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08:36
¬_¬ I should probably hit wikipedia before saying too much about that XKCD... though I did notice, it was 'leet'
that page is not loading very well ¬_¬
idgi?
@thecoshman It's true up until the third panel.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol. So no attempts to make use of it being made?
08:39
@thecoshman Well, the first half of the fourth panel is true as well.
Kinda bodes poorly for SETI. How are we gonna decode alien transmissions if we can't even hack together a softmodem for a primitive spacecraft of our own?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't see why they would go for the idea of letting the public make use of it. Just release the specs for the decades old 'hunk of junk'. I'm sure they can spare some time to transmit what ever signal the masses of nerd conclude should be transmited.
@thecoshman That's not in the first half!
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes... to expensive for NASA to develop a rebuilt system, but the masses of nerds work for free
@thecoshman They lost the specs.
08:43
@thecoshman Unfortunately, there are many masses of nerds, often whose intentions differ.
@MarkGarcia clearly those who want to destroy the world should get their way, wouldn't want to upset those people now.
@Potatoswatter really?
@thecoshman Why do you think it's expensive?
@thecoshman They thought they had shut it down permanently. NASA doesn't seem to have a good technical archive in place, rather incredibly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes surely there are some specs left for it. What about people who worked on it?
Reminds me a bit of reading about the technical marvels of Greece and Romeā€¦ we really don't even know what they achieved, because no technical documentation ever survived.
08:46
So the 'mercan government is able to record nearly every bit of information on the people, but can't keep one, admittedly rather beefy I'm sure, tech spec in a draw?
See, this is why we can't have nice things.
@thecoshman One reason all that personal data was so improperly accessible is that they couldn't manage to organize it very well.
FWIW, there's a lot more to do then simply being able to send commands.
@Potatoswatter Almost implying those were created by aliens.
@R.MartinhoFernandes sure sure. Still surprises me that they didn't open it to the public as some sort of "get people interested challenge".
08:49
Instead they just have given conspiracy theorists yet more shit about how the government is trying to cover alien contact. Why else would they not want the public to be able to get at the data on this probe?
@thecoshman Open what to the public?
@MarkGarcia Have you ever seen a mummy? Otherworldly.
13 mins ago, by Potatoswatter
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2014/02070836-isee-3.html
@R.MartinhoFernandes vOv trying to reverse engineer the system.
They have specs, they don't have implementation :v
08:51
7 mins ago, by Potatoswatter
@thecoshman They lost the specs.
¬_¬ well isn't this productive
>
The transmitters of the Deep Space Network, the hardware to send signals out to the fleet of NASA spacecraft in deep space, no longer includes the equipment needed to talk to ISEE-3. These old-fashioned transmitters were removed in 1999. Could new transmitters be built? Yes, but it would be at a price no one is willing to spend. And we need to use the DSN because no other network of antennas in the US has the sensitivity to detect and transmit signals to the spacecraft at such a distance.
Why would they shut down the probe in the first place?
@CatPlusPlus ah, just crowd fund it :P
Yeah but what for, there's nothing special about this junk, other than that apparently they failed to implement shutdown command correctly :v
It must be shutdown!!!
@thecoshman Moving people to new projects, management stuff.
08:58
@thecoshman Because its mission was over.
Both very good reasons to stop sending data to the probe, but not a reason to shut it down 'permently'
@thecoshman OCD? :p Need to shut it down after use, otherwise it's like an unmatched parenthesis, nagging at you constantly. :D
JBL
JBL
Good morning!
It's safer to shut down crap you're not actively monitoring
or it could just be cold war paranoia. Don't let it fall into the wrong hands, kind of thing
09:02
They still do it.
It's probably just part of the pork barrel. They paid the company to do it, because the company invented a reason it should be done.
They won't shutdown the Voyagers and didn't shutdown the Pioneers because their missions are extended until they are out of range or out of transmitting power (as in the case of the Pioneers).
But they shutdown or (decomission some other way) other probes.
JBL
JBL
The Hubble Telescope may have made people in this domain careful about "Shutting down things when mission is supposed to be over".
They crashed the Galileo into Jupiter.
