« first day (428 days earlier)      last day (4510 days later) » 

11:10 AM
what's the advantage of windows backup over simple file copying? windows backup removes control, it copies gazillions of gigabytes nobody ever asked for (in my case about 400 GB of data taken out of thin air?), and hides that it's running, it hangs firefox (which is how i found out that it had started), and so on. perhaps my question is, how could they "improve" the backup utility so that it ended up worse than simple file copying, how on Earth is it possible to do such wanton destruction?
 
VLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARGH.
 
11:25 AM
People closed my goto question :(
 
@FredOverflow what goto question?
 
18
Q: Do we still have a case against the goto statement?

FredOverflow Possible Duplicate: Is it ever worthwhile using goto? In a recent article, Andrew Koenig writes: When asked why goto statements are harmful, most programmers will say something like "because they make programs hard to understand." Press harder, and you may well hear something like ...

 
@FredOverflow they didn't understand you
But I think that while the "exact duplicate" is possibly technically correct, its application is counter-productive and stupid. It is like a court deciding you can't get a new decision on your guilt because it has been decided before, so new discussion of that can't be useful. It is the idiot's view that any question has a fixed single answer, "we're a question and answer site, dammit!" (<- idiot).
 
SO is managed by aspergers.
 
@StackedCrooked By the way, have you seen the "Ass Burgers" South Park episode? :)
 
11:37 AM
@FredOverflow Lol. Never heard of it, but a quick google is showing.
@FredOverflow Stigma is the only remaining problem with it.
 
#define jehova goto
 
#define continue_at goto
 
#define yo_mama goto
yo_mama fat;
Heh, I'm not even sure if I'm using the syntax right.
 
@StackedCrooked What syntax? goto label; is correct.
 
I've only used one or two times in my life.
And that was when I was back when I was learning C++.
 
11:51 AM
I used "gotos" a lot when doing inline assembly ;)
 
Long jumps?
 
No just regular jumps when doing conditionals and loops in assembly.
You know, triangle filling and stuff. You had to use assembly back then (90s) or you weren't the cool kid on the block ;)
Plus, Turbo Pascal didn't exactly emit the most efficient code.
 
I only started programming seriously in 2003.
No, 2004.
In the 90's I was frustrated because I didn't have a PC.
 
I can't remember exactly, but it must have been at the end of the 80s.
 
We had a Mac. But no programming tool was provided. I couldn't copy some programming software from friends because they all had IBM compatibles.
 
11:55 AM
Oh, I used lots of gotos in C64 BASIC, of course. There where no while loops.
But there were no labels, you had to jump to line numbers :)
10 print "hello"
20 goto 10
 
My very first but brief programming experience was also basic on C64 around 1993.
@FredOverflow Yep, that's the classic.
 
I'm still waiting for a PC that boots as fast as the C64. You switched the thing on, and two seconds later, you could start programming.
 
Hey look, I wrote a program that counts to a million... Ok, I'll stop it now.
@FredOverflow but loading a game took around 3 minutes.
 
Even filling the screen with cool characters took forever in BASIC, you could literally watch every line to be drawn. That's why every programmer that used the C64 for longer than, say, a year, eventually learned assembly language.
 
And I could only use the C64 if no one was watching TV.
 
11:58 AM
@StackedCrooked Not if you had one of those cool "fast loader" modules, then it took only 10 seconds.
 
@FredOverflow Ah yea, a friend of mine had that on his C128. I was pretty envious.
 
That's the one I had ("Action Replay MK something"), cost around 65 Euro back then.
Which was a lot of money for a kid. I waited several years before I could afford buying one :)
 
Wow, that's perseverance.
 
Well, having a C64 without such a module pretty much teaches you perseverance, doesn't it? ;)
Ha, that's the exact package mine came in :)
LOAD "*", 8, 1
remember that? ;)
 
what did that loader do exactly?
 
12:06 PM
@refp Are you talking about the Action Replay module or the LOAD instruction?
 
12:18 PM
I'm talking about that little red box, I remember seeing one of those when I was younger playing games on my fathers old C64
or.. well, I'm not sure I saw it while actually playing, but I have definitely seen one close to the console
 
It sped up the loading times by a factor of ~20
 
12:38 PM
mawning
 
@DeadMG people have been saying things behind ur back. notice the starred message.
 
