00:22:16 -!- oerjan has joined. 00:23:16 Hmm. Wonder if ffmpeg could render two different streams of subtitles on top of a video (say top and bottom). Probably. 00:24:33 spämmi! 00:24:44 i think it's been a while since the last one. 00:24:51 lots of bitcoin spam though. 00:27:27 oerjan: Are they telling you you could make a guaranteed $13000 in just 24 hours, or some such? 00:28:40 Although just now there's Rainer from Vienna, who I've allegedly met 2 months ago in a hotel and asked to tell me how to get "extra money on crypto currencies". 00:31:27 -!- boily has joined. 00:31:59 helloily! 00:32:13 fizzie: i don't remember 00:32:27 hellørjan! 00:32:33 fizziello! 00:32:37 QUINTHELLOPIA! 00:32:41 but obviously with bitcoin raising eightfold in a few months it's the thing to spam. 00:32:57 `? bitcoin 00:32:59 bitcoins are coins that have been drilled through with a bit, and can be strung together in long chains. This practice dates to ancient China, and the Chinese remain experts in bitcoin manufacturing. A chain can support up to 21 million coins before breaking. 00:36:57 -!- Phantom__Hoover has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 00:48:05 -!- jaboja has quit (Quit: Leaving). 01:24:02 -!- moonythedwarf has joined. 01:25:36 -!- moonythedwarf has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 01:26:25 -!- moony has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 01:26:53 -!- moony has joined. 01:28:06 -!- moony has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 01:28:32 -!- moony has joined. 01:37:42 helloony 01:41:06 Is baking not a type of cooking? <-- possibly, but not for the scandinavian cognates - "koking" means boiling 01:41:25 (which might have confused Vorpal) 01:42:38 * oerjan assumes speaking to americans is fairly useless at the moment 01:43:07 -!- xkapastel has quit (Quit: Connection closed for inactivity). 01:43:52 oerjan: quite likely 01:44:02 I never really understood Thanksgiving, and notably how it differs from Christmas 01:44:05 the two seem very similar 01:44:09 -!- MrBismuth has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 01:44:34 <\oren\> `? thankgiving 01:44:37 thankgiving? ¯\(°​_o)/¯ 01:44:39 helloerjan 01:44:41 <\oren\> `? thanksgiving 01:44:42 thanksgiving? ¯\(°​_o)/¯ 01:44:55 Thanksgiving is not quite my holiday 01:45:40 huh, Wikipedia implies that the US Thanksgiving is the equivalent of (genetically related to, as much as holidays have genes) the british Harvest Festival 01:45:47 and yet they're really quite different in nature 01:45:49 hm are they even cognates actually 01:46:16 in the UK what basically happens is that people donate food to the school (normally tinned food), they make a big display out of it 01:46:19 and then give it all to food banks 01:46:49 I think its main purpose is to educate children about where food comes from 01:47:01 which is not something that you automatically know without being told 01:47:08 shachaf: do american jews celebrate thanksgiving in general? 01:47:52 (it's not strictly a religious holiday, so i wouldn't know) 01:48:51 Seems as though what happened is Britain had a tradition of a large harvest, which was retained more recognizably in the US, and in the UK mutated rather heavily? 01:48:55 *large harvest feast 01:49:38 pikhq: right, it was more celebrating the end of the harvest, I think 01:49:45 you've done all the work gathering the food you need for the winter 01:49:50 may as well celebrate by eating some of it 01:50:23 I think part of it, though, is just the US has a myth that connects it to our national origins. 01:50:40 Which naturally will tend to keep it a bit more recognizable. 01:50:52 I don't know 01:51:16 ais523: I heard that buying tinned food and donating it to food banks is a very inefficient use of money 01:51:23 Better to give the food banks the money directly 01:51:39 shachaf: not /very/ inefficient, but it does waste some money because they can purchas in bulk 01:51:53 it's a very efficient use if you had the food already and just forgot to eat it, and it's getting close to expired 01:52:22 Well, they might also purchase different things, not just the same things in bulk 01:53:00 I wonder if the extra cheerfullness factor from the food having been selected by children trying to be kind has any effect 01:53:32 oh en:cook and no:koke _are_ cognate, but both are latin borrowings. 01:55:10 -!