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nwp
nwp
00:01
I have a server lying around that isn't doing anything if that helps.
@nwp i think he uses rackspace as his host.. so i doubt it'd help him
nwp
nwp
@johnathon I don't understand this. How does having rackspace as a host prevent copying the software to another server?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold WTF XD
user6438653
lol
Ven
Ven
00:13
:D
tee hee
user6438653
00:28
You can't perform thi blah blah
user6438653
@milleniumbug The trash is a nice place, thank you :)
user6438653
bye
01:43
hi hi hi hi hi hi
lo lo lo lo lo lo
re re re re re re
mi mi mi mi mi mi
SEIZE THE MEANS OF PRODUCTION
5
vyfacj mi kokot
01:47
fa fa fa fa fa
so so so so so
la la la la la
si si si si si
do do do do do
there is a inverse correlation between how much a company is doing to make sure the apps in their market is up to standard and the market share of their devices
01:51
that's really interesting, telkitty!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
take window's phone for example - strictest checking, but the smallest market share nowadays
nooble you talkin SHIT???
no
:(
android: almost no checking and the largest market share
ios is somewhere in between, closer to window's phone and inching towards their market share
which means, app makers and app users are wild, next to feral, they don't like to abide by house rules
02:13
@Telkitty it could be that android devices are traditionally cheaper than both I devices and windows devices
@johnathon I think part of it is that Android tends more toward the old X philosophy: concentrate on providing mechanism rather than policy.
@JerryCoffin Perhaps, but take it as a market share view. There's more apps written for android than there is the other two because that's where your going to sell more apps. I have a friend that works for a medical software company and they are android developers. From the financial standpoint there's just more android users so that's where the $ is.
@JerryCoffin and what drives the fact that there's more android users is the devices are traditionally cheaper.
@JerryCoffin place a tablet in the hands of every doctor in a hospital and that cost difference becomes super real lol. We used them on production floors as well. Android was chosen because we could get chap tablets for about 200 bucks that would suffice for what we needed them for. Worked nicely so long as people didn't break them (which was frequent).
there are multiple concerns, if you have to spend way more time to complying the guidelines without be able to make more money, then obviously the app developers aren't motivated in making apps for your phone
I guess the $149 apple charges for keeping apps in their market doesn't help
@johnathon Android didn't start out with a large market share--it came onto the market after iOS was well established. I hesitate to draw conclusions about the reasons for Android's growth though--I'm not nearly good enough at mind reading to claim to know why every one of millions of customers decided what they did. Speaking only for myself, the decision wasn't based on price, but on superior design and performance.
02:28
@Telkitty I've wrote some stuff for IOS way back in the day. I know guidelines and things of that nature are updated but my experience wasn't that horrible. I did let my developer account lapse though.
precisely
@JerryCoffin I agree. Just speaking from experience though in industry you don't buy the highest quality device if you can replace a lower quality device for 1/4 of the price.
also android phones are produced by many manufacturers, there is competition in making the phone hardware better amongst android manufacturers themselves, and the manufacturers can learn from their competitors on how to better cater the market
I suck because I'm a Samsung fan boy LOL i've never liked any of the other phones.
02:34
in the smart phone segment I don't doubt that one bit
but there's more to the devices than smart phones
and industry is starting to bring arm devices into their automation practices
I've seen everything from windows embedded to Debian in that space.
Windows CE used to be really popular
I should seriously be looking at amazon app market
@Mikhail it still is with hand held scanners
@Mikhail but CE has become something else as of late
not $149 a year is much, I just don't want apple to make that $ for making their guideline retarded complicated
@Telkitty i dont blame you lol
2
02:45
windows phone is a fucking joke lmao
@LadyGaga I haven't tried one recently, but the (admittedly few) people I know who have them seem to be really happy with them.
I had an earlier version of windows phone, a bit crude IMO. Maybe later versions are more polished ...
