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11:00 AM
@Ven no those are exclamation points, but it’s a common mistake
 
@Telkitty :)
 
user1804599
@wilx std::swap
 
@rightfold What? That it is the other way around?
 
user1804599
So I had this wonderful idea
 
11:07 AM
@rightfold I am holding my breath now!
 
That's not a wonderful idea :P
 
Science doesn't work on the basis of "proof". Proof is something that belongs only in the realms of mathematics and philosophical logic. Whereas science works on the basis of the best-available explanation that fits the available evidence.
err ...
 
What? It's true.
 
makes science sound like religion
mind you, science 'works'
it's not best fitting theory
 
@Telkitty Why? No religion "works on the basis of the best-available explanation that fits the available evidence."
I don't see why a statement that applies to science but applies to no religion makes science sound like religion.
 
11:16 AM
Before the Scientific revolution, religion solves everything, remember
 
What's the "scientific revolution"?
And how does that make that statement apply to something other than science?
 
The scientific revolution was the emergence of modern science during the early modern period, when developments in mathematics, physics, astronomy, biology (including human anatomy) and chemistry transformed the views of society about nature. The scientific revolution began in Europe towards the end of the Renaissance period and continued through the late 18th century, influencing the intellectual social movement known as the Enlightenment. While its dates are disputed, the publication in 1543 of Nicolaus Copernicus's De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres...
 
Science is way way older than that.
 
like ... the earth is flat?
 
@Telkitty What? You can observe some science in old Greece.
 
11:20 AM
The Earth has been known not to be flat for ages, and its circumference has been measured in the Iron Age.
And arguably, astronomy has been around since the dawn of agriculture.
A calendar is extremely important for agriculture. Observing the sky, modelling it, and making predictions based on such models (like "solstice will be X days from now") is old as fuck.
 
and some people still think astrology actually work
 
How does the prevalence of pseudoscience make science look like religion?
 
RT @alt_kia who made this horror https://t.co/IWiGDVi0Db
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes only to people incapable of seeing the difference
 
Science is the process of gathering, comparing, and evaluating proposed models against observables. A model can be a simulation, mathematical or chemical formula, or set of proposed steps. Science is like mathematics in that researchers in both disciplines can clearly distinguish what is known from what is unknown at each stage of discovery. Models, in both science and mathematics, need to be internally consistent and also ought to be falsifiable (capable of disproof).
source:
The scientific method is a body of techniques for investigating phenomena, acquiring new knowledge, or correcting and integrating previous knowledge. To be termed scientific, a method of inquiry is commonly based on empirical or measurable evidence subject to specific principles of reasoning. The Oxford Dictionaries Online define the scientific method as "a method or procedure that has characterized natural science since the 17th century, consisting in systematic observation, measurement, and experiment, and the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses". The scientific method is an...
 
Ven
11:29 AM
@rightfold ????????????????????????????
 
@Telkitty Relevance?
I.e. point to that part in that paragraph that makes it sound like religion.
 
Argument: Science doesn't work on the basis of "proof".
Counter argument: Models, in both science and mathematics, need to be internally consistent and also ought to be falsifiable (capable of disproof).
 
@Telkitty What.
 
Have you ever learned physics
 
No religion works on the principle of falsifiability. How does that make science look like religion?
@Telkitty Science works on the basis of models that can make falsifiable predictions.
Religions hinge on unfalsifiable claims.
6
 
11:35 AM
I am saying that science is more rigorous than 'works on the basis of the best-available explanation that fits the available evidence.'
 
@Telkitty No, it isn't.
"Models" in that sentence means "available explanations that fit the available evidence"
 
What is a Lorentz transformation
it's a transformation that fits the reality more than Galilean transfomation
 
if it doesn't work, then it's not science even if it's the best fitting theory
 
@Telkitty If what doesn't work?
What's "it"?
 
best fitting theory
do I have to repeat every of my sentences multiple times?
 
11:37 AM
@Telkitty Then nothing work because nothing works completely.
 
no, please. One-time nonsense is enough
7
 
At least she doesn't have.... GNUmonia!!! Amirite? @rantyben 😜 https://twitter.com/rantyben/status/775251760654929920
 
@Telkitty No, because repeating doesn't make things clearer. You do have to remove ambiguities and unclarity.
 
this just in: Galilean transformations are unscientific
 
@Telkitty That's blatantly wrong.
Pretty much all scientific theories ever don't work to some degree.
 