- moonythedwarf has joined. 01:56:36 -!- moonythedwarf has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 01:56:41 -!- moony has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 01:57:11 -!- moonythedwarf has joined. 01:57:32 shachaf: come to think of it, I suspect the food is involved unconditionally because that's what the festival requires 01:57:41 and it gets donated to food banks merely to avoid having to throw it away 01:58:07 -!- moonythedwarf has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 01:58:34 -!- moonythedwarf has joined. 02:00:46 [wiki] [[Esolang talk:Funding]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=53415&oldid=53377 * Fizzie * (+1947) Reply and reorganize a bit. 02:10:21 -!- boily has quit (Quit: EMBRACING CHICKEN). 02:29:47 -!- xkapastel has joined. 02:33:35 -!- sleffy has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 02:46:59 fizzie: rainer from vienna finally got around to me, it seems 02:53:56 -!- MrBusiness has joined. 03:01:45 oerjan: Rainer sent me a second email just now. They must be getting desperate. 03:02:50 who's rainer 03:08:11 -!- watered has joined. 03:20:54 -!- sleffy has joined. 03:21:09 -!- Jojo__ has joined. 03:21:14 -!- Jojo__ has left. 03:21:28 -!- Jojo_ has joined. 03:21:31 -!- Jojo_ has left. 04:18:39 -!- hppavilion[1] has joined. 05:10:07 -!- moonythedwarf has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 05:12:15 -!- augur has joined. 05:12:44 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 05:12:59 -!- augur has joined. 05:40:13 -!- ais523 has quit (Quit: sorry for my connection). 06:09:03 -!- watered has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 06:11:23 -!- watered has joined. 06:54:20 -!- doesthiswork has quit (Quit: Leaving.). 07:09:58 -!- FreeFull has quit. 07:22:24 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: Nite). 07:45:57 -!- watered has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 08:44:47 -!- HackEgo has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 08:45:03 -!- HackEgo has joined. 08:50:26 In addition to official Un-cards of Magic: the Gathering, some people make up unofficial Un-cards. You can have cards that you rip in half as you draft them, tapping/untapping stuff other than permanents, unexplained keyword abilities, adding stuff other than mana into your mana pool, and demons in your nose. 08:52:37 Can you tap/untap a player? 08:52:42 What about the stack? 08:54:06 Of course you can't tap/untap a player or the stack (or any objects in the stack). But, Un-cards can ignore this! 08:58:57 Holy Priests of the Future {WW} Creature - Human Cleric (1/1) ;; Faith-Healing ;; Bands with other creatures having at least as much faith as ~ 09:02:09 You don't like mushrooms, right? 09:02:17 How about cashew nuts? 09:12:20 I don't know 09:16:48 This is the one that was suggested by this IRC: Demons In Your Nose {UB} Instant ;; If there are any Demons in your nose, you may cast them. Each of those spells gains flying. 09:18:22 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 09:23:07 -!- xkapastel has quit (Quit: Connection closed for inactivity). 09:25:23 -!- AnotherTest has joined. 09:27:59 -!- Phoeni has joined. 09:28:03 boo 09:29:36 there apparently used to be people who knew things about Conway Game of Life here 09:32:32 -!- fungot has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds). 09:37:53 Who? 09:39:37 I know some things about, but, perhaps not much more than what the rules are. 09:40:13 (And I made a program that can execute it, too) 09:48:29 Jafet made a HashLife implementation in Mathematica in here once 09:48:49 -!- hppavilion[1] has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 09:49:26 this channel showed up in a 7 year old board thread 09:49:33 so I said hey why not 09:49:37 . o O ( The do-s and don't-s of M:tG card design: Don't. ) 09:49:57 but if you program zzo you are half (something?) qualified (theoretically) to answer my next question 09:50:14 -!- fungot has joined. 09:50:40 ahh, I have fond memories of Magic 09:50:53 Magic Was a Way of Life.. or .. uh FOCUS Phoeni : ) 09:50:56 so 09:51:09 classic 5am question 09:51:22 what's the smallest initial form that has the biggest explosion in complexity? 