@R.MartinhoFernandes impossibru! <-- that was a suggested correction by the way, heaven forbid I only use the one 's'.
09:06
Drivers license revoked :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes That was to avoid bio-contamination.
Good morning. Cool story nonetheless
@Potatoswatter off/from what?
Crashing is different from turning the transmitters off ā€” which guarantees that it can never be controlled (crashed or otherwise) again.
@thecoshman Europa.
@Potatoswatter turns out Galileo actually got accelerated to such a speed that it was able to pass right through Jupiter without being ripped apart/crushed by gravity. In 2453 it will collide with earth so fast it will make Nagasaki and Hiroshima combined look like a fart.
09:10
Well, they turned off Ulysses then.
Hmm, another angle is that the engineers probably want to spin this story to motivate a higher budget for themselves. The article said that the probe would be ready for a new comet mission if it were reactivated, but they didn't mention whether there's a suitable cometā€¦ it's possible that no target exists. This depends on how easy it is to identify a target; I don't know if it's a simple database search or more intensive.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ā€¦ or did they? :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes no... it's still crossing the Irish sea every day, twice a day return trip.
It's just cool that a vessel might still be working - even though not designed to be after >30 years
@sehe which is why I still don't get the 'oh, we used it this once, now lets stop it from ever being used again' attitude.
@rightfold can't remember... I'll have to take a look and see if any questions come to mind.
@rightfold ... Perl?
^- some nice dessert I had yesterday -^ ... & the day before that I had seafood buffet ... life has been good ^_^
09:23
<rolleyes> you're using the wrong fork
those forks were supplied by the shop
o_0
it's not a fork, it's a spoon.
@thecoshman here's a compromise. Let's say it's a spork
@jalf needs more knife
09:27
raaaagh, plink sounds
looks like a tea spoon to me
@jalf RAGH! GETTING ANGRY THAT OFFERS HAVE TO HEAR THAT HELLISH NOISE!!!
lol offers
free plink @thecosh
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 what on earth did you hope to achieve from that?
Hmm, a little Wireshark and curl scripting could make a nice rhythmic plink.
09:32
js would do
@sudorm-rfTelkitty I thought you quit
@Potatoswatter er, you do realize that once we hear the plink we turn it off (again), so we won't hear it for another month, or whatever the default duration is on that cookie? :p
@jalf apparently this is a concept well beyond many of the people here.
I didn't know it could be disabled.
09:44
@Potatoswatter :o
The audio icon in the upper right, next to "all rooms"
Sadly, it just sets a cookie on your machine, with a limited lifetime
so when you least expect it, the sound returns
@jalf I trust you have seen my questions explosions on meta about the biggest fuck up in software design ever.
@NKShukla ooops, looks like an bee pooped in chat.
let it bee
So useful. I needed that dot
09:51
This completes my dot/insect poo collection.
bird poo looks more like ;
Imported from India, no less!
last week a bird shit on my shoulder. that was bad luck, but also it was luck because it didn't land on my head
Or your auxiliary cake spork.
@StackedCrooked either way you got shat on, welcome to the world of software development.
10:00
@Potatoswatter I'd wipe it off on shoulder :P
@thecoshman Now now.
:'( I want to play with using Erlang on work server, but it's not installed
... I guess I could just install it...
@Potatoswatter Talk about bio-hazard
user1804599
This is so cewl.
spelling bee?
user1804599
I can now hit F5 to invoke rake test and have its output displayed in a new window.
10:04
@sehe bee-flu is a thing :O
@rightfold have you used rake a lot?
user1804599
We use it as build system at work.
user1804599
Besides that I have never used it, no.
Cool, I don't think it's commonly used in workplaces.
user1804599
I could use something else but the other guy uses Windows so that would be eternal pain.
user1804599
10:08
And Ruby is easy to install.
@sehe bio-hazard is a cool word. I reminds me of games like Half-Life.
user1804599
BioShock
10:22
@StackedCrooked IIRC The original name for the Resident Evil games in Japan was Biohazard
@StackedCrooked I sometimes hate one piece, whenever stuff looks as though shit is going down, they switch to an alternate scene or flashback or some such, stalling for like 7 more episodes :)
is it me... or is it wrong that the fact a bit of software has an internal cache and how it should be used something that new requirements should never make mention of?