@IntermediateHacker I don't get it.
 
@IntermediateHacker meh
I'm pretty sure that I only have to fix up operator overloads, functions, and lambda expressions, then I am WinRARâ„¢
oh, and function calls, too
@IntermediateHacker No, the racism one was obvious. He was referring to the "engineering degree" one
 
@DeadMG how can u become an archiving software?
oh...
the engineering one is difficult.... I think it means that stuff gets more difficult as semesters pass, but in my opinion, that is true for all subjects.
I am 7Zipâ„¢ .
 
12:53 PM
@IntermediateHacker what's the source of that picture? copyright info?
 
@refp u mean the russiians are strong one?
 
also, this is not \b
 
No, I meant the picture in the post I was referring to in my post, the international teacher question
 
@refp I have no idea. I just found it on forums, found it funny, posted it here.
 
1:02 PM
@IntermediateHacker thanks!
 
you're welcome, I guess.
 
Are there any relevant alternatives to Code::Blocks (that is, lightweight IDE on top of GCC)?
 
Dev-C++ ?
Though, it's unmaintained and kinda old.
 
I read on several places that Dev-C++ is horribly outdated.
 
U can try AnjutaIDe
 
1:07 PM
it is horrifically outdated
they don't even list Windows XP as compatible, it's so old
 
Is something wrong with code::blocks?
 
I've heard AnjutaIDE is nice.
 
you could try Eclipse? I heard that they're going for C++ support
 
Eclipse is awesome. It has a C++ plugin. But what's wrong with Code::Blocks?
 
@RichardPennington I don't know, I just want to evaluate several lightweight alternatives to Visual Studio.
 
1:09 PM
I've tried Eclipse a few times. It never seems to come out well.
 
@FredOverflow, tried KDevelop? (dunno if it fits into your definition of "lightweight", though)
 
@FredOverflow Me too.
 
Jesus, what is it with you and pictures?
 
NetBeans?
 
1:09 PM
this is not an image board
 
Didn't Shakespeare say something about an image saying more than a thousand words ?
 
I don't give a flying fuck what Shakespeare said
he's dead
and therefore cannot justify his opinion
 
@DeadMG tell that to the Ministry of education. and the idiot's who wrote my english book
 
and in addition, I have absolutely no desire to see a hundred words about your desire to see the room topic changed, let alone more, "Please change the room topic" would be more than enough
@IntermediateHacker Fuck whoever they are. This chat channel isn't run by them.
2
 
lol. I give up. :D
 
1:11 PM
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: After almost 30 years of intermediate absence, auto is finally back! [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
There you go.
 
@FredOverflow thanks.
 
Explanation: C++ originally had type-inferring auto in the early 80s, but sadly, Bjarne was forced to take it out again due to C incompatibilities. But now it's back!
 
didn't C at the time require auto as explicit?
 
That would explain the C incompatability.
 
I'm pretty sure that C89 didn't need auto any more than C++98 did
 
1:14 PM
If C++ hadn't given a fuck about C compatibility, it would have been a 1000x better language today.
 
That is, should auto x = 3.0 mean double x = 3.0 (the C++11 meaning) or int x = 3.0 (the C meaning)?
 
default-int has been dead in C++ for a long time
 
Yes, but not in 1980 :)
 
I'm pretty sure that C++ never, ever had default-int
 
You're wrong. Unless you mean standard C++.
 
1:15 PM
@DeadMG Yeah, but some ancient C++ compilers had it.
 
well, I an understand why Bjarne wouldn't have introduced it in the 80s
but I think it could have been in Standard C++
 
According to TD&E, C++ had implicit int for 10 years.
 
glad I wasn't born for those years
 
@DeadMG those days had their good points.
 
hmmm
C as the pinnacle of programming? I think not
 
1:18 PM
You could code a simple 2d arcade / action game and actually sell it in those days.
 
Hehe. I had to convince people to switch from assembly language to C. Not an easy task.
 
you can these days
 
@DeadMG no u can't, I've tried it.
 
never heard of indie games?
then you probably did it wrong
 
@DeadMG C was the pinnacle of systems programming. There were other languages available for non-systems stuff. Like Simula or Cobol ;)
 
1:19 PM
@DeadMG I know of them.
 
games from the 80s didn't sell because they were good, they sold because they were better than watching TV
 
Are you implying TV has improved over the last three decades?
 
no
 
@DeadMG I know. that's exactly why the 80's were a better environment for game programmers
 
I'm implying that games have
@IntermediateHacker Not for gamers.
the fact that game programmers have to actually have good design and implementation of their games and understanding of their audience is a good thing
 
1:21 PM
but it requires hard work. (shocking music) :(
 
eh
indeed, and talent.
 