09:51:28 could be a few answers 09:51:37 the one on the top of my head is R pentamonio 09:51:48 Is there a standard measure for that? 09:51:54 I don't know 09:51:56 hence why I am here 09:52:24 one of my awesome 5am scribbles that explodes like R penta .. and then ... oh shit it got Meta 09:52:26 I imagine that most reasonable meanings of complexity grow BB-style in the size of the initial pattern 09:52:29 Douglas Hofstadter Likes thisd 09:52:35 I'm So Meta Even This Acronym 09:53:07 So among the things I don't know is "how to measure" as pointed out 09:53:15 R Penta goes BALLISTIC 09:53:26 but say an 8 item pattern could go "more" 09:53:30 but it "starts bigger" etc 09:53:35 all this stuff 09:54:08 http://www.conwaylife.com/w/index.php?title=Infinite_growth#Small_infinite_growth_patterns 09:54:23 so zzo38 for example if you are a programmer you could just do an Add-on 09:55:27 "...giving several 11-cell patterns with infinite growth" 09:55:39 But just because it adds glider guns or stuff 09:55:45 somehow that's not "complex" 09:55:51 more questions : ) 09:56:32 BUT borrowing from that article I'll grab a vocab word 09:57:02 something like R Penta and then SOMEWHERE in the life cycle add 1 pixel in the most compact way to keep it going 09:57:12 like "feeding" the life 09:57:35 so the end result "keeps wandering all over doing stuff" 09:58:05 So THAT is my second level question 09:58:09 the first half was warmup 09:58:13 - ------------------ 10:05:31 Is baking not a type of cooking? <-- possibly, but not for the scandinavian cognates - "koking" means boiling 10:05:31 (which might have confused Vorpal) 10:05:34 ah yes 10:06:02 Is Vorpal Scandinavian? 10:06:10 shachaf: I'm from Sweden yes 10:06:36 But you live in -- the UK? 10:06:39 nope 10:06:41 I live in Sweden 10:07:07 I thought maybe you were in the US. 10:07:27 My memory is no good. 10:11:03 -!- LKoen has joined. 10:46:28 Vorpal: By the way, since we've tended to share these -- it's not exactly a panorama, but I was out taking pictures of a Light Thing the other night: https://zem.fi/tmp/beamrules.jpg 11:16:04 -!- watered has joined. 11:20:15 -!- zseri has joined. 11:32:35 -!- sleffy has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 11:35:53 -!- boily has joined. 12:09:27 -!- AnotherTest has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 12:30:38 -!- boily has quit (Quit: RELATIVE CHICKEN). 12:31:32 -!- zseri has quit (Quit: Leaving). 12:31:59 -!- zseri has joined. 12:32:54 fizzie: A "light thing"? 12:33:01 it is quite pretty yes 12:33:11 fizzie: lasers into fog? 12:33:56 fizzie: by the way, the only reason I have been on at all this week is that I have been home with a severe cold, so I had nothing better to do 12:34:51 with regards to "not paying attention to internet stuff" I mentioned yesterday 12:50:09 -!- watered has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 12:51:15 -!- watered has joined. 13:03:16 Vorpal: I think those were just regular lights into fog. But there were some lasers as well: https://zem.fi/tmp/lasers.jpg 13:03:31 Vorpal: And just lights in general: https://zem.fi/tmp/gates.jpg 13:03:48 fizzie: you live in a cool place! 13:05:04 Vorpal: My wife says it makes no sense London has all these things and Finland/Helsinki has none, even though the latter would have ample supplies of darkness and woodland. 13:08:17 I agree 13:08:27 There's at least three recurring yearly light shows somewhat like this (the photos are from Syon Park's Enchanted Woodland, but there's also the Magical Lantern Festival at Chiswick House and Christmas at Kew in Kew Gardens) plus some more conventional "light art" thingies (Winter Lights Festival at Canary Wharf, the Lumiere festival just generally around London). 13:11:53 I flickr'd some photos of the Canary Wharf one last year, https://www.flickr.com/photos/fizzief/albums/72157676045132054 13:12:53 (Oh, and apparently the Magic Lantern Festival as well.) 13:15:02 fizzie: looks cool, especially the ones with horizontal ribbons between the trees 13:15:10 how was that made? 13:15:51 I think that was just physical ribbons coated with something that glows under UV light, and then some UV lamps pointed at them on the ground. 13:15:57 aah 13:22:33 -!- LKoen has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 13:25:38 I think I should try to execute some parts of the XTW interpreter parallel. 13:37:48 especially in the VM 13:39:04 `ping the VM didn't magically come into life, right? 13:39:08 pong 13:39:12 whoa! 13:39:13 it did? 13:39:17 what happened? 13:40:29 -!