> Tu touche pas d'apl pour le logement ?
cc @AldwinCheung ça marche dans le contexte mais j’ai quand même pensé à toi
03:06
03:25
@johnathon More generally, in most cases for every item that's the best of its kind, there's another that's good enough for most purposes for a fraction of the cost. In the case of mobile devices, however, I'm not entirely sure this applies---they certainly carry the high price tags, but I haven't seen much to convince me they have even somewhat higher qulity to justify it.
> GAFA (Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft)
@JerryCoffin That's kind of how we viewed it. I mean the better screens yes that's more money. But for the same processing power, minus say a speaker or some other sensor that we had no intentions of using, the much cheaper device was the best fit, and it was so all because of $
@JerryCoffin to be clear, we knew they'd break. We knew that we couldn't necessarily repair them or even have them repaired. It was much cheaper to replace a $200 dollar device vs a $600 dollar device that would break at the same rate
@LucDanton you forgot Microsoft
ils ont fait une GAFA
^this^ is of course a groan-worthy pun
03:42
@johnathon This is one place that there really is a serious difference between Android and Apple: with Apple, you get basically one level of device; take it or leave it. With Android you can get a low-end device with a low resolution screen, or a much higher-end device with a much higher resolution screen. For example, my phone has a 5.6" screen with 2560x1600 resolution (524 ppi)--much higher than any Apple phone.
@JerryCoffin Exactly. How much is an IPad?
@JerryCoffin that's pretty much the general best of tablets
@JerryCoffin but you can't get it cheap. So people that are buying tablets for professional as well as casual gaming (kids) usually go android
@johnathon The 9.7" iPad Pro has 2048x1536, and the 12.9" iPad Pro has 2732x2048.
I question the efficacy of human minds when it comes to unnecessary overhead such as branch prediction. I just read up on the Wikipedia article—what smart person invented this so I can smack him upside? Just do two concurrent speculative executions for both branches and then discard the "wrong" branch's speculative execution. — Link TheProgrammer 3 hours ago
^^ Is it just me or has there been a recent rise in the # of SO users who think they're smarter than everyone else?
@Mysticial old IBM machines did just that
@Mysticial but.. they are old. and slow. LOL
@Mysticial I'm not sure--the level is pretty high, but I'm not entirely convinced that this is really new or different. There have certainly been arrogant (and uniformed) people all along.
03:48
yeah, I question your observation skills
@JerryCoffin Then it might just be some sort of observational or confirmational bias on my part.
@Mysticial ...or perhaps on my part. Without some actual statistics to go by, I don't know which.
@JerryCoffin One can be arrogant and not be uninformed, but we do have special vocabulary words to describe what people are when they are both at the same time
@johnathon Assholes?
aw I should have said I question the observational efficacy of your human mind
03:50
@Mysticial LOL that's one.
ScY
ScY
How would I go about measuring something like push_back() or pop_back() with /O2 on MSVC2015?
@Mysticial OTOH, we should probably give him credit: his idea is better than many in at least one respect--it's a way of doing things that has been done and actually does work. That's a whole lot better than the multitudes pushing ideas that are so broken they can't even begin to work at all, who usually still act as if the rest of the world is composed of idiots for not recognizing their brilliance.
Help, the questions are getting worse
6
@JerryCoffin You're right. I think the part that I'm objecting to is the tone rather than the content.
@Mysticial I can't blame you--it is certainly arrogant to assume nobody's thought of this particular idea before.
04:02
@Mysticial Dunno, I’ve come across people like that fairly consistently since joining, but admittedly haven’t kept count
@JerryCoffin I can imagine a case where the CPU uses idle cores to run alternate branches on busy cores. But putting aside the sheer complexity of such logic, the latency of moving to another core is very high (~100 cycles). Sure it can be optimized down, but there's only so much you can do before you hit the speed of light. And if you can't get it down to 10 cycles, there's almost no point.
