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user559633
12:00 AM
no
 
user559633
haha. ended up just reformatting it.
 
Hey, do you guys know if the weave (c compiler), works with Python 34? It doesn't seem to be included in my Winpython distribution.
 
@tristan when I was selling my condo, I decided to encrypt some of my harddrives since I woudn't be home and we went on vacation for house visits. For some stupid reason I decided to create an obscure password that I said I won't forget....well......I have a new door stop
 
user559633
@idjaw yep, that's exactly what happened with this one. ran that pw cracker for days before just calling it quits
 
12:17 AM
cbg all
 
cbg
 
user559633
i'm off. have a good night idjaw
 
take care tristan!
 
night @tristan
 
 
1 hour later…
user559633
2:36 AM
@AndrasDeak thanks, i think it's probably time that i bother to read RST documentation
 
cbg
@AnttiHaapala Canadian approved! That's all you need to get by where I live. Don't know how much it costs? The clerk will show you if you say ಠ_ಠ . It's a very versatile phrase
Any anime fans? I'm messing around on github
 
 
3 hours later…
6:11 AM
hmm, I obviously couldn't get connected during GM.
 
6:43 AM
cbg
 
Morning
 
@AnttiHaapala not any longer. What a terrible question.
 
thanks, OP kept pinging me when I was stupid enough to comment there :D
 
7:12 AM
@AnttiHaapala, I've forgotten to ask permission from you. — Joota 1 min ago
smartass
 
7:29 AM
Nice riposte from Ilja, though.
 
it is 10:30 AM and I am already feeling going down to their level
 
7:48 AM
Cbg
 
In [12]: %timeit contains(a, 1001)
The slowest run took 6.41 times longer than the fastest. This could mean that an intermediate result is being cached
1000000 loops, best of 3: 584 ns per loop
@MartijnPieters ^ i've never seen that, ever. Funny that it now shows that with bisect
 
8:09 AM
Interesting, I see no caching in the code.
@AnttiHaapala: that message can also occur if there just happened to be an OS switch to elsewhere during that slowest run.
ipython can only guess as to why there was a slow run, caching is one of multiple possibilities.
 
Why this comment on this edit? Is this a reference and I'm missing something? stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/12012566
The comment is "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0285333/"
 
@MartijnPieters no, you're wrong
it occurs because of branch prediction
I was doing constant search for a value that is greater than any in the list.
 
@OrangeFlash81 it links to a film called alias. The edit adds an alias (kinda). Poor attempt at humour 3/10
 
hmm but I get it also with random indexes
*not random.
but some that seems unlikely that it would learn
I cannot use randint either... because it is too slow :d
 
@AnttiHaapala ah, the processor does the caching in that case (what branch to take) :-)
 
8:18 AM
but I do not really get how it can be that smart...
because if I pick any number it still is faster...
 
@AnttiHaapala produce 1000 lists up front? Or one list and 1000 random.choice() items from the list?
 
yeah that'd be it
anw.
sorted(list(range(1000000)))
 
If it is too fast to be true, then it is probably not true and you made a mistake somewhere.
 
already sorted is 1.8 ms.
 
@AnttiHaapala uhm..
 
8:19 AM
3 ms for building a set
 
why are you sorting a range?
 
testing.
 
TimSort special-cases already sorted sequences, but that's not what you are measuring here.. :-P
 
Cabbage!
 
so practically there is no case that would really pay off with sorting any sequence and then doing bisect on it
because even on the sorted sequence is only twice as fast.
and presumably set wouldn't care about sortedness
(lets test)
100 loops, best of 3: 2.55 ms per loop
building set from randomized was faster :P
sorry
hmm peculiar, building a set from randomized is slower :D
or perhaps it is a cache-miss again
damn this is hard
@MartijnPieters you know it is really hard to do correct algorithm timings with python.
I did list(range(1000000))
it means that all the numbers were sequentially allocated in the memory.
if I shuffle them, there'd be cache misses
the correct way is to build a list with random.randint
hmm still curious.
the sortedness also affects set building time way too much.
 