Are u implying that I don't have talent ??? (You're probably correct. :D)
 
well, strictly speaking, I haven't seen your work
but it's an unfortunate fact that in general, most games suck donkey dick
 
rather stupid I know, I made it in my spare time.
 
snake and hangman?
I agree, you'd need a little more than that
 
1:25 PM
yup, in Vala
 
lol
 
but this is good.
is it working?
the wikipedia "personal appeal" thing is so annoying !
 
what, C+- interpreter?
 
no idea, I've got plenty of my own stuff to test
 
1:33 PM
lol.
 
lol
 
lol
 
how many of u still follow the FORTRAN tradition of using single letter variables e.g i,j,k for FOR Loops (in whatever language) ?
 
Finally a use for the tag.
 
1:48 PM
Why do my edits have to be peer reviewed (rep. < 2K I know). But who reviews them? The Mods or the OP?
@KerrekSB how do u display the tags?
 
@IntermediateHacker [tag:xxxx]
 
@IntermediateHacker anyone with lots of rep, afaik
 
we just have a link in the top bar on SO to the list of unreviewed edits, and then if we can be bothered, we look at an edit, and approve or reject it
anyone with rep > N can do that
where N is some value I'm not sure of :)
 
N is always increasing. if(myrep >= N) N += 1000;
 
1:58 PM
:)
 
    Bedazzling Names
    Choose variable names with irrelevant emotional connotation. e.g.:

        marypoppins = (superman + starship) / god;

This confuses the reader because they have difficulty disassociating the emotional connotations of the words from the logic they're trying to think about.
from ~How To Write UnMaintainable Code , The Hackers Choice (thc.org)
m_
a naming convention from the world of C++ is the use of "m_" in front of members. This is supposed to help you tell them apart from methods, so long as you forget that "method" also starts with the letter "m".
Hide Macro Definitions
Hide macro definitions in amongst rubbish comments. The programmer will get bored and not finish reading the comments thus never discover the macro. Ensure that the macro replaces what looks like a perfectly legitimate assignment with some bizarre operation, a simple example:

    #define a=b a=0-b
 
LOL, when I compile "hello world" with Code::Blocks, the resulting executable is 1MB.
 
@FredOverflow switch from debug to release target. and check for additional static libs.
plus, #include <iostream> automatically gives u 900KB - 1MB overhead.
 
2:14 PM
GCC probably links CRT statically. Also, it doesn't matter.
 
who cares about 1 MB when u have a hard-drive > 200-300 GB?
 
> C is not a stepping stone to learning C++; it is a detour. I myself learned C two years before learning C++, and this was a mistake. It is best to learn C++ directly and to never waste time with C. If for some reason you must later program in C, you can quickly learn to give up the conveniences of C++ and learn C style. There won't be unlearning involved, because C simply doesn't support C++ techniques. If you learn C before C++, as I did, you will have to unlearn C style and C constructs.
> Second, Java. Java is a terrible programming language developed by incompetent programmers. It is not an undue exaggeration to say that everything Java does is wrong. There is nothing interesting that can be learned from Java, except how such an awful programming language can become so popular. Java is said to increase programmer productivity, but this is a half-truth. Java increases the productivity of incompetent programmers; it harms the productivity of excellent programmers.
> Since 90% of programmers are incompetent, the overall effect is that Java increases programmer productivity. I submit that this is the exact opposite of a good thing. Do not waste time with Java; let the incompetent programmers revel in their miserable language while you embrace the wonder that is C++.
lol
 
C machine model and C preprocessor, as good things, really?
 
I agree with you.
- vector<T> is good, C arrays are bad.
- Explicit resource management belongs inside data structure implementations and precious little else.
- RAII good, RIAA bad.
lol @ RIAA
 
I also don't think that being an international standard does much good to C++.
 
2:26 PM
Before the standard, every compiler implemented its own dialect.
 
The comparison is with Java, which supposedly is bad because it's not a standard, but I haven't seen any competing Java dialects.
 