@Ryan It might be a bit of observational bias since you're moderator and those kind of people are probably more likely to show up in the mod-queues.
You’re assuming I’m a good moderator and actually visit the queues, though ;)
ScY
ScY
Nevermind lol
@Mysticial I'd assume what he had in mind here was executing both streams on one core, and when you know which way the branch went, just "unwinding" the results of one (about like you would now with a mis-predicted branch). The problem there is that you split execution resources between the two streams, so while it's faster when the branch predictor is wrong, it's also usually slower in the ~97% of cases where the branch predictor is right.
You also need a big cache to speculate across many branches this way--fetching from 7 or 8 streams concurrently will use up a lot of bandwidth to main memory.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, that's why I didn't really consider doing them on the same core. Perhaps you could utilize pipeline bubbles or other idle execution units to run other branches.
And yes, hitting main memory that many more times is not a good idea.
And there's also the power aspect of running down multiple branches.
The whole sharing resources thing is running along the same lines as hyperthreading.
The difference is that HT sacrifices latency for throughput. Running down multiple branches sacrifices throughput for latency.
Which TBH, isn't exactly a terrible idea for a lot of code.
04:14
I'm just sad we don't have barrel processors
@Mysticial I'm not sure I've ever seen a solid measurement of how much difference that really makes, but it certainly seems like it could be pretty substantial.
@JerryCoffin That would be a fun benchmark to write. See what the difference between 4 inst/cycle vs. 1 inst/cycle.
I did a similar benchmark in high school to compare the power draw between 128-bit AVX and 256-bit AVX in otherwise identical code.
It wasn't small.
04:38
@LucDanton je suis touché :D
@Mysticial Here it would depend (heavily) on the mix of instructions in the branches. If they both had similar instruction mixes, you might not see much difference in instantaneous power draw simply because you wouldn't be able to use a lot more execution resources (whereas, modulo differences in instruction scheduling, 128-bit vs. 256-bit pretty much automatically ~doubles resource usage).
@JerryCoffin Yeah I was thinking it wasn't going to be that simple. You could have a long dependency chain of long-latency FP instructions. And then start putting useless zero-ing instructions between them and watch the power go up. That might be able to isolate the raw decoding overhead.
The long dependency chain keeps the sequence running at the same speed. That you hold constant.
And try inserting other instructions that use different execution units to see how it scales up.
@Mysticial I think to get very far, you'd probably either simulate it or else run it on a processor that actually supported this mode of execution (and let you disable it if you wanted). It seems like some of the later SPARC T-series processors do support this (but I could be remembering incorrectly). Unfortunately, since the Oracle buyout, documentation of their processor internals has deteriorated dramatically.
04:54
@AldwinCheung d’accord mais je crois bien que j’y suis pour rien cette fois-ci
 
2 hours later…
06:24
-_- morning
06:46
correct!
06:59
localize answer
07:41
My GF's phone got bricked into a bootloop this week-end
discovered what those are on a buddy's desktop last week
@ProblemSlover In this case, I can't really blame them. To make this meaningful, you'd need to configure a hole through your router's firewall on TCP port 445 (and depending on the naming, possibly some other ports as well). It's essentially impossible for this to happen by accident--if a relative novice were to try to set up their computer to allow this vulnerability to work, chances are pretty decent that they'd fail.
@JerryCoffin yep..it is...but "all they need is tricking victims to connect to a malicious SMB server, which could be easily done using clever social engineering tricks." makes sense as well..
08:39
Hello, I've looked over a bunch of questions like stackoverflow.com/questions/77817/c-runtime-knowledge-of-classes and they don't answer exactly my questions. I'm looking for a tool in C++, that allows runtime inspection of objects. I.e. I could write "print all" and get a list of all existing objects; or I could write "print all A" and get a list of all objects of class A; or find a object then inspect its member variables and call its method. Ideas, beside switching to a script language?