8:26 AM
 
@vaultah though that is not a proper duplicate :D
op's calling the main() within class body, there is no self, and it is not a bound method
perhaps I'd reopen hat
 
cabbage
 
@JRichardSnape Thanks
 
Dear friends how to count the number of /n in this string
[u'ABOUT DAISY\n', u'Cover\n', u'Swadesaabhimaani, K. Kelappan, Muhammad Abdul Rahiman\n', u'Title\n', u'Publication\n', u'K. Ramakrishnapilla\n', u'K. Kelappan\n', u'Muhammad Abdul Rahiman\n', u'Back Cover\n']
 
@Anes have you tried researching "how to count substrings in a string in python"?
I'm sure that if you do, and take the time to do it yourself, then you'll find the answer.
 
8:41 AM
ok @F
 
There's really no need for you to come here first and have us write a google query out for you. Doing this will simply annoy the members of the room and make them much less likely to help you in the future, as it's just unbelievably lazy.
 
actually how to convert this list structure to string is the problem
[u'ABOUT DAISY\n', u'Cover\n', u'Swadesaabhimaani, K. Kelappan, Muhammad Abdul Rahiman\n', u'Title\n', u'Publication\n', u'K. Ramakrishnapilla\n', u'K. Kelappan\n', u'Muhammad Abdul Rahiman\n', u'Back Cover\n']
 
@Anes number of /n's: 0
@Anes read the python tutorial in its entirety first and then come back with some real problems.
 
Final Fantasy IX out on Steam \o/
 
8:58 AM
Hi everyone, quick question: One of my question was put on hold. What should I do to reopen it?
(question on Python)
 
@JonClements or @MartijnPieters here?
 
really busy - wassup?
 
Thanks @DavidArenburg
 
@JonClements Hi, We finally finished the saga, I just need a here meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/319590/…
 
Hi @MartijnPieters, one of my question was put on hold. I think it is a good one. Would you mind if you can have a look to reopen it, please?
 
9:01 AM
@AndyK you don't need to ping anyone in particular (especially a mod) - the room in general can review your question if they can and see if it needs re-opening or improvement
 
ok @JonClements this is my question stackoverflow.com/questions/36593590/…
 
@DavidArenburg For that - it looks like it'd be best to (sorry - only had time to skim) have an answer that summarises what actions have been taken and the current status - then have that (ideally) as an accepted answer.
 
@JonClements Ok, I'll post an answer, but I need a mod to add a tag IMO. I don't want to keep bothering Shog all the time
 
Sure - I'd consider it more complete when it has something that describes exactly what as been completed - that way there's a reference - if that makes sense?
 
@JonClements k, thanks
 
9:06 AM
@AnttiHaapala got solution
str1 = ''.join(capitulos)
length = len(re.findall('(?=\n)', str1))
 
@AndyK you should be more precise in your question. In any case, you'd still not get rid of a while loop easily; instead you'd have a while-loop inside your for-loop...
so ymmv.
@AndyK in any case: print("%s is a leap year") % (year) is wrong
you're using () around print args in Python 2; and this wouldn't work in Python 3
(perhaps you'd also consider switching to python 3 if you're a new user)
@AndyK @JonClements the major problem is that there was an answer that was accepted;
and then followed up by
Hi @artofcode, sorry the for my mess. Can you have a look at my updated question, please? Thanks — Andy K 24 hours ago
@AndyK it is generally frowned upon to change your question drastically after you've gotten an answer.
@JonClements stackoverflow.com/revisions/… this was @AndyK's original question
 
@DavidArenburg thanks
 
@JonClements thank you too. I'll have the OP to accept this
 
@DavidArenburg Things take time - but they happen eventually :p
 
9:19 AM
yeah, I feel very releaved as we are re-tagging these for years now on a daily basis
 
@AnttiHaapala many thanks for your feedback. one of the gents asked me for precision, this is the why of my amendment
@AnttiHaapala some of the do's and dont's of SO are not totally incorporated yet. Sure, my phrasing can be better, sure too , I still do much of the XY problem, part of me being too much in my head. However, my question is decent one and can be helpful too people who have the same question
In case, you have doubts. I started my question at -3 and it went back to 0 ...
 
Ooo... v. close to another gold shiny - yay! :p
 
mmmhh ? (e.g. not sure to understand)
(I'm truly realizing that I don't like to beg but well sometimes ...)
 
9:59 AM
@AndyK people do not usually check the edit history before upvoting. Your question is sane, yes, perhaps not -3 worthy, so someone did some upvoting to balance it.
however how the question reads currently is completely different from the question that you asked originally and got answers to.
 