- watered has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds). 13:41:02 b_jonas: Was it not-alive then? 13:43:10 -!- watered has joined. 13:43:15 fizzie: non-alive when? 13:43:23 it was non-alive a few days ago 13:44:23 fizzie: I wonder, instead of random people sending money to you, does any of the virtual machine providers support the option where random people can pay money directly to the hosting provider over the internet and that money appears on that virtual machine's account if they add the rihgt incantation? 13:44:53 Oh, that. Yeah, it's been back for quite a while now. I don't think it was down for more than four days or so. 13:45:47 um... I was busy then, or something 13:46:24 -!- doesthiswork has joined. 13:46:36 I don't know if "non-owner payments" are a thing with any provider. Could be. 13:46:47 The one I've been looking for accepts bitcoins, FWIW. 13:47:08 s/for/at/ 14:11:36 -!- garit has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 15:06:39 -!- watered has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 15:07:58 -!- watered has joined. 15:16:49 Oh boy, Cloud at Cost is having a Black Friday sale ;) 15:20:21 Quick, let's buy more of them. 15:30:00 Here's a rather random question, but I'm having some trouble Googli.. I mean, searching Google for it. Does anyone happen to know if there exists a cheap device for plugging a POTS landline handset to a computer in a full-duplex way? 15:30:04 All I can find are (a) record-only boxes that slot between the phone base and the mic/speaker handset, (b) FXO devices that make a computer be able to interact with a POTS system, and (c) a few very Skype-specific USB devices intended for doing Skype calls from an old landline phone. 15:30:12 I just basically want to make an old phone an audio I/O device. (Or possibly just the handset part, but it'd be more elegant to use the entire phone.) 15:32:46 -!- fungot has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 15:32:46 -!- garit has joined. 15:32:46 -!- garit has quit (Changing host). 15:32:46 -!- garit has joined. 15:32:48 -!- garit has quit (Excess Flood). 15:34:16 -!- garit has joined. 15:34:19 -!- garit has quit (Changing host). 15:34:19 -!- garit has joined. 15:36:40 Do you know how to make such a device? 15:50:17 -!- fungot has joined. 15:54:23 Not really. I used to have a voice-capable ISA modem card that might've been able to do it, but that's back in Finland anyway. 15:54:26 I've found a few instructions about the handset part (though mostly just about recording), and that might be easier, since AIUI it's really just a specific kind of microphone and speaker. The phone system itself is probably a little more involved. 15:54:31 I'm not particularly good at electronics. 15:56:29 -!- AnotherTest has joined. 16:22:29 -!- moony has joined. 16:29:14 -!- xkapastel has joined. 16:48:05 -!- doesthiswork has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 16:59:27 -!- jaboja has joined. 17:02:42 Heh, CaC is spamming me. 17:05:49 -!- erkin has joined. 17:08:51 -!- FreeFull has joined. 17:38:44 haha discounted crap 17:54:07 -!- jaboja has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 18:04:51 -!- atrapado_ has joined. 18:21:04 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 18:40:50 Some closure: looks like the thing I was talking about is called a "FXS adapter" in telephony land, and there are no cheap ones, except for build-your-own projects. The cheapest alternative seems to be some sort of standalone VOIP box, which can be had in the £15-20 price range used. 18:56:23 -!- watered has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds). 18:57:19 -!- watered has joined. 19:04:01 -!- AnotherTest has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 19:04:33 -!- watered has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 19:05:29 -!- AnotherTest has joined. 19:22:41 -!- sleffy has joined. 19:51:32 hallo gang 19:51:46 I'll repeat since I posted my question when no one was up 19:51:52 any experts on Conway's Game of Life here? 19:59:48 -!- erkin has quit (Quit: Ouch! Got SIGABRT, dying...). 20:14:33 -!- watered has joined. 20:35:27 -!- moony has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 20:45:17 -!- ATMunn has changed nick to nnuMTA. 20:48:43 -!- xkapastel has quit (Quit: Connection closed for inactivity). 21:00:58 -!- fungot has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 21:02:18 -!