@samaYo if an employer uses raw SO reputation to hire or reject me I probably don't want to work with that employer. You never know from where a stellar 120.000 reputation reply comes, it might be a rehashed copy and paste from a book|blog post|answer or not.
putting forward hack as the reason to switch to hhvm seems strange ... it's strange because the argument that skills are transferable goes out the window when we are talking about hack, it has a different type system and supports different paradigms, generics, async etc, you can reuse as much of your PHP skillset to write Hack as you can to write Java or C# ...
if I'm running a team, why would I ask everyone on the team to learn about something new that has existed for 5 minutes when there are so many stable, open alternatives ... I'd rather have them rebuild mission critical parts of the application using a mature stable platform
I've mostly read about people switching to hhvm because of speed, which still has some legitimacy until 7 is released, but reading that people are switching specifically to take advantage of Hack seems strange ...
but, yeah, read the manual for RAID setup ... I made the mistake of assuming that I will be able to figure it out without the manual and wasted basically whole eventing getting nowhere
@Jimbo well I don't care that much and the flag-summary doesn't contain that many information for me to understand what the issue with my flags seemed to be
@PeeHaa @FlorianMargaine It's a Greek word, I'm pretty sure the Greeks are the ones you should listen to :-P - My misses insists on pronouncing Michelin as "Mitchellin", it drives me nuts, you can't just change the pronunciation of foreign words because you're lazy. And don't give me that loan-word crap because it isn't a loan word, it's still being used in the context of being a Greek letter.
Sorry to ask if sounds irrelevant, but since the room's tagline reads "Discussion for all things PHP, and stuff", I wanted to ask windows 8.1 users here. Which antivirus have you tried and which one would your recommend?
@iroegbu Oh have they rebranded it back to that in Win8? I haven't paid much attention to the inner workings of Win8 because it is a ridiculous operating system.
@PeeHaa Well rarely/never do I run MBAM and it finds anything other than pseudo-threats (tracker cookies, badly packaged exes etc) on a machine that's had MSE running, which is good enough for me.
@Jimbo My misses uses this at work and asserts that it is good, I have no real opinion because I've not used it for ~10yrs (estimate, a loooong time ago anyway)
@rahulserver Yeh, but I'm also willing to bet he installed MSE after he started having problems. MSE is good when you put it on a new machine, as soon as you have malicious software on the machine then installing anything is likely to produce poor results, because the malware that's already there can see you coming. In that situation what you want is MBAM -> power cycle 3 times or more.
@rahulserver MSE as resident shield, MBAM for cleanups. If you want to/are not averse to paying for a resident shield solution, I would recommend giving your money to MBAM because it is a great tool and it's not as insanely expensive as others.
there actually is in windows ... theres an option that tries to build everything but doesn't stop the build if an ext fails, we don't have it in nix tho
@SergeyTelshevsky usually what you find is that the running process that's "doing the damage" will be running in protected OS memory, attaching yourself to a vulnerable built-in svchost child is common, which means that the AV tool can only clean that element of the infection at shutdown/startup, before the kernel has launched the vulnerable ancillary service. One of the things that the running process does is hide the way it respawns itself when it's nuked
so once you've nuked it you have to scan again before it respawns itself, so it can no longer hide itself and you'll get the root cause. I've seen a few in the past that have 3 or more layers of this, things that pretend to be fake anti-malware SWs often do this
I've also come across a number of infections that actively prevent you from launching executables with the strings e.g. "avg" or "mbam" in the file name
@SergeyTelshevsky I can tell you from personal experience that on a heavily infected machine, you'll frequently find that a second scan after the reboot will actually find more items than the first
Well, they might. The continuous rebirth theory of creation states that there are a potentially infinite number of universes, the creation of each triggered by one previous, and since by definition there cannot be anything outside the universe, saying that each new one inhabits a new set of dimensions the creation of which was triggered by another universe is not a terrible way to visualise it.
btw, theoretical physics is really complicated and basically just philosophy with a different hat on
Anyone read this post on using a Dispatcher for your service later? Bollocks or some truth to it? To me, looks just like an object responsible for shortcutting your requests to other components...
We have a peer review system, it's just that we aren't very good at detaching the merits of the idea from personal involvement. Much like medical science.
@Ja͢ck Indeed, the problem is that no-one takes criticism well, I guess it's just human nature. There's a tendency for people to put their ideas out for review, and when they get negative feedback they take it as a criticism of the person and not the idea. If someone says something you disagree with you will often leap to the defense of your viewpoint without fully considering that you might be wrong, it's just in the nature of having put a lot of work into it in the first place.
In the context of purely theoretical ideas it's even more of a problem, simply because there's usually no empirical mechanism for obtaining proof one way or the other. You can't prove or disprove the many worlds interpretation because you will never be able to observe them
Also dark matter and dark energy are likely indicators that the theoretical model is wrong, rather than there being something that we are unable to observe, simply because of the scale of the discrepancy
looks a bit boring to look at really, the case doesn't help ... it's just plain white ... because I don't like busy things ... I used to have a board that lit up like an xmas tree, but it just annoyed everyone because blue and red flashing lights would be emitted all night from the office ...
no external lights on this one and no looking at the board from the outside ...
@SergeyTelshevsky So you get to your controllers, what do you do there? You call things that abstract what you would normally do in your controllers (according to what frameworks say) into this other object?
@Ja͢ck Yeh, it doesn't mean the model isn't useful, much as the orbital model of atomic structure is likely not representative of what's happening but it's still useful as a teaching tool because a lot of the derived mathematics still works and is testable