There are only 2 or 3 relevant Java compilers. Back in the old C++ days, there were at least a dozen compilers.
Also, the Java compilers actually differ in some corner cases. I remember writing a program that compiled under Eclipse but failed under the Sun compiler. Had to do with multiple interface inheritance and Generics, can't remember the details off the top of my head.
 
IMO that happens when the specification is bad, not because it doesn't have ISO or ECMA label on it. :P
CSS is supposedly a standard, and everyone got it wrong, and still struggle with getting it right.
And it's not even a complex programming language.
Also, why is this page highlighting paragraphs with bright red colour on hover, WHY.
 
afternoon all
where would a variable in project properties looking like $(QTDIR) be defined?
 
Eh?
QTDIR is usually an environment variable.
 
2:37 PM
Hey guys
 
oh in the general environment variables of the machine?
 
@CatPlusPlus Maybe a CSS error? ;)
 
i have most of this blog posting left to write
about current directory path and environment variables
and configuring visual c++ express (or rather msbuild)
everything gets too much when i delve into it!
 
Finally optimized that 3D engine!
I've been working on something that compiles JavaScript using v8 and executes it as a desktop application (makes it easier to design cross-platform applications which can also run in browsers)
 
2:52 PM
That sounds awfully useful. Have you run out of theoretical template ideas? ;)
 
Placing a 3D model directly inside JavaScript code has the interesting ability to hang Visual Studio
Memory pooling can definitely increase performance in 3D applications
 
So, you're reinventing AIR.
There's a reason almost nobody uses that — it plainly sucks.
 
Air's performance sucked because they didn't use a high-performance JavaScript engine, it was poorly optimized, and wasn't at all extensible
It wasn't the concept, but rather the implementation
 
I really don't see why people want JS and HTML on desktop that badly. It's atrocious combination.
 
Increased compatibility with web applications - so you can access your applications from anywhere.
 
3:04 PM
That's why we invented laptops.
And please don't tell me you want to access your data from computers you don't control, because that's just funny.
 
@IDWMaster how does that make sense? How would a desktop application written in JS be accessible from anywhere?
 
Because JS!
And something!
Oh, and cloud! And more buzzwords!
 
It could also run in a browser, being that it's written in JavaScript, given that the required JS functionality is ported to browsers, and extended using the cloud for file storage.
 
there is a gaming stackexchange site? Awesome!
 
3:07 PM
@IDWMaster but that's not the same thing. Then I can run different ports of the same application from different locations. I've always been able to do that. I can run a C++ application on Linux or Windows, assuming the required functionality is ported to all those platforms
 
@jalf Still; there isn't currently a simple way to write an application in one language (say a desktop language like C++) and port it to the web.
 
It's not webscale!
 
@IDWMaster But why would I want to? Different platforms have different capabilities. Why would I want the exact same application ported to every platform?
gmail would suck if it was a desktop application
And MS Office would make a horrible web app
 
Web immensely sucks as a platform.
 
I expect different things from a desktop app, a server app and a web site
 
3:09 PM
32 secs ago, by jalf
And MS Office would make a horrible web app
I'll second that!
 
So why DOES web suck as a platform?
HTML5 greatly improved its functionality
and WebGL
 
Because of stupid web technologies.
 
I don't think it sucks. It has its advantages, but it also has some major downsides
 
Because of DOM, JS, CSS and HTML.
 
@CatPlusPlus exactly.
 
3:11 PM
What about those needs work?
 
@IDWMaster It still won't allow me to do a million things I want to do. I don't have free access to the functionality of my OS. I don't have the same performance as a native application, and the input mechanism is pretty much pre-determined by the browser. A native app can handle input in any way it likes.
@IDWMaster Have you ever tried to do anything with the DOM?
It's a pain to work with
 
Yes, I already designed a cloud-based application framework
 
but that's the developer's problem. I'm talking from a user's point of view. A browser is an extremely constraining platform
 
but what about the Cloud? Is the Cloud and the Web considered to be the same platform?
I've checked out some Cloud software and they're a lot better for stuff like MS Office as compared to the web
 
@IntermediateHacker They can be made the same through the use of JavaScript, WebSockets, and XMLHttpRequest
 
3:14 PM
The "cloud" is a buzzword.
3
 
Why would you want a lowest common denominator platform? Why would I write an application that's restricted to doing what desktop and browsers have in common?
 
