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1:47 AM
anyone runs own mail server?
and has successfully installed multiple language packages?
 
3:13 AM
I saw that just yesterday. Great stuff. Also ZeFrank made a new video(I think it was about fish), haven't seen it yet though.
 
4:04 AM
 
4:16 AM
the problem with supported server is ... over the time I become overly relying on the support
 
 
3 hours later…
7:01 AM
info C5002: loop not vectorized due to reason '1300'
MSVC still refuses to vectorize float -> unsigned short conversion.
 
@Mikhail Hmm, I thought complex addressing modes were discouraged but Clang does not seem to shy away from them.
 
7:24 AM
Should I file a bug?
Its like a 4x performance difference
MUH PERFORMANCE
 
@Mikhail Always.
 
7:59 AM
@mik, do you know much about medicine?
 
Not drugs, but I know how to do histology and imaging
If you have a prostate biopsy I can grade it :-)
 
So what's the difference between depression and major depression? The drug curing them that is?
 
Don't know that. I don't know drugs. I only know what I work on.
 
So you would not have any idea on how long does FDA take to approve a new drug
 
From I recall, there are like 3 kinds of anti-depressants and one of them doesn't work but they keep giving it to people.
 
^ I didn't read the paper but attended the talk (The guy works next door to me)
 
8:17 AM
lol
 
8:45 AM
Because often they are not stupid questions at all.
 
err ... multiplexing??
pretty sure it's matured technology
 
yeah but it's still a good question to have on SE, even if the answer boils down to, "packets are only sent one at a time, if any collide it is detected and ignored"
 
nwp
9:02 AM
I'm not sure about that. It seems like a better fit for wikipedia.
 
a link to the wiki article wouldn't go amiss in the answer to be sure, however landing on this question after a google feels better than having to parse the technical text on wikipedia
 
9:14 AM
we don't need typename anymore in trailing return types, yet another reason to use them /o/
 
Its not clear if the guy is distinguishing between analog signals or packets...
Might be a better fit for the DSP stack exchange?
 
 
1 hour later…
10:24 AM
that feel when std::unordered_map<bool,
12
 
11:19 AM
@Mikhail lol
@Morwenn \o\
 
12:03 PM
@Mikhail I raise you std::unordered_map<nullptr_t,
 
y u do dis u_u
 
One bucket to rule them all.
@ratchetfreak Here's another one.
That's it! Port 80 is not a resource! It's just part of a tuple! Thank you for putting it so clearly. — Marcos Gonzalez Jun 20 '13 at 17:03
^ Enlightenment
 
@StackedCrooked best moments you can get on SE, worth more than the rep
 
/cc @Mysticial Chances are you know most of this, but I thought this was a nice historical recap of Ryzen.
 
12:18 PM
@Borgleader Interesting text, but I really hate the page's layouting/scrolling.
 
@StackedCrooked modern web in a nutshell
 
12:46 PM
@StackedCrooked Same
@Mikhail wai twut
 
 
1 hour later…
1:57 PM
@JesperJuhl - while I agree with where you are coming from, I think the wording of your comment is exactly what the Blog Post Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change. is talking about. Could you reword it? — Martin Bonner 5 mins ago
@Martin Bonner - No. I'll leave it as is. I don't see the point of wrapping things in cotton or sweet words just to avoid stepping on toes or hurting feelings. I believe in plain speech that tells things how they are. If people are offended by plain speech/truth, then that's their problem, not mine - they should grow thicker skin. Sorry, but that's my position and I'm sticking with it. — Jesper Juhl 1 min ago
I smell a wave of meta posts incoming
 
nwp
It's probably mean to think like that but I would be amused if SO bans all competent developers for not being welcoming enough.
 
nwp
2:10 PM
@HuddyBuddy ~ I'm sorry to see that your very logical answer was down-voted. I would like to welcome you to English Language & Usage Stack Exchange! Thanks for taking the time to contribute an answer. It’s because of helpful peers like yourself that we’re able to learn together as a community. Here are a few tips on how to make your answer great: english.stackexchange.com/help/how-to-answerBread Apr 23 at 23:51
It has begun.
(Or maybe english people were always like that)
 
I extracted 400 Python LOC from a 2300 C LOC script and I'm not sure that I did things right...
 
nwp
After twitch plays pokemon "SO learns C++17" might be the next step.
 
2:27 PM
When adding a small timedelta to a date doesn't produce a datetime >.>
Thanks Python...
 
2:59 PM
@Morwenn If only there were a language where you could, like, specify the types produced by operations, so you could make a direct statement that adding a time to a date would produce a datetime. Let's see. Maybe a syntax like datetime operator+(date, time); or operator+(date, time) -> datetime;, or something like that would work...
 
nwp
Thats ridiculous. Nobody would use such a syntax.
 
right, I'll dive into Haskell, thanks
it's date + timedelta btw, not date + time
 
nwp
You could do both \o/
 
@nwp But that would require overloading, which is clearly far too complicated, so we can't trust users with it.
 
nah, dynamic typing and stuff, you can't know whether you're adding days or seconds, so you can't tell whether you want a date or a datetime as a result
to make things simple I just converted my first date to a datetime prior to adding the timedelta, now I've got the right result
funniest thing is that I originally need to read the date as a Julian offset
 
3:08 PM
@Morwenn This is the sort of thing that leaves me skeptical of dynamic typing outside extremely narrow domains. It's pretty decent in Lisp, and sort of all right in SNOBOL and AWK. It's annoying but barely passable in Python and Smalltalk. And it sucks in pretty much every other case I've seen.
 
nwp
It should still be possible in python with an __add__ function and some type() and isinstance().
 