Ell
Ell
@BlueLemon probably doesn't exist
well, maybe valgrind can do it
@Ell sure, valgrind is nice, but I think it is more a VM for memory leaks detection than a tool to implement my own scripting language. But I want the latter. So if there is no such tool, is there a framework that allows to implement fast a flexible scripting language in C++?
user1804599
@Rerito lol non-iPhone phones
Ell
Ell
@BlueLemon oh you want to write your own scripting language
you'll have to write that yourself
user1804599
@BlueLemon just translate it to Lua and run that
user1804599
08:48
Or JS with V8
user1804599
Also you don't want to do this in, of all languages, C++. Compiler writing is all about discriminated unions and tree transformations, which are an eternal pain in C++.
@rightfold, yes that is why I'm looking for a tool in the first place; so do know any nice references for Lua scripting with C++?
@wilx soon (tm)
Coliru runs again. But recent user data is lost.
(user data since Jan 28).
user1804599
Write it in Erlang.
user1804599
08:54
git nine nines
sometimes I think about what would happen to my apps if I die inadvertently
Ell
Ell
@BlueLemon sol2
@Telkitty apple will take them out once your membership expires
@набиячлэвэли WTF?
09:09
@Ell thank you, that is a good fit for my requirements
Ell
Ell
no problem
Do we have any Greek speakers here? Can you write meme in Greek without using Latin script?
3
@ProblemSlover and android?
eventually it will be taken out by android too
09:24
@Telkitty and no traces will be left of Telkitty :/
@StackedCrooked we need a blog post explaining how you fucked up
you need to stream your fixing it
Well. Rackspace told me my machine instance is gone because the host machine died.
So I restored from a weekly backup.
wait... it's a vps no?
ergh... I need to get chat extensions installed again
Yes, it's a VPS.
09:29
¬_¬
surprised it's taken so long
09:55
@ProblemSlover I disagree. It's severly overacted, and not even reminiscent of Sean Spicer's real manners
@StackedCrooked WTH is that
I trust that Rackspace was the party holding that backup, right
@R.MartinhoFernandes But why
@sehe names that aren't expressible in ascii
@sehe You must be a Trump supporter!1
 /$$$$$$$$                                          /$$
|__  $$__/                                         | $$
   | $$  /$$$$$$  /$$   /$$ /$$$$$$/$$$$   /$$$$$$ | $$
   | $$ /$$__  $$| $$  | $$| $$_  $$_  $$ /$$__  $$| $$
   | $$| $$  \__/| $$  | $$| $$ \ $$ \ $$| $$  \ $$|__/
   | $$| $$      | $$  | $$| $$ | $$ | $$| $$  | $$
   | $$| $$      |  $$$$$$/| $$ | $$ | $$| $$$$$$$/ /$$
   |__/|__/       \______/ |__/ |__/ |__/| $$____/ |__/
                                         | $$
                                         | $$
@thecoshman lol
10:02
¬_¬ ffs, shit that cuts of the last line of a message to instead show a link to see the full message is so annoying
new national anthem of america!@
nwp
nwp
@ProblemSlover not even the good money money money song
@nwp <3
@nwp its not that catchy as trumps money :/
@wilx why?
10:09
@sehe "The increasing need for easily readable, internationalized content suggests it is time to allow non-ASCII characters in RFCs where necessary."
@sehe Because! (It was joke.)
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's always necessary /when necessary/
@R.MartinhoFernandes Slippery slope! Watch as it degrades slowly to RFCs full of Japanese emoji.
@wilx What's "Japanese emoji"?
@R.MartinhoFernandes (ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
10:14
It hasn't degraded to being full of ASCII art.
@R.MartinhoFernandes This is much easier. Also, it was a semi-joke.
Anyone here dealt with using git svn where you want to use a shared git repo for normal work, but keep the old svn for all the infrastructure to read form? I can set it up... but using git svn dcommit to push commits from the main git repo to the svn repo will rewrite the git commits and I don't know how much of an issue that could be
@sehe I don't understand.