@jalf To target a larger audience
 
@jalf good point.
 
@IDWMaster with crap? I could target the same audience by writing a good desktop app, designed and tailored for the desktop, a good website, designed and tailored for the browser
 
Also; many users are afraid of downloading products, particularly from small businesses, because they are afraid of getting viruses.
 
3:15 PM
and a good tablet app, designed and tailored for tablets
Why would I target a larger audience with something that sucks on every platform?
 
Riiiight, because it's totally not true that most viruses are targeting browsers now.
Because they suck.
 
Use a more secure browser such as Google Chrome, instead of Internet Explorer
 
They claim to be heavily locked down sandboxes, and fail at that at every turn.
 
@IDWMaster even assuming that this is true, then that's a reason for writing a web app. It's not a reason for trying to run your web app on the desktop
 
why are the masses so afraid of viruses?
 
3:17 PM
IE is your target when writing webapps, did you not want 'larger audience'?
 
@IntermediateHacker because viruses wreck people's computers and make them lose their data?
just guessing
 
I think developers should target the right audience and not a large audience
 
And the amounts of workarounds for browser deficiencies is far greater than workarounds for common desktop OSes.
 
@IDWMaster So you're saying that instead of writing different apps for different platforms, we should all just target Chrome? And then the world will be a better place, and we'll magically reach a larger audience?
 
@jalf Vendor lock-in ftw!
 
3:19 PM
@jalf I'm not saying to target a SPECIFIC browser, or to not target a certain browser. I'm working on a platform which can determine the capabilities of each browser and use the ones the browsers support.
For example on Internet Explorer
I could fall back to Silverlight or Flash for 3D rendering
if the user has neither of those
fall back to server-side rendering, and stream using the HTML5 video tag
 
@IDWMaster but then what about your "use a secure browser" comment above?
 
don't use Silverlight . please.
 
@IntermediateHacker I thought MS abandoned it?
 
@jalf Unfortunately; there are users who choose to use Silverlight and insecure technologies
There's not much you can do about that
@rubenvb Every time they release a new version they say it's dead
 
@IDWMaster that doesn't even make sense
you just argued that web apps were more secure. Then people pointed out that some browsers have security holes, and then you say that "there's nothing we can do about users using insecure browsers"?
so web apps are not more secure then?
 
3:20 PM
Lol server-side rendering.
2
 
Silverlight is not even cross-platform (fuck moonlight). Best bet is to use Flash, or HTML-5 for the future.
 
@jalf You can't MAKE people get Chrome
 
@IDWMaster but if you can't force users to use a secure browser, then you also can't claim that browser-based apps are (more) secure
 
@jalf They can be more secure, IF the user decides to use a more secure browser. Although I guess you could say the same thing for desktop apps, but you'd just have to always run 30 different virtual machines for those
 
Er, what?
 
3:22 PM
@IDWMaster and a desktop app can be more secure IF the user decides to use an updated and secure OS
30 virtual machines?
 
@jalf Assuming 30 different applications the user doesn't trust
 
Why would I run 30 virtual machines?
You lost me
 
Why is IE considered so popular? The only person I know who uses IE is my dad. And only because the only browser installed in his office pc is IE.
 
er, lol?
Have you tried looking at some of the more reliable statistics?
 
3:24 PM
@jalf is that directed at me or @IDWMaster?
 
the people who visit w3schools are generally web developers. They don't use the same browsers as normal people
IE is still around the 50% mark
 
A typical user who has gotten a virus before, will hear the word "download" and think it's a virus
I know many people like that
 
@IDWMaster me too.
 
@IntermediateHacker at @IDWMaster. The first thing any half-decent web developer learns is that (1) w3schools is a lousy reference site in general, and (2) their "browser stats" are just about the most skewed ones in existence
 
However, when you tell the same person to simply go to a website without "downloading" anything, they will not be nearly as hesitant to do so
 
3:26 PM
There are lies, damned lies, and statistics ~ Mark Twain.
 
@IDWMaster and that's good for security?
If security is the goal, then I'd prefer the route in which the user is skeptical
 
@jalf Not necessarily good for security, but it's good for business.
 