11:39 AM
ITT telkitty is to physics like bartek is to programming. If it's not perfect, it's shit.
 
If you're using "science" to mean "absolute truth" you are wrong. Philosophy deals in truth, not science.
 
@AndyProwl Thank you for dropping by just to say this
 
lol
 
Science cares about the ability to make predictions about the real world from models. It doesn't care about whether the models are true or not; only whether they can be used to make predictions.
8
 
@AndyProwl Except Bartek understands some of that shit (which makes it more confusing for the audience)
 
11:41 AM
True that
 
@AndyProwl if syntax is not perfect, compiler might give errors
 
dig deeper
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would like you to tell any scientist 'you are wrong (to some degree) '
 
@Telkitty any scientist would either misunderstand me or agree.
Scientific models differ from mathematical models in that they are about the real world (whether mathematics is the real world or not is a long-standing topic of philosophy).
 
@Telkitty they already know
 
11:43 AM
'Just because I am an idiot, I will assume science is all wrong'
 
@Telkitty All scientific theories are known to be incorrect.
 
Hell. There are even scientists who combine scientific research with religious belief
 
@sehe Which is perfectly feasible because unfalsifiable assertions are outside the domain of science.
 
@Telkitty incorrect is not black/white or absolute. Incorrect may mean: correct in 99% of the cases. Or in 100% of the cases under these N constraints
 
let's me re-emphasize: science has to work, and it has to prove that it works
otherwise it's not science
 
11:45 AM
 
it could be voodoo
 
@Telkitty How does that make it sound like religion?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Exactly my point. Which is why no scientist will be stunned if a theory is questioned.
Questioning is the whole fucking point
 
@sehe They all are.
 
:32796162 because this is a place where 'We'll evaluate your fitness for committee work' JIT garbage collection
 
11:46 AM
You cannot name a scientific theory, current or otherwise, that doesn't have gaps where its predictions fail.
 
@Telkitty :sad-trombone.wav:
 
@Telkitty The "proof" of science is in all of its useful predictions it allows us to make.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes because religion is based on faith, not whether it's actually based on evidence or whether it works
 
@Telkitty the only two things required of a scientific theory are predictive power and explanatory capability. Proof isn't.
 
Anyone has experience with a usb docking station and external monitors?
 
11:48 AM
@Telkitty But science isn't based on faith. It's based on real-world evidence.
 
My shitty computer won't compile, I need a faster one, but the one I was looking at sucks in that it doesn't have a docking station that's not USB.
I need two external monitors :/
 
Proof is for mathematics.
Also note that proof isn't the same as absolute truth. (Which is why absolute truth isn't in the realm of mathematics either; it's philosophy)
 
A proof is sufficient evidence or a sufficient argument for the truth of a proposition. The concept applies in a variety of disciplines, with both the nature of the evidence or justification and the criteria for sufficiency being area-dependent. In the area of oral and written communication such as conversation, dialog, rhetoric, etc., a proof is a persuasive perlocutionary speech act, which demonstrates the truth of a proposition. In any area of mathematics defined by its assumptions or axioms, a proof is an argument establishing a theorem of that area via accepted rules of inference starting...
 
@Telkitty In mathematics the meaning of "truth" is confined to the model in use.
 
Well, even in mathematics proofs are often about belief and philosophy.
 
11:50 AM
how can you 1+1 when no two things in this universe are the same
 
Wait, you're talking about falsification as in popper? In that case I take that back.
 
@Telkitty From that page: "A notable exception is mathematics, whose proofs are drawn from a mathematical world begun with axioms and further developed and enriched by theorems proved earlier."
Mathematics isn't about absolute truth.
It isn't even about the real world.
 
Mathematics is just about deriving shit from other shit.
 
so are you telling me that maths is based on false premises?
 
11:50 AM
@Telkitty that's philosophy. Maybe you should get a room with @Cinch/@VermillionAzure
 
@BenjaminGruenbaum for a desktop, get a decent GPU or DisplayLink USB adapters
 
@Telkitty No. False dichotomy.
 