@thecoshman Change the infrastructure.
Long term plan, yes
10:15
@thecoshman Make it a short term plan.
Also, how hard could that be.
I really like the guidelines for names.
but there is a lot that works of the way svn is, and is badly designed making it very likely to break if we try to move it to git. Where as, it should be relatively easy for us to move the dev interface to git, and then move things little by little to the git version
Treating the transliterations secondary is how it should be.
eventually we can be safe to drop the svn repo
@R.MartinhoFernandes It sounds like a blanket justification that always work ("We only fire judges when necessary" / "Propaganda is bad. Therefore we use it only when necessary" etc.)
10:17
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... it's always necessary to use non-ASCII when it's been necessary to use non-ASCII
I'm bad at thinking of un politicized examples r.n.
@thecoshman So what.
Up until now, those cases meant: no RFC.
@thecoshman But it has never been necessary. It could just be convenient
> RFC that we can send elephants as part of reading the RFC when necessary
It just seems like an odd way of saying it
but maybe it's just normal legal talk way of putting it vOv
There's really no reason to construct a bad analogy.
10:20
@thecoshman It seems like a very normal way to say this to me.
"There's a need, so we're enabling it."
sure, but it's saying "there's a need, so we're enabling it, where necessary" :\ I don't know...
@sehe It was an automated weekly backup. (Which costs extra money of course.)
Even more money :|
@thecoshman What's unusual about that?
There are existing goals to uphold, so they have to restrict the use [to where it's needed].
@sehe The document defines when it is allowed.
@sehe "easily readable internationalized content" is the justification. The "where necessary" is part of the solution.
It's fu*ked up..
https://goo.gl/1m7N1q
10:28
@ProblemSlover lol, what is that?
@wilx idk. help me to understand it
Yet another large stack of combining marks.
Ven
Ven
Heyo
user1804599
@Ven Hi!
10:31
@wilx It's μιμίδιο.
@R.MartinhoFernandes \o/ Thanks.
Why do you need that?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Curiosity, mostly. :)
FWIW, the Ancient Greek source is μίμημα, the word for "imitation". Not sure which you are interested in.
The other day I had a discussion with a friend about how to refer to modern things in ancient languages. E.g. How you say rock & roll in Latin?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Translate it literally?
10:38
bash redirict... is >> or > for append?
@wilx That's what we went it, but our off-hand vocabulary was a bit limited (we knew "rock" as in stone, but not as in "to rock"). Post hoc googling yielded "musica vibrivolvens", which is actually pretty cool ("to rock" became vibrare).
@thecoshman >> is appending
@wilx thanks, thought it was :D
just wanted to make sure, and google is surprisingly slow to tell you :P
user1804599
@Ven You shouldn't be defining variables in C++ headers, because that implies you're writing C++ code.
nwp
nwp
"If you are using a language that someone has heard of you are a failure as a programmer."
10:43
But in some modern languages, they will often just borrow words. Say, in Russian it's just рок н-ролл ("rok n-roll").
They don't even translate the "and".
11:01
s/&/н/g
@wilx Google Translate says "μιμίδιο"
@Potatoswatter Yeah. Robot has already answered that. Thank you.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold :D
@thecoshman >>
hi..i have one doubt.. i have inserted key and value to a map.. and an iterator is pointing to the same key. Now if i remove key by calling erase(key), corresponding value will be removed? what will happen to the iterator pointing to value..?
Good lord, what I'd give to have only one doubt…
hmm... adding an svn remote to a git repo is not as simple as I thought it would be... can't seem to work out how to configure the credentials
user1804599
11:17
@Ven lol the reply
user1804599
lol headers
@kayle It will become invalid.
@kayle If you are using C++11 then you can erase through the iterator and use the return value of erase() to get valid iterator pointing after the erased element.