- fungot has joined. 21:10:10 -!- shikhin has quit (Quit: Alas.). 21:10:29 -!- shikhin has joined. 21:17:11 Phoeni: i watched two and half YouTube videos about it, so im an expert. Feel free to ask your question =) 21:18:03 Hooray! 21:18:18 How far did your videos take you? 21:18:33 "and a HAALF!" (Eddie Murphy) : ) 21:18:42 (HAAAAYYAAALF!!) ) 21:18:42 -!- atrapado_ has quit (Quit: Leaving). 21:18:43 Sorry 21:18:56 Let's start easy 21:19:21 So you make dots, and they either are lonely and die off, or crowded, and the middle one die of 21:19:35 and most really early positions in the "crowded" stage die off in stages 21:19:42 so far so good? 21:22:25 The cells are formed into patterns. 21:24:37 but patterns from a set of rules that you re calculate turn after turn 21:25:12 zzo38 you were here earlier 21:25:19 do you still have your program? 21:26:33 I just checked, and the 5 dot config called R pentamonio dies off in about 1100 turns 21:26:40 and it has a boundary 21:27:09 so it can't be that hard to run it 3200 times adding one pixel at a time a bunch of choices 21:27:28 Phoeni: it doesn't die off. it emits multiple gliders. 21:27:39 or was that another pattern? 21:27:43 well I am skipping the gliders 21:27:57 I saw those, but one sec lemme look at something again 21:27:58 -!- fungot has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 21:29:08 -!- fungot has joined. 21:29:28 ot taking the time to count exactly, it produces 4-5 gliders so they "end off into space" but in the main colony it stabilizes 21:29:39 that's what I am referrring to 21:30:08 but before that it gets into all these fantastic patterns 21:30:41 so I am curious if you add 1 pixel somewhere in the run if you can keep it going wild without locking down 21:31:09 probably not just 1, so there is some sets of minimum numbers of pixels per overall complexity growth 21:31:29 but since the original is FIVE and it explodes into 1100 cycles 21:31:36 it can't be that many new pixels 21:31:45 So whats your question 21:32:01 I just typed it 21:32:07 Strange stuff is happening and there is no way to quickly predict it (usually) 21:32:14 so I am curious if you add 1 pixel somewhere in the run if you can keep it going wild without locking down 21:32:31 right, so just a brute force 21:32:39 Yes 21:32:45 that's my question 21:33:01 because a computer can do it in an organized fashion 21:33:13 you can greatly optimize the execution though 21:33:21 and 1100 steps is small, this slow web version was done in ten seconds 21:33:29 by press calculating whole patterns, excluding empty areas, etc 21:33:45 sure 21:33:54 computer can calculate something like 1 billion cell-steps per second 21:33:56 so I am just curious how to find out 21:34:22 brute force 21:34:37 in this case "a billion cell steps' but with the "wonders of multi plex sims" it's 110 steps times (guess) 2000 locations for the pixel 21:34:39 there are no way to solve it algorithmically 21:35:05 game of life is Turing complete, you can encode any program in it 21:35:22 so ny making quick prediction about it, you could solve any possible problem faster 21:35:24 by* 21:35:27 I'd just like to see it programmed out 21:36:13 I came here because the room title was obscure programming stuff and specifically a board post said a few people knew some stuff about it and zzo38 earlier said he'd already made one 21:36:36 -!- garit2 has joined. 21:36:36 -!- garit2 has quit (Changing host). 21:36:36 -!- garit2 has joined. 21:38:19 it sounded like an easy test case for a programmer to crank out 21:38:31 if anyone cared 21:39:06 Solving quick game of life simulation = solving all possible programs 21:39:38 its literally the same, as asking to solve how to simulate any given program faster than it takes usually 21:39:44 -!- garit has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds). 21:41:00 you're right but answering a diff question than I had 21:41:03 I do still have the program of course 21:41:09 I was looking for one quick piece of data 21:41:22 heh "of course" - heh things happen 21:41:28 programs get lost to dead hard drives : ) 21:42:13 but so zzo38 in concept *I think* all you'd have to do is put a loop and add 1 pixel to the run of the center population ignoring the gliders once they're out of range 21:42:26 and see which one pixel adds the most to the whole colony 21:42:45 possibly two 21:43:03 or because of the crowding rule deleting one pizel 21:43:06 same idea 21:43:53 I just had the idea to add some food : ) 21:44:44 I have Wolfram's New Kind of Science but last I looked it over I didn't see the Food idea 21:49:07 -!