I think that solution used by my friend is quite good - check if site is IE, provide some crappy version of website for it and big flashing frame "Get some better browser, dude!". But probably it's not going to work on business websites.
 
yes, but a moment ago you were talking about improved security being an advantage
 
@Griwes I do that too! The best way to tackle compatibility problems. :D
 
3:28 PM
Anyway, your "fallback to SL rendering on IE" is broken
how can I write a 3d application, if I can't trust the rendering to be efficient?
 
@IntermediateHacker, yeah :D
 
@jalf It's better to have inefficient rendering then no users at all
And Silverlight now supports GPU-accelerated rendering too
 
@IDWMaster no. Because inefficient rendering will make your application look broken, so you'll have no users and have made a bad impression
 
So does Flash
 
And can you expose the full functionality of, say, WebGL with full hardware acceleration across all browsers?
and with reliable performance characteristics
 
3:30 PM
The greatest pain for the users I've seen is having to install the Flash / Silverlight / Java plugin. WebGL wins in this case.
 
A typical user will click a link that says "FREE MONEY" and get infected anyway. I don't see how that makes web better in any way.
 
@jalf Nearly all browsers. I don't see why not.
@IntermediateHacker Most users have those installed anyways
 
@IDWMaster What does "nearly" mean?
@IDWMaster And they are where the majority of security flaws are found
 
@jalf Firefox, IE, Chrome, Safari. Not Chameleon, Konqueror and other beasts of history.
I guess
 
Firefox support and performance for WebGL is atrocious. IE is somewhere around that mark, too.
 
3:31 PM
@jalf Obviously not all mobile devices, Windows 3.1 computers (if anyone still uses those), and other devices will not be able to ever render 3D
 
Rely on Flash, and you can kiss any claim of security goodbye
 
Or rather, Firefox JS engine plainly sucks.
Web doesn't solve any security problems, and only adds new ones.
 
@jalf Well; I guess I should have stated that "apparent security" instead
 
@CatPlusPlus It's been improved a lot. Do u have the latest Aurora build?
 
What the user believes is more secure
 
3:32 PM
@rubenvb So, say I want to write a shader. Which language do I write it in, and how do you port it to what the browser's 3D API expects?
 
No, and neither have the majority of the userbase.
 
yeah. but anyway, it's better now.
 
Browser technologies will continue to improve, users that stay behind will get worse performance, users who upgrade will get better performance. Just like users who buy newer GPUs will get better performance, and users who are still using Windows 3.1 will get horrible performance.
 
@IDWMaster you have a funny way or arguing. Alternating between "this is more secure", and "it doesn't matter that it's insecure, as long as users think it's secure"
 
@jalf Hey, I was just suggesting what he meant. WebGL is OpenGL 2.0ES if I'm not mistaken. The "common subset" that's also supported by newer smartphones.
 
3:34 PM
And desktop technologies don't improve at all, right. Still not seeing any superiority the web would have.
 
Anyways; the point is that I need some way to distribute my applications
and the browser seems to be the best way
 
@IDWMaster will u get to the point? damn prolonging discussions.
 
and if the users want an even better experience, after they're already satisfied with the base experience
They can upgrade their browser, or finally learn to trust the product and download the desktop version
 
You're assuming that they'll be satisfied with the base experience. :)
 
Right, because users think before doing anything.
And are distrustful of software.
Please.
 
3:35 PM
@jalf Hopefully they are.
It's very difficult to market software these days, especially if you're a small business with little reputation.
 
Desktop software is doing just fine, so I guess users don't have problems with downloading stuff.
 
@CatPlusPlus If it comes from large companies, it does fine
 
Hiding the download by writing the app in JS should be distrusted, if anything.
Not really, no.
 
Most users haven't heard of the large companies
 
3:37 PM
@IntermediateHacker Who hasn't heard of Microsoft or Apple or Sony?
 
@IDWMaster who has heard of Oracle?
 
I don't know why I keep participating in discussions like this.
I should get some food.
 
@CatPlusPlus I agree.
It's obvious no conclusion is going to be reached
@CatPlusPlus ^^^
 
Conclusion: None. I think we can all agree on that.
 
Conclusion: Cats work for Tech Support. I think we can all agree on that.
 
3:56 PM
> Great thinkers are mappers. They rarely proceed by erecting edifices of great conceptual complexity. Rather they show us how to see the world in a simpler way.
YAY ME
 

« first day (428 days earlier)      last day (4510 days later) »