@JerryCoffin tbh I'm at least glad there is a full-blown timedelta class instead of adding a random integer
 
nwp
Just because you're using python doesn't mean you can't over-engineer.
 
there's surely a reason behind that choice
like, people not wanting the result type to be different depending on the value of the timedelta
 
nwp
Meh, it's python, dynamic types everywhere is to be expected.
 
3:12 PM
@Morwenn Dependent types FTW! :-)
 
nwp
There is probably some wisdom in seeing a dynamically typed language with users trying to avoid dynamic types.
 
I mean, even in a statically typed language, what would you expect by adding a timedelta to a date considering that the timedelta stores days, seconds and milliseconds?
 
@Morwenn I don't think there's a good reason to have a date separate from a datetime. This is one thing that <chrono> got right: as far as the time itself goes, there are only two things: relative times and absolute times (and even "absolute" times are just times relative to some well-known epoch). Anything else (date vs. datetime) is purely a question of how you want to view that data, not a characteristic of the data itself.
 
not sure how the new calendar & timezone library handles that
 
@Morwenn Seem to handle it: "Pretty well".
Seriously though, if I'm not mistaken, it's mostly dealing with converting between the actual time data, and some human-readable representation of that data.
 
3:20 PM
I guess you give a date and timezone, convert it to a time_point then add whatever duration you want to it
 
@Morwenn Sounds about right (and the reverse of course--convert a time_point to a date based on a timezone).
 
 
3:57 PM
@Mysticial sooo it looks like Cannonlake isn't coming this year unless it's not 10nm
 
4:16 PM
@Mgetz Yeah we all kinda saw that coming.
Cannonlake gets delayed at the rate of one year, per year.
 
4:39 PM
@Mysticial well allegedly according to intel they are shipping it... in small quantities... to people.. they just aren't saying who, or what quantities
totally not complete BS they swear!
 
 
1 hour later…
5:56 PM
 
6:07 PM
@Borgleader :D
 
 
1 hour later…
7:08 PM
man go easy on picture this will slow down my VPN
 
 
1 hour later…
8:14 PM
Looks like that SE blog post really stirred the hornet's nest.
185
Q: Does Stack Exchange really want to conflate newbies with women/people of color?

Nicol BolasThe Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming blog post says: Too many people experience Stack Overflow as a hostile or elitist place, especially newer coders, women, people of color, and others in marginalized groups. There have been accusations of elitism against SO since time immemorial. Basic...

 
I think I wrote my longest sql query ever
164 lines
yet the number of line could be much more if I split the conditions on multiple lines... It's 4 subquery deep.
 
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix You are probably doing it wrong. :)
 
8:42 PM
@Mysticial Well, the blog post is garbage.
It seems to me, once again, like somebody from outside without actual coding experience trying to tell people inside with that experience how to govern themselves.
Also, mentioning IAT, more garbage.
 
@wilx I'm more concerned about how nobody internally who looked at it (if anybody at all) saw any issues with it.
 
@Mysticial He is EVP, there are few or no people who can object to safely.
 
...
 
<< Entropy I think you'll find that due to weird conversion rules, this is printing 1 because it is a non zero function pointer. I think you meant to print "Entropy" (also I think you'll find if you rename your function, that print statement will no longer compile) — Borgleader 19 mins ago
Apparently this wasn't clear enough for OP... I don't know how else to say it.
 
9:02 PM
@wilx This reminds me a lot of those airplane disaster shows. The captain makes an obvious mistake that eventually crashes the plane. But the 1st officer can't bring himself to challenge the captain even when he knows the error will kill them.
 
@Mysticial Hehe, yeah, sounds similar.
 
Because it has happened so many times, they starting doing the whole Crew Resource Management thing.
Maybe SE needs some of that.
 
I feel he created this own work. He'll claim the overwhelmingly negative response is an indicator that everybody is in denial, and motivation for continuing work.
"You're so racist you didn't even know you were racist!"
 
@Mysticial There's a famous example of this caused by a Dutch pilot.
Forgot his name.
 
@StackedCrooked The Tenerife Disaster.
 
9:07 PM
Ah. Right.
 
I know my shit when it comes to aviation accidents. :)
 
@JerryCoffin :P
 
10:05 PM
@Mysticial I recall that one of the techs working on a gliding bomb in WWII tried to bring up that the safety mechanism wasn't safe, he got ignored and one of the Kennedy's died because of it
 
10:39 PM
@Mysticial There's a lot of people there with some semi-valid points but also a lot of "OMG SOCIAL JUSTICE CAN'T HAVE THAT!!1111"
 
11:20 PM
@user703016 a quick something on business schools which I found interesting
 
bottom line is that people are trying to maximize their personal wealth without asking why or if they should
 

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