@Telkitty It's abstract
 
@Telkitty Maths doesn't care about the real world truthiness of maths. That's philosophy.
 
but assuming from the first post, you're probably talking about a laptop
 
11:51 AM
@Telkitty maths is based on premises whose correctness is irrelevant, they're axioms. Science on the other hand bases itself on premises mostly based on their predicting power. What @R.MartinhoFernandes is talking about is how popper sees it (falsification) vs how quine sees it (usefulness in prediction).
 
@sehe Well, that's for philosophers to decide too :P
 
lol. What. If it's divine harmony of the spheres
 
@Telkitty is just trolling, IMHO.
 
@Telkitty you should probably read them both if you want to participate in that argument and be taken seriously. I don't know many people who'd argue with someone who hasn't done even the most basic philosophy of science course.
 
11:52 AM
@wilx Sure she isn't. She'd be able to act less confused if needed
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mind bender
 
For monists, mathematics is the real world.
 
10 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@Telkitty All scientific theories are known to be incorrect.
3 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@Telkitty Maths doesn't care about the real world truthiness of maths. That's philosophy.
3 mins ago, by Benjamin Gruenbaum
@Telkitty maths is based on premises whose correctness is irrelevant, they're axioms. Science on the other hand bases itself on premises mostly based on their predicting power. What @R.MartinhoFernandes is talking about is how popper sees it (falsification) vs how quine sees it (usefulness in prediction).
maths is not about truth, science is all incorrect
that concludes everything you have discussed so far, I am off for a jog
 
@Telkitty Scientific theories not science.
 
@Telkitty math is not about truth, science is not all incorrect you just don't understand what correctness means.
 
@Telkitty Whether maths is about absolute truth or not has been discussed at least since Plato. It's not new.
 
11:56 AM
Science isn't about being "right" it's about being useful.
@Telkitty just read "Two Dogmas of Empiricism"
 
@Telkitty This concludes you can't read/or keep yourself from strawmanning
 
Anyway, back to why I got here - anyone here has a laptop dock that connects via USB? I need a computer with a non-shitty cpu and the one I found only has a USB dock
 
why you all are still engaging telkitty in discussions is completely incomprehensible to me.
 
Ven
:P
 
@BenjaminGruenbaum IME USB docks with external display outputs all use DisplayLink
...wait do you want a USB dock or a non-USB dock?
because now I'm confused
 
12:01 PM
@Telkitty So now, instead of keeping repeating your own statements, you repeat those of others. Progress
 
@milleniumbug I want to buy an ASUS ZenBook Pro UX501VW and connect it to two external displays
 
@BenjaminGruenbaum there's an HDMI, so one of the displays is covered. I see no "usual" docking station connections, but there's a Thunderbolt connection, so there
 
I don't want to connect 5 things to my laptop every day several times.
 
I see two options: a.) connecting an external GPU over thunderbolt (weird, and possibly costly) b.) a DisplayLink adapter like one of these displaylink.com/products/universal-docking-stations
or maybe there's some way to connect a display directly to a thunderbolt port
 
12:17 PM
wow!
> The use of IPoE addresses the disadvantage that PPP is unsuited for multicast delivery to multiple users.
This really caught me out
Did you guys parse it correctly the first time?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, it wasn't really discussed. Plato just said the truth and some people try to deny it :P
 
@Columbo I think that it's important to note that mathematics doesn't change depending on which philosophical view is "The Truth" (it's the nature of the real world that changes). It works the same way regardless; the study of mathematics is unaffected by the philosophy of mathematics, which is why I say mathematics isn't about absolute truth. It could be rephrased as "mathematics is not about the philosophy of mathematics", which can be seen as trivially true.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or in a more concise form, truth doesn't depend on what humans think?
(Which, by the way, is subject to discussion in epistemology if I'm not mistaken)
 
@milleniumbug there are usbc docks
 
Behaviorists could argue we only believe 2+2=4 because we were told to think that, and that there is no such thing as mathematics. Weird people
 
Philosophy is the end of the road, though: some philosophy is about the philosophy of philosophy.
Mandatory:
(Relevance in the tooltip)
 