@kayle in general iterators become invalid when you modify a collection. There are exceptions which are well documented.
@Luc Niebler ranges are still not nice for range authors :(
@Morwenn To be honest, I find that all the "good parts" have the same letdowns of Boost.Range.
11:33
@wilx What do you mean by "WTF"
It's a classic combo-breaking response
@набиячлэвэли It is also commie mantra.
@набиячлэвэли Really? This is the first time I see it.
@wilx okay wow fuck you too thanks
@wilx yes
There's a port of tahonermann/text_view to range v3, but it simply resorts to writing custom iterators that later get wrapped in Niebler ranges. github.com/tahonermann/text_view-range-v3/blob/master/include/…
So, about zero benefit from Niebler's ranges is provided, but it does bring a lot of boilerplate lines.
Ugh.
I still don't get what's the fuss about with Niebler's ranges tbh
I've also noticed that ranges TS doesn't seem to have any of the bits meant to write ranges easily, like view_adaptor and friends.
So, IOW, the ranges TS is bullshit.
11:45
@R.MartinhoFernandes Tell them!
@набиячлэвэли Right, me neither.
Every single nontrivial range I've tried to write has proved to be somewhere between impractical and impossible.
(And not only by my flawed assessment; I've asked Niebler about some of the limitations and they were confirmed)
lol, there's a view_base in the TS. "empty base class to signify that a class is a view"
:<
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, does using those ranges improve the user experience once the ranges are written? As opposed to library writer's experience.
@wilx No more than Boost.Range does.
There's really not much you can do after you add a pipe operator.
And the pipe operator is the one benefit over just using iterators. All the rest is just rewriting the iterator stuff.
There are also some disappointing design choices even from the user's POV. E.g. drop_while, filter, a few others, do work in begin.
jrh
jrh
12:08
Hi guys, I wanted to bring this question up, it has C/C++ answers but it got closed as a dupe of an Objective-C only question. I flagged it but it got declined (probably rightfully so). IMO the two question setup (this one and its dupe) as-is is confusing. What do you guys think?
1
Q: What does $ sign means in c

wmichaelsenWhat does the dollar sign ($) means in c/c++/objective-c? I'm quite familiar to the languages but have never understood what it means.

admittedly I only found these questions because I was googling out of curiosity (what does C / C++ do for this character I never use)
Maybe I should just ask Niebler "what does range-v3 have over Boost.Range?"
generators make great ranges
I'm probably the only one with this opinion though
yeah
nwp
nwp
@jrh The question seems to have a proper answer. Closed means you may not write more answers. Do you anticipate people wanting to write more better answers to that question?
12:10
I agree.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought it might be solving some of the issues with temporaries or such.
jrh
jrh
@nwp my issue with it is that it's marked as a dupe of an Objective-C question
@wilx lol, that's exactly one of the walls I run into often with Niebler's library.
jrh
jrh
I guess it's okay that it's closed but the close reason doesn't make much sense
I don't like ranges-v3
:/
12:12
This reminds me, how is Ogonek going, @R.MartinhoFernandes? :)
@wilx I was doing some work on it lately, but I want to rework all the range machinery.
Hence this rant.
jrh
jrh
@nwp Though the comments seem to indicate that the answerers weren't sure if '$' was valid in C++, they seem sure that it was valid in C, though.
C99 allows it. I don't see anything in the C++ standard allowing it. — user515430 Feb 16 '13 at 21:17
@user515430: Maybe, I'm not sure. But [lex.name] still permits "other implementation-defined characters"... — Oliver Charlesworth Feb 16 '13 at 21:19
@jrh I just voted to delete. "c/c++/objective-c"? Pick one.
(There are enough easy to find questions for C++ alone already)
jrh
jrh
eh, I guess, for what it's worth I really did search for "is '$' valid in C"
though I mostly did it because I was bored
SO eats the $ in the search.