@AnttiHaapala I don't need a true reopen as I've got answer to my question but my pride says it is bad for me
i hope it can be reopened
if not, well, I'l swallow it like they said
but if possible, that would be nice ... :)
 
Just let it go.
It really doesn't matter that it's closed.
 
@Ffisegydd true
 
And frankly in this scenario it makes more sense to use a while loop anyway.
 
sounds good
cheers @AnttiHaapala & @Ffisegydd
 
10:19 AM
@AndyK umm... can think of much nicer ways to solve your problem in general though - counters/loops not withstanding :)
 
@AndyK use a generator for example
>>> list(islice(filter(lambda x: x % 4 == 0 and (x % 100 != 0 or x % 400 == 0), count(1992)), 20))
[1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020, 2024, 2028, 2032, 2036, 2040, 2044, 2048, 2052, 2056, 2060, 2064, 2068]
>>> list(islice(filter(lambda x: x % 4 == 0 and (x % 100 != 0 or x % 400 == 0), count(1888)), 20))
[1888, 1892, 1896, 1904, 1908, 1912, 1916, 1920, 1924, 1928, 1932, 1936, 1940, 1944, 1948, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1964, 1968]
 
from calendar import isleap
from itertools import islice, count

for leap_year in islice((el for el in count(2016) if isleap(el)), 20):
    print(leap_year)
 
even nicer
and in 2500 if they end up changing the leap year calculation, then you didn't have to fix your code.
just use updated python
>>> for leap_year in islice(filter(isleap, count(2016)), 20):
...     print(leap_year)
 
Just make sure you're on Python 3.x for that though or ouch :p
 
@andyk - you have a couple of other issues in your code as posted in that question. For instance - you print after you've incremented the year, so you always print the year one after the leap year. Also - check the logic of what happens if you hit a year that is divisible by 100 - you'll infinite loop...
 
10:33 AM
of course you'd have to be on python 3 for everything
 
I dread comments like these:
Sorry , i think i am not much clear on my question. I am pulling out data from a db and storing it to a dict(). So here B is actually a list of dict() like below : — tec_abhi 1 min ago
 
Seems like andyk has gone, so I won't waste my breath on why you should start on Py 3 when you're just at the exploring stage.
breath? Typing fingers, I guess. I don't speak all my comments out loud as I type. Honest.
 
So, what they posted wasn't really reflective of their situation. They will now proceed to completely invalidate my answer, and still not provide enough context to properly solve their underlying problem.
 
Frustration
In other news, I actually answered a couple of questions yesterday and the OPs didn't immediately vanish without trace. So that was nice.
 
Yup, comment updated. I'm too busy right now, ignoring it.
@JRichardSnape Wow! I gotta get me some of those!
 
10:37 AM
 
@MartijnPieters :)
you know The Fast Show, Antti?
 
@MartijnPieters They see a ninja, panic and run! :p
 
@JRichardSnape Nope I'm here
@JRichardSnape Why should I use Py 3 instead of Py 3 , although I know Py2 is going to be deprecated this year (if not mistaken)
 
OK - cool - in that case: If you're just starting out poking around python, I'd recommend using 3
You've just given one of the reasons, but also there are some nice additions to 3 that can prove really useful as you start to use the language more.
For basic stuff - lots of things are the same between the two and why would you learn something that is becoming obsolete?
Old arguments about libraries not being compatible with Py 3 are largely irrelevant now - there are some old dinosaurs about, but unless you're specifically using/learning python in order to interact with those, it's no longer an argument.
 
@JRichardSnape ofc
@JRichardSnape what, you think I watch American sketch shows? That's like enjoying British cuisine.
guide to eating well in London: go to the restaurant whose name you cannot pronounce.
 
10:55 AM
@AnttiHaapala English folks have pies and even wines, which are not too bad actually. Their Stilton is good ...
It is not well known as French or Italian cuisine but still
 
morning
 
@AndrasDeak morning
#"¤%#"¤%¤#""#¤ rude noobs
stackoverflow.com/questions/36591539/… I had accept in this answer, then when I said "you've got another question? then ask it"
and now my accept was removed
 
@AnttiHaapala :) To be honest, I assumed you'd watch Finnish sketch shows - but I have no idea what that would be. I thought the fast show would be a fairly niche reference. OTOH - my serbian mate was obsessed with only fools and horses, so you never know what travels where.
By the way - you could always try The Fat Duck at Bray for a pronounceable UK restaurant.
Personally - I'm more a pie and a pint kind of guy.
 