12:29 PM
lol
I take my information from Popper's books tho
 
@Columbo No, this can be observed empirically.
Also funny that the first sentence in the wikipedia article for "Philosophy" has no links (except for the parenthetical about the etymology of the word)
@Columbo We (at least I) believe 2+2=4 because we can observe pairs joining to become quartets.
.. ..
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes What is a pair? What is a quartet? All you "see" is certain objects changing position, so your perception creates a connection between these objects. You are the one who introduced the notion of a pair, not the universe
 
^ here's some for your own empirical observation, in case you haven't come across quartets before :P
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes or at Hitler
 
12:34 PM
@BenjaminGruenbaum even better, this means you could connect a docking station without rotating your USB connector several times + you could find an application for this socket
 
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes But math doesn't observe, math defines what a successor is and then proofs 2+2=4. The only way to refute that proof is by disagreeing which order single digit numbers come in.
 
@nwp There are many ways to build that proof. Peano arithmetic is just the most common way to define natural numbers.
@nwp Also "single digit" only matters for the representation. Take "2+2=4" is a statement about numbers, not as a sentence in the common language of mathematics.
@Columbo "What's 2? What's 4?"
What I told nwp about representations holds for you as well.
"A pair" is just a way to say the same as "2" in English.
@Columbo I don't have to define "pair" unless you define "2". Basically, we can only have this discussion if we have a common concept of "number", because that's what the statement "2+2=4" is about.
 
@milleniumbug thanks, any dock you'd recommend?
 
Hey guys, I'm trying to understand the C++11 regex library. There's a version of the constructor of `regex_token_iterator` that takes `(first, last, regex, initializer_list submatches)`. The nice example here:

http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/regex/regex_token_iterator/regex_token_iterator/

shows how one code use an `initializer_list` to separate words with {1,2} corresponding to two parts of a word.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yep. Also called critical rationalism, and that works great.
 
12:42 PM
I'm wondering, would there be any case where the initializer list could take anything more than {1,2}?
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist {1, 3, 5}
 
@BenjaminGruenbaum oh, I assumed that was a statement, not a question
 
I don't understand the question.
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist if you have more submatches in the regex
 
I'm kind of unable to understand how more submatches could appear
could you please give a simple example?
 
12:45 PM
"this subject has a submarine as a subsequence and one more sub just for kicks"
 
If I have a word "subplayhoney", and I match play. Will sub-play-honey be the submatches?
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist No, just play.
 
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't own a USB 3.1 C dock so I can't personally recommend any
 
In the example in the link I gave, the words where submarine, and subsequent. The match was sub, and the initializer_list {1,2} made it sub and marine or sub and sequent
I don't understand why {1,2} mapped to sub and sequent, for example
 
12:47 PM
@TheQuantumPhysicist No. The regex is not sub.
It's \b(sub)([^ ]*)
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right!
 
but if I were to choose, I'd read the specs carefully and get the dock with a newer version of the displaylink chip, which can support bigger resolutions/or 2 displays
 
But then definitely that has to be the {1} part, right?
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist The {1, 2} means it wants the 2nd and 3rd instances (0-based) that match the regex.
 
(I'm continuously talking about displaylink because this is pretty much the only company which provides display-outputs-over-USB)
 
12:48 PM
If you change it to {0, 1, 2}, it gives "subject", "submarine", and "subsequent".
 
OH!
Gotcha!
Thank you very much!
That's the answer I'm looking for
@R.MartinhoFernandes
 
The example says "1st and 2nd" which is wrong, so I can see why one might be confused.
 
the rest only matters if you want to get specific outputs, like more USB connections and the like
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Agreed!
 
No, wait, I might be wrong.
I'm not sure anymore :D
Yeah, I'm wrong :D
 
12:53 PM
@BenjaminGruenbaum note: these external display outputs don't work well when using Linux
 
What are you wrong about?
@R.MartinhoFernandes
 
@milleniumbug oh, that kinda sucks
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Actually I'm playing with an example here, and I see that {0} gives the full match
then {1,2,...} gives the submatches, so starts from one
 
Yeah, "submatch" means what I know traditionally as "group".
 
That's minor though. I was having trouble understanding what submatches mean... and now I know that submatch = capture group
Yes exactly
 
12:54 PM
I.e. a part of the regex within parentheses.
 