Try "is dollar sign valid in C".
@Rapptz To me it's basically Boost.Range with a lot of fanfare.
jrh
jrh
12:16
8
Q: Does At symbol (@) and Dollar Sign ($) has any special meaning in C or C++

CppLearnerRecently one of my friend encountered this question in an interview. The interviewer asked him if the special characters like $, @, |, ^, ~ have any usage in c or c++ and where. I know that |, ^ and ~ are used as Bitwise OR, XOR and Complement respectively. But I don't know if @ and $ has any ...

@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah that's how it looks like to me too.
Truthfully the only positive impact I feel like it had on the standard was the concept of a sentinel iterator.
i.e. separate types for begin()/end()
I think that's a pretty good change
Yeah, but we can (and should) add that to the standard without ranges.
We did add that w/o Ranges TS
Which is good
jrh
jrh
12:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes go ahead and delete on second thought, it's covered well by another question that only showed up when I searched for dollar sign alone.
When I searched for "at symbol and dollar sign" strangely enough that question didn't show up the other day
I can't seem to reproduce it now though.
nwp
nwp
I could have sworn $ was allowed in identifier names, but apparently they are not
@ProblemSlover unlikely, since I am one of the most elite troll on the internet @ moment
@nwp , $ is allowed only in VC++
At time like this, I am an optimist - maybe finally people will realise how elite I was as a troll and crown me as one of the most famous trolls in the 21st century after I die
@Telkitty nope.
nwp
nwp
12:27
I don't understand how Qt Creator still fails to follow a symbol when using auto somewhere. They have a clang backend that tells them the types and still it doesn't work.
Visited the War Museum in Saigon (Ho Chi Min). Quite a place. That war really was forgotten, unfortunately.
Now I kinda understand how other parts of the world percieve the Eastern front of WW2
yeah, that image above could be considered NSFW
@nwp I don't think they use it for their intellisense
@Telkitty Are you sure? Dunning-Kruger much?
IMHO the most elite troll is timecop and his GNAA.
is there anyone here? I have an issue
non C++ related
12:42
@EvanCarslake that's as on-topic as you can get here
lol
alright, I have a pretty slow connection (limited by wifi hotspot provider)
now I go to this website that lets me convert a youtube URL to song, online. I enter the url and click download. A 7mb file downloads at 400kbs/s and finishes in 10 seconds, how is this possible?
I want to get this setup with the norm ;)
nwp
nwp
@EvanCarslake maybe your connection was interrupted and the download didn't finish, it just stopped, and your software doesn't make it obvious?
what does speed test tell you?
Can you use something like wget to download something large enough and tell what it says?
kilo bits or kilo bytes?
12:46
its this speed every single time, fully downloads and test immediately, used it at least 40 times
bytes
@wilx you need to enlighten me with examples of how great this timecop is ...
(always annoying when that is unclear bits/ bytes)
want to see?
The Gay Nigger Association of America (GNAA) is an Internet-trolling organization. They have trolled several prominent websites and Internet personalities including Slashdot, Wikipedia, CNN, Barack Obama's campaign website, Alex Jones, and prominent members of the blogosphere. They have also released software products and leaked screenshots and information about upcoming operating systems. In addition, they maintain a software repository and a wiki-based site dedicated to Internet commentary. They are listed as a far right cyberterrorist organization in TRAC. Members of the GNAA also founded Goatse...
how do I know this is not an online hoax?
12:50
not trying to advertise but the website is: mp3juices.cc
also they are hackers, not trolls
@Telkitty Your Dunning-Kruger shows.
can anyone verify this unreal download speed
@wilx holy shit
TIL, trolls have organisations too
12:52
@Telkitty Yeah. You are a small fish.
However, professor Jodi Dean and MIT graduate Ross Cisneros state that they are an organized group of anti-blogging trolls.
grey hat trolling hackers
amazing

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