of "silicone" is dumb. It's a siloxane, not a ketone... 20:29:42 Well crystal doesn't have a crystaline structure! 20:30:03 er, what. 20:30:42 And neutrinos aren't small neutrons! 20:31:41 They are small and neutral, though. 20:31:54 So is Switzerland 20:39:03 As far as I can figure out, the etymology for the Finnish "pii" for silicon comes from the fact that "pii" had a (now no longer used) meaning of 'tooth' or any sort of spike in a tool, so a type of flint useful for toolmaking got called "piikivi" ("kivi" being rock/stone), and those contain silicon compounds. 20:40:06 da piikivi being of course an anagram of wikipedia 20:40:11 vikipedia 20:41:06 There's a "Finnish version" of Uncyclopedia called Hikipedia (lit. "Sweat-pedia"). 20:41:45 -!- Speed`` has changed nick to Speed`. 20:43:41 'Sir Humphry Davy proposed the name "silicium" for silicon, from the Latin silex, silicis for flint, flints, and adding the "-ium" ending because he believed it was a metal' argh 20:43:47 well, whatever, it's not as bad as hydrogen. 20:44:33 Bike: Metals, metalloids, who cares. 20:44:47 It's a semiconductor 20:44:49 Close enough 20:44:59 also I'm pretty sure back in the days, "metal" had a different definition 20:45:24 "The meaning of "metal" differs for various communities. For example, astronomers use the blanket term "metal" for convenience to collectively describe all elements other than hydrogen and helium " 20:45:25 See? 20:45:28 it's totally a metal 20:47:37 yes 20:47:56 And of course, diamond is the hardest metal 20:48:00 And it is made of carbon 20:48:53 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:SiliconCroda.jpg to be fair, that does look p. metal. 20:49:50 really i'm more annoyed at silicone. chemist really ought to not just name something as a ketone because it's vaguely analogous to a ketone 20:50:38 Systematic names in chemistry is a pretty recent thing anyway 20:51:44 `addquote And neutrinos aren't small neutrons! They are small and neutral, though. So is Switzerland 20:51:46 1171) And neutrinos aren't small neutrons! They are small and neutral, though. So is Switzerland 20:52:10 oerjan: Also known as "Switzerino". 20:52:39 he named it after benzophenone. that's not IUPAC systematic but it's still proto-system. 20:52:40 (Actually, that sounds like a derogatory term.) 20:55:32 iirc metal is from the greek for mine 21:10:11 -!- FreeFull has joined. 21:11:53 seems like it https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%CE%BC%CE%AD%CF%84%CE%B1%CE%BB%CE%BB%CE%BF%CE%BD#Ancient_Greek 21:25:26 -!- conehead has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 21:25:27 -!- hexagon has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 21:25:27 -!- jconn has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 21:26:03 -!- rodgort has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 21:27:06 -!- yorick has joined. 21:27:33 -!- hexagon has joined. 21:27:53 -!- b_jonas has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 21:27:56 -!- rodgort has joined. 21:29:16 -!- b_jonas has joined. 21:32:09 -!- hexagon has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 21:32:31 -!- hexagon has joined. 21:36:41 -!- conehead has joined. 21:41:36 -!- AnotherTest has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 21:42:58 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: leaving). 21:52:58 -!- myname has joined. 21:53:17 -!- impomatic has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 21:53:19 -!- tertu has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 21:53:21 -!- Sprocklem has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 21:53:21 -!- 23LAAD5BZ has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 21:53:37 -!- b_jonas has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 21:54:08 -!- tertu has joined. 21:54:26 -!- impomatic has joined. 22:07:49 you know what's bad? that gasoline is called "benzene" or "naptha" in some countries/languages 22:08:32 -!- tertu has quit (*.net *.split). 22:08:39 -!- atslash has quit (*.net *.split). 22:10:21 -!- Sprocklem has joined. 22:11:21 -!- ais523 has joined. 22:11:51 -!- ais523 has quit (Excess Flood). 22:12:01 -!- atslash has joined. 22:13:04 -!- ais523 has joined. 22:13:23 happy Australian mailman mailing list reminders day! 22:13:31 hi ais523 22:14:04 hi quintopia 22:14:48 -!- b_jonas has joined. 22:15:49 what are you on about now? 22:16:12 the " happy Australian mailman mailing list reminders day!" thing? 22:16:18 yes 22:16:36 it's a joke #esoteric tradition; the mailing list server software Mailman send out reminders on the first of every month 22:16:38 kmc: what? whyyyy 22:16:45 and several of us are subscribed to Mailman mailing lists hosted in Australia 22:16:55 so the reminders come out on the last of every month instead 22:17:12 is that actually the active component there? i thought in us gasoline at least it was octane 22:17:59 hebrew for example 22:18:15 I think octane's the largest component of most gasoline/petrol 22:21:32 -!- Sprocklem has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 22:44:18 -!- b_jonas_ has joined. 22:46:14 -!- b_jonas has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 22:46:17 -!- atslash has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 22:46:18 -!- atslash has joined. 22:48:15 man, is it mailman day already? 22:48:39 mine is the TUHS mailing list (also .au) 22:50:36 -!- atslash has quit (Quit: This computer has gone to sleep). 22:52:06 -!- callforjudgement has joined. 22:52:54 -!- ais523 has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 22:55:15 Bike: It's "bensiini"/"bensa" in Finnish, and yes, it's probably not a good name. 22:55:19 -!- hexagon has quit (Changing host). 22:55:19 -!- hexagon has joined. 22:58:51 "Etymology: From Swedish /bensin/, from German /Benzin/, from benzoe + -in." So it's not our fault! 23:08:43 -!- nisstyre has joined. 23:11:48 -!- Bicyclidine has joined. 23:25:39 In Polish it's benzyna 23:25:52 Probably from German 23:27:05 Oh, apparently from French 23:39:28 -!- scarf has joined. 23:39:56 [Error] ais523: No such channel. 23:40:01 Freenode's having fun today, I see :-) 23:40:06 -!- scarf has changed nick to ais523. 23:43:16 -!- callforjudgement has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 23:49:50 -!- Sgeo has joined.