@BenjaminGruenbaum the official drivers are Ubuntu-only, so you have to rely on someone to port them
I have an older USB 2.0 DisplayLink adapter, and I've yet to make it work on my Fedora
I've read this is an issue when using closed-source nvidia drivers, but I can't make it work when using open-source nvidia drivers either so I'm pretty much out of luck
 
nwp
tests run through after having broken everything 2 days ago, yay!
 
@nwp sounds like a major fuckup if you managed to have broken tests that long :-)
 
nwp
a somewhat major rewrite actually
I don't think incremental improvements would have been feasible and I didn't want to get paralyzed by tests.
But I am happy there were tests to guide the new implementation.
 
how long took the rewrite only, without fixing the tests afterwards?
 
nwp
1:03 PM
no clue, it was testdriven, so I only implemented enough to make the next test pass
 
@ArneMertz Sometimes I think some changes are easier if you do the part that breaks the most thing first. Works well if the failures that can then be dealt with in parts.
 
@milleniumbug honestly if it works in Windows I can live with that - I don't really have a strong opinion about operating systems to be fair.
I'm just scared it'll lag a ton.
 
Are ranges in a TS, or not at all?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes depends largely on the system where you do the rewrite. In my experience breaking big first quite often means you break it, you don't recover for days, you roll back and start with smaller increments... And the overhead of those increments often turns out to be smaller than the time you estimated for fixing the broken stuff.
 
Oh, different types for begin and end made it.
 
1:09 PM
@BenjaminGruenbaum I wouldn't try watching movies or doing displaying 3D on one, but otherwise it works quite well wrt not-lagging
 
Ven
interesting insight from gregg here https://t.co/rqA6PmphCH
 
.@horton_official Who's that Pokemon?! https://t.co/ItOvgErQJA
 
nwp
it feels like there should be a way to get this to work
 
1:25 PM
template<std::size_t size>
Forward_declared_type get(char (&buffer)[size]);
struct Forward_declared_type {...};
template<std::size_t size>
Forward_declared_type get(char (&buffer)[size]) {
    return get(buffer, size);
}
 
Forward_declared_type get(std::vector<char>& buffer); // obvious fix
 
Fucking tabs.
 
1:41 PM
@milleniumbug oh cool, I mostly just want it to run a browser and vscode
 
> You can expect updates here at least once a week. This page was last updated on 16th August, 2016.
anet known issue tracker
 
rip gw2
 
@PatrickM'Bongo no you don’t understand, we’ve run out of issues. everything is now fine
 
1:57 PM
@LucDanton lol at that "nothing is off the table" comment
 
2:09 PM
nothing is off the vtable, because ram in the cloud is limitless ~_~
 
My office has terrible building design: window blinds on the inside; windows open to the inside.
Can't have both windows open and blinds down.
 
@PatrickM'Bongo r u a hacker
 
@LucDanton Literally the 1 %
 
2:19 PM
@LucDanton lol
 
user1804599
chocolate mixed with saliva is delicious
 
@rightfold FYI you've never tasted anything without saliva so the <with saliva> is always implicit
 
user1804599
are you cicada?
 
user1804599
 
user1804599
cicada confirmed
 
Ven
2:21 PM
is he tho
 
cuda is short for cicada
 
user1804599
cicuda
 
Ven
cudaca
The AWS C++ SDK is pretty fucking terrible
 
@Morwenn btw je voulais ajouter une description genre "patrick m'bongo - marabout du logiciel - don de naissance - compilation garantie ou remboursé - retour du template aimé - amour - fortune - typage fort" etc mais flemme
 
user1804599
2:24 PM
TIL there's no IKEA in South America.
 
@PatrickM'Bongo haha
 
Also I don't really know how to translate it into english because I have no idea how these things are usually worded
 
I've only seen them in Portuguese, but I know exactly what you're talking about.
 
user1804599
Translate it into Korean Park Young-Bae
 
> redresse tous les sexes tordus
I’m fairly sure this one is legit
 
2:25 PM
@PatrickM'Bongo Probably not as common in English-speaking countries because of African immigration rates.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ha, yes, I've googled a bit and didn't find anything satisfactory. Could be the reason
 
Ven
"Hey, marc, things with type T&& will auto-move, right?" "well yeah of course. why would the type exist otherwise"
@PatrickM'Bongo retour du template aimé :o
Tu vois des buildfiles qui n'existent pas ?
 
Don't forget the inline for faster performances!
 