11:16 AM
nothing wrong with liquids in the UK.
 
@AnttiHaapala don't worry, they are just working on entirely rewriting their question, which would invalidate your answer. The accept was removed in anticipation of this.
 
@JRichardSnape Man after my own heart.
Keep your fancy cuisine. Give me pie and mash with a pint of scrumpy and I'm yours.
 
@Ffisegydd import scrumpy
 
11:29 AM
I once tried a scrumpy called pyder.
 
from scrumpy import balance
for pints in range(5):
    print(balance(pints))

Fine
Fine
Shtill fine
I'm alright, I'm alright
Oh. Shit.
@Ffisegydd From Gwynt Y Ddraig, perchance?
 
cAbBaGe
 
cABBAge
 
dancing queen!!!!!
 
I'm in danger of becoming a grumpy old man of the "In my day..." variety. Just looked up my old first year maths syllabus and realised that we covered most of what I teach in the first year in the first term
 
11:40 AM
reminds me of when I went to college and some schools had started introducing graph calculators. College disallowed them. I was in one of the schools that did not introduce them.
 
Tell me about it. I've been trying to set up a new office network with a router from the wrong millennium
@Ffisegydd Any good? Always on the lookout for a decent scrumpy.
All I can seem to get my hands on is Old Rosie
 
Ah, don't get me started on that - "so, student 123456, how do you think it is reasonable that y = x^2-1 crosses the x axis at 76e54 as you've written here?"
"Well, that's what the calculator told me"
You could do worse than Old Rosie
Now there's a line to conjure with out of context.
 
Ha! True on both accounts. Was just looking for some variation. I normally grab the local brew stored in an old detergent bottle whenever I'm darn sarth.
 
@JRichardSnape based on your performance they extended the time it's taught over? :)
 
12:08 PM
Cbg
 
@RobertGrant Harsh, Bobby, harsh.
 
Cabbage
@JRichardSnape I imagine you'd be a happy customer at Pie in the Sky.
@JRichardSnape The era of The Feeling of Power may be a lot closer than Asimov envisaged.
 
@JRichardSnape I believe so. I was slightly drunk by that point.
@IntrepidBrit Yes very good from what I recall.
 
12:25 PM
Yay! I just scored nicely on a well-written Tkinter question. But no wonder it was well-written: the OP's been a member for a couple of years, and he's a maths teacher. :) I thought he was a relatively new member, from his low rep. OTOH, it's kind of odd that he didn't know to (translate, rotate, translate back) if he's a math teacher...
 
@PM2Ring I remember that story :)
 
@RobertGrant It's a classic. As a young maths nerd I loved it instantly when I first read it.
I'm a little sad that the other answers here scored upvotes even though they don't really answer the OP's question. True, my answer was a bit late to the party, but still, I reckon it's a bit weird to answer a "How do I call a function with this signature" question by changing the function signature in the answer!
 
12:40 PM
@PM2Ring I used to be a regular watcher of that series. A hilariously unlikely premise, but Richard G was a very good actor and the cast carried it off.
@PM2Ring I've not read that, but I should. Even from the summary, it seems worryingly prescient.
 
@JRichardSnape I discovered Pie in the Sky about 5 years ago, when they re-played it here. I was quite impressed. And it's currently getting re-played again, so I guess it's fairly popular here.
 
@PM2Ring A rather opinionated OP by the look of it. I am not sure of his intent in repeating your statement with certain words emphasised. I am reminded of the rhetorical style of my 4 year old, though.
 
@JRichardSnape It's definitely worth tracking down. When Asimov wrote it electronic computers were still bulky and very expensive; but that doesn't really detract from the appreciation of the story, IMHO. But I wonder how young readers of today would react to it.
@JRichardSnape Yeah, that does seem rather juvenile / infantile. I get the feeling that Joota might be one of Antti's & Ilja's colleagues.
 
@PM2Ring we used to watch that :)
 
bah - where's @idjaw when ya want the Cap'n :p
 
12:54 PM
@RobertGrant I love the Britishness of it; I can't imagine Americans making a show like that. ;)
 
I think Morgan is a captain too.
 
Hi folks! I have a question ... What's the best (or most used/recommended) builder/package manager in Python, which can download and install packages in a similar way that NPM or PHP Composer do?
 