- xkapastel has joined. 22:13:14 like the legend of the phoeni... 22:16:05 Wasn't that a book by Nesbit? 22:16:13 Oh, no, I'm mixing up two books by Nesbit. 22:17:55 if you add an "x", it's the opening line of daft punk's "get lucky" and the name of an upcoming anthology from gilded dragonfly books 22:21:21 -!- watered has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 22:25:44 y'all are partly right 22:25:53 this is a new channel for me to ne in 22:26:12 Phoenix is right, just like you think, and more accurately, the male one from the Egyptian lineage 22:26:32 the missing X is some mostly forgotten wordplay little thing I was pondering one year 22:26:46 and IRC only lets you sorta have 1 name per network 22:28:50 You can use NS GROUP to add multiple names to your account if you want to do, although only one name is in use at once. 22:29:57 ooh that's new to me, what's that? 22:30:20 Fortunately I don't have all that many, but userenames are how the net runs and it's irritating 22:30:28 An account is not required, but it is possible to do. Issue the command "NS HELP" to the IRC server for a description. 22:30:51 is that freenode only or across most of the big networks? 22:31:14 NS HELP 22:31:33 Not all IRC networks implement it, but some do. (Which subcommands are implemented under NS also can differ by network) 22:32:17 so then do I Identify back and forth? 22:32:51 so yes I came across Nickserv isn't on all the networks, but I'll deal with that later 22:33:00 just doing basics today : ) 22:34:01 If you are registered, then you can use the PASS or NS IDENTIFY command to authenticate so that you can be logged in. 22:34:15 I am registered for Phoeni 22:34:18 I did some time back 22:34:25 but how do you switch names? 22:34:35 Issue the NICK command to switch names. 22:34:44 right that part I got 22:34:52 oh wait 22:34:57 I might be confusing myself 22:35:10 lemme think 22:35:38 A. So if I am in teo IRC channels at the same time, I can't have two nicks going at once, unless that's what Group does 22:35:57 You can have only one name per connection. 22:35:59 two 22:36:03 right 22:36:21 You need two connections if you want to use two names at once. 22:36:29 B, THEN, I think Twitch gets grouchy and only wants one twitch name per (something) 22:36:53 so my gaming twitch gets smashed into my chess twitch name 22:37:20 sure I've done landline and mobile before 22:37:22 two connectionds 22:37:37 Does that work for Twitch too 22:37:50 So at home I might have to do AdiIRC and Kiwi or something 22:38:27 I don't mean landline and mobile; I mean just connecting twice to the IRC server, with the same IRC client for both connections if it supports multiple connections to the same server. 22:39:26 (Different IRC clients work differently, and you may need to look at the documentation for the IRC client you are using.) 22:41:22 hm that's new to me too, also something to think about 22:41:32 things to do when not studying 22:53:02 I use hexchat here, and I think it supports two connections to the same server but I'm not sure. 22:53:45 I did a survey of clients about 3 years ago and AdiIRc becae my "winner" 22:54:12 -!- AnotherTest has quit (Ping timeout: 260 seconds). 22:54:18 and I think I glanced at hexchat but it just didn't make my list for now lost reasons to do with intuition 22:57:35 -!- zseri_ has joined. 22:57:46 ok, works 22:57:54 -!- zseri_ has left. 23:03:14 -!- boily has joined. 23:03:53 -!- doesthiswork has joined. 23:05:54 @massages-loud 23:05:54 You don't have any messages 23:12:25 @massages-loud 23:12:25 You don't have any messages 23:19:19 You don't have any massages 23:20:24 @massages-loud 23:20:24 You don't have any messages 23:21:24 dosthelloswork, Relloger9, zsellori. lambdabot doesn't massage hth 23:23:26 I parallelized some namespace copy work in the XTW interpreter. 23:49:08 Have you looked at my new esolang yet? 23:53:57 which one? 23:54:23 It is titled "Crement" (ais523 gave it this name, because I didn't have a name for it at first) 23:55:44 yes 23:59:21 It would be interesting to have a instruction which allows to copy a previous instruction (given by address field) after the last command