As far as i can gather, this cache is an implementation detail
depends on what the semantics of the cache are precisely
what do you mean?
well, not all caches are transparent.
for simple example, let's say that I have a cache but accessing it is non-atomic so the function isn't safe for parallel access.
10:36
As far as I can see, the requirement is like me asking you remind me of something later, but detailing how you must remember it.
user1804599
I do not understand why anyone would think that 2-space indentation is ever a good idea.
@rightfold it's half a tab, vOv :) (usually! :))
user1804599
You could just as well not indent your code at all.
@DeadMG implementation detail. The requirements should say if parallel access is required. If so, then the fact that the cache needs to be updated to handle it is just part of the implementation.
user1804599
Like noobs.
10:38
it's still better than tabs, just don't tell LRIO
ranges mailing list is getting pretty interesting
does... does Solaris not have a repo like apt-get?
10:57
@thecoshman the cache might not be intended to transparently cache everything. It might be intended that the caller explicitly chooses what to cache
@thecoshman There might be other details that cannot be hidden, like the cache update time. DNS cache is not an implementation detail because it takes so long to update.
but without knowing anything about the code, we can't really say whether we think it's wrong :p
A 2nd dwelling I personally designed for my own backyard ... although probably not end up builing one like this simply because building square ones are just cheaper ~_~
@jalf the cache is never exposed to the caller. like I said, it is an implementation detail.
@thecoshman so what did you mean about the docs describing "how it should be used"?
11:01
@DeadMG you thinking of it wrong, I think. The cache is still an implementation detail in DNS, but you would specify the behaviour of the system, "results never more than X old", it is up to the implementation to use a cache (if it wants to) appropriately.
@jalf ... that the specification for the behaviour of the system is specifying how this cache should b used, even though it is not something a user interacts with. It is just there so that this system can avoid ramming so many read/writes into the DB when it is mostly going to be changing those values again right away. A buffer if you will.
IMO it's just moving the problem of slow DB to a slow to initialise RAM DB
From what I can see, these specs are like me asking you tell me 8^4, but you have to add the numbers up one at a time, by hand, using a fair trade pencil.
4096
@thecoshman The secret to fighting latency is lies.
@thecoshman Alternatively, consider what happens when the cache needs to be updated. If updating the cache is heavy work, you might consider manual control to be valid.
@R.MartinhoFernandes huh?
11:13
oh robot
I'm having some trouble with premake
silly thing keeps trying to link the Wide stdlib into an archive.
And you want it to...?
not do that.
And instead...?
Stack Overflow pen is crap.
just run the post build command
Trying to keep calm is so hard when dealing with such shitty tools.
11:18
hmm
according to LLVM, my operating system is mingw32
@DeadMG Hmm, dunno.
I guess I could always just not phrase it as a project in Premake terms, but it really kinda is one.
or introduce a dummy .cpp file for it to compile and link even though nobody links to it
that's what I had before anyway
bah LLVM's shitty exceptionless coding style is so fucking annoying, out parameters everywhere.
especially when they're not even considerate enough to take an out parameter of a string, which it is, instead of some crap like a vector of characters
11:40
pls help
@YellowSkies You really have an urgent need there?
@DeadMG oh, didn't realise thePhD worked on that too.
morning
@YellowSkies jesus christ man... have you even tried to search on google before asking?
FYI: The symbols are named "quotes" and "angle brackets".
11:45
good lord
@Potatoswatter "rabbit-ears" and "angle".
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 that's a new one on me.
INTERCAL names.
@YellowSkies standard lib directory & "current" directory
intercal?
11:46
@thecoshman INTERCAL stands for Computer Language With No Pronounceable Acronym.
JBL
JBL
@sudorm-rfTelkitty Oh, I didn't know #include <Windows.h> was "search in the standard lib dir for that header".
JBL
JBL
</sarcasm>
Bye.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... how does it stand for that?
11:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes INTERCAL is totally pronouncable.
"" is "some directories, and then the same as <>". <> is "some directories".
@R.MartinhoFernandes <fox ears