@JonClements have no fear the captain is here. What crime fighting is needed?
 
1:05 PM
I know pip, but one has to manually run it. How can we automate that, so that any relevant packages for the project are mentioned in a file, and the package manager/builder downloads and installs the package.
 
Again, pip. That's what the requirements.txt does. That plus setup.py.
 
like in php, packages are stated as required in composer.json ... and all you have to do is ship composer.json with the project, and once "composer install" is run, the required packages are automatically downloaded and placed into the vendors folder of the project.
Okay, so requirements.txt + setup.py.
with pip
 
Alright cool! Got it. Thanks @Morgan'Venti'Thrappuccino .
 
@Sawant No problem.
 
user559633
1:14 PM
requirements.txt or setup.py
 
user559633
or you could load it in if you want
 
user559633
but you want pip
 
@Sawant Bear in mind that PHP is almost always running on a server, in an environment where lots of bytes are being uploaded and downloaded, so automatic downloads are quite acceptable. Python can be running in all sorts of environments, and while a Python script is probably in an environment with Net access it's not good to assume that it is, or that the user would be happy for automatic downloads to occur without permission.
Also, Python installations can often be more complex than merely copying some scripts to the local drive: there can be compilation of C code for extensions, etc. The pip module can handle that, but it should require explicit user permission, IMHO.
 
@tristan I thought you used both together? I've definitely seen both used.
 
when you start dealing with dependencies, things can get a bit tricky with pip. Currently dealing with a bit of an issue with packages having similar dependencies, but one in particular requires a specific version that gets updated. So in this, ordering of requirements matters. If I am wrong about this, I would love to hear about it, because it caused a bit of an issue for us yesterday. :P
 
1:21 PM
You might also consider that if you are writing for Windows, specifying dependencies that rely on C compilation can result in, erm, frustration for the end user...
 
user559633
@Morgan'Venti'Thrappuccino you don't have to. github.com/tristanfisher/yams/blob/master/setup.py#L14-L15
 
user559633
solution: don't write software for windows
 
or in the compsci sense, then.
 
PEP Tristan - don't write software for windows
 
@tristan But isn't that using both of them?
 
user559633
1:23 PM
@Morgan'Venti'Thrappuccino that's setup.py pulling in the requirements.txt. you don't have to run setup.py
 
You're loading in requirements.txt and loading them via setup.py.
Ahhh, okay.
 
I'd always have setup.py load the requirements.
I think I only manually install requirements when I'm developing, and then really I should do python setup.py develop or whatever it is.
 
user559633
oh man my standing desk is in state now
 
Will you use it during your standups?
 
@tristan which one did you end up getting
 
user559633
1:27 PM
probably, yes. those 30 minute long talk at each other sessions
 
DSM
Morning cabbage. Right now I'm having enough trouble standing.. my back did not take kindly to yesterday's gym session.
 
user559633
@idjaw the jarvis bamboo thing you linked to, with a contoured edge. ergodepot.com/Jarvis_Desk_Bamboo_p/jrv-b.htm 60x30"
 
Does this deserve a DV, or should my comment suffice?
While it's certainly possible for a Python script to modify its own source this is generally not a good design. — PM 2Ring 6 mins ago
 
@tristan thanks. Ships to Canada. <3 woo.
 
DSM
But I overheard the bro-iest bros ever talking and they reminded me of tristan, who I think first taught me the "do you even lift bro" meme.
 
user559633
1:28 PM
@idjaw :D i'll let you know how it is
 
user559633
@DSM do you even though?
 
I have been known to even on occasional.
 
Why lift when you can Powerball?
 
DSM
Not for the next while, at any rate, until movement and anguish are not synonymous.
 
I also have a powerball. They hurt
 
1:29 PM
there's a great gym joke, but the video is in french. @DSM how is your french?
 
I once wrote a script that modified its own source, because I decided it would be tidier than having an extra data file lying around.
 
user559633
what part of the powerball do you use for punching?
 
Does "malware that performs rm -rf /" count as "modifying its own source"?
 
Eventually I abstracted out all the modification code into an independent module, then realized I was dumb.
 
I like the idea of code that self destructs. "You can create this gif animation once, then the code will be gone forever." makes it much more Zen.
 
1:31 PM
In celebration of ephemerality
 
Reminds me of the video game created as an art project, which only exists as a single executable on a single flash drive.
 