Ven
@PatrickM'Bongo They overloaded EVERY SINGLE FUNCTION with const T& and T&& overloads. And of course the 2nd one doesn't use std::move.
 
isn't std::move basically just a cast to T&&?
 
2:30 PM
well it is
 
Ven
3 mins ago, by Ven
"Hey, marc, things with type T&& will auto-move, right?" "well yeah of course. why would the type exist otherwise"
thanks for working with my previous message.
 
@PatrickM'Bongo Yeah, it really seems like it's not a thing. "windshield leaflets" does give some results but adding any of "magic", "sorcery", "witchcraft", "love", and so on doesn't produce any of the kind we're looking for.
 
I thought I had read something about Wall Street-type executives getting occult readings or whatever to help but as it turns out googling 'wall street' and 'witchcraft' together finds a lot of conspiracy stuff
 
lol
-conspiracy :D
 
just like how you filter out homeopathy results with -garbage right
2
 
2:35 PM
@LucDanton The more you filter the homeopathy results out, the higher their PageRank.
 
idgi
@R.MartinhoFernandes quite close actually
 
@LucDanton potentisation?
 
hey that was just for that night and how did you hear about it anyway
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol!
financial astrology is easy to find but it doesn’t lead anywhere
is that the right stuff or what? cc @PatrickM'Bongo @R.MartinhoFernandes
 
Perfect!
"French and English spoken" Hmmm
 
@LucDanton Excellent
 
2:41 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah I noticed
 
@LucDanton More seriously, I have a feeling conspiracy nuttery should be easy to classify (not that you can do that directly through Google search, though)
 
another one, which I like better cos the previous one was a bit dry and matter-of-fact
> 2) Do you want a baby? come
 
Right, broken grammar makes it more legit.
 
WTF, why does a file saved in text with Word Mac OS with default encoding and line endings gives no output when doing cat on said file?!
 
> We treat diarrhea, stomach, and smoking
 
2:43 PM
I need to change line feeds to \n while saving, that's ridiculous
 
cat is for meow files, use human instead
 
> 3 in 1 Penis Enlargement
1. Size (LENGTH & THINKNESS)
 
does anyone has a guess as to where that second flyer could be from?
 
There are five Luangwa Roads in Zambia.
 
2:45 PM
Sounds almost chinese
 
Only Kamwala Clinic Google knows about.
No StreetView. :(
 
currency of Zambia is the Kwacha, so I say close enough
> 18) Things moving in your body.
 
Anyway, now I'm concerned about my penis thinkness.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes "thinkness"?
 
See above.
6 mins ago, by Luc Danton
another one, which I like better cos the previous one was a bit dry and matter-of-fact
 
Ow my eyes.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes hehehehe
 
@LucDanton text-align: offensive;
 
anyhoo believe it or not but found all of these via 'witch doctor flyer' if anyone wants to try their hand at finding more
 
@LucDanton Maybe "windshield" was too specific.
There's a blog dedicated to it: eishsangoma.wordpress.com
 
2:51 PM
great, that should be a trove of material for @PatrickM'Bongo
 
I regret
@Ven Also they apparently cba doing a trivial wrapper flagged_var<T> or whatever
 
Ven
and not copy-paste all their shit for 123123 years?!?!?!??!?!?!!!
 
I'll save this file as reminder_not_to_work_at_amazon.txt
 
the numerous references to 'that black spot in your hand' are new to me, never read anything like that before
 
2:54 PM
24 instances of &&, not a single move.
@LucDanton WTF is that.
 
> Remove black spot in your hand that keeps taking your money
 
Oh. Maybe it's some spiritual black spot.
Or maybe not.
One can never know.
The Black Spot is a literary device invented by Robert Louis Stevenson for his novel Treasure Island. In the book, pirates are presented with a "black spot" to officially pronounce a verdict of guilt or judgment. It consists of a circular piece of paper or card, with one side blackened while the other side bears a message and placed in the hand of the accused. It was a source of much fear because it meant the pirate was to be deposed as leader, by force if necessary—or else killed outright. In Treasure Island, Billy Bones is much frightened by it but remains determined to outwit his enemies; however...
 
apparently this is a South African blog, so maybe it’s a regional thing
yeah, 'sangoma "black spot"' gives a lot of hits
 

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