A codeart installation by Fizzygood
 
DSM
@idjaw: I'm better than I admit to because if people think you know French well you can get into awkward situations if they overestimate your ability. If it's not much beyond the SRC news I'm probably okay. :-)
 
@Kevin I remember a game a year ago that had a finite number of games. So say it was 1,000,000 rounds then after 1,000 people played 1,000 times it would stop.
 
great. I am sharing the video. Hope you get the jokes :P
oh. Someone actually subtitled. Great!
 
1:34 PM
All that build up for nothing.
 
user559633
as long as it's imitating pepe le pew, my french is on point
 
I love that video. They've made a bunch of them. But I think that is the first one they made in that series.
so. Either everyone loves that video and are watching the rest. Or I made everyone hate the internet and you have all left your computers. Win?
oh hi idjaw....how you doing today? oh man. I'm awesome! having a coffee. Doing things. The usual
cool cool.
how 'bout dem playoffs eh?
Oh man...some good hockey was played last night.
yes. Definitely some good hockey was played.
 
The problem with arsenal is, they always try to walk it in
 
I love dem Gunners
 
@idjaw SEE!? REFERENCING OLD JOKES! FUNNY!
Oct 22 '14 at 19:11, by Kevin
The problem with arsenal is, they always try to walk it in!
Oct 6 '15 at 14:43, by Kevin
The problem with Arsenal is, they always try to walk it in
 
user559633
1:48 PM
Wow, what a ludicrous display.
 
Consistency! Long term planning!
 
how to design a shitty API: Part 23. GNIP / Twitter historical API
 
how the crap did that happen. You all showed up at the same time.
 
None of those are character-for-character identical so I'm good
 
The world is out to get me
 
1:48 PM
I'll just keep permuting punctuation marks and capitalizations til the end of time
 
I assumed your Llanfair reference yesterday was a pwll request
 
@PM2Ring watching Withnail and I sort of ruins it
 
How to design a shi**y API the hard way - Zed Shaw.
@JRichardSnape lol
 
When a certain endpoint is queried, the API returns a JSON response that has a field named acceptedAt. Then the documentation says that the acceptedAt should not be taken to mean that the request was accepted - instead the value of that is the timestamp when the job was accepted or rejected.
 
user559633
GNIP? google shows that as some company that's out of business
 
1:52 PM
because twitter bought it
 
@RobertGrant Ah, ok. I haven't seen that one. And I think I'd prefer not to. :)
 
twitter paid 100000000 million billion dollars for a company who sells 1 API... and they didn't even get that API right.
 
user559633
shit. we need to make sopython social
 
This room will be social over my dead body.
 
1:54 PM
Literally. I'm dying. Please halp.
 
@tristan 134 million starbucks
 
darn it - that factorio game seems to be trending - if only it was £2 - I could just about manage that :(
 
user559633
@Ffisegydd Then we'll just be a social network for mortuary scientists, forensic analysts, and people with dark sexual desires
 
@JonClements It's really good.
 
user559633
there aint no stopping the marketing machine baby
 
1:55 PM
@Ffisegydd rub it in...
 
@tristan You say that like it's a bad thing.
 
@JonClements I'm saying that to convince you. Give into temptation.
 
Heck - unpaid invoices and running two start ups - not a luxury I can grant myself right now if I want to actually eat :(
 
of course the API documentation also uses the term UUID (without examples).
 
1:56 PM
and the said UUID does not look anything like an UUID.
 
mind you - it'd be a good bit of distraction time for a bit... sighs
 
hoverboard, for real
 
instead it is 10 random lowercase characters/numbers
 
DSM
Am I the only one not running a startup? Feels like I'm missing out.
 
@DSM yes
 
1:57 PM
mind you - a few hours in the mod queue and nuking accounts is quite satisfying in a weird sorta way
 
I am not running a startup.
just wanting to run away from them
 
user559633
@DSM i work for a huge corporation and my side-project startup has all but stalled for various reasons as of late, so no, you're not the only one
 
user559633
and also, unless the startup is building something cool or you stand to make a lot of money, you're not missing out by not working at one. they're generally really shitty experiences
 
@JonClements <3
perhaps I should run for a mod, I could unleash my anger in a productive way.
 
I'm running an anti-startup movement looking to bring the world back to good old fashioned corporation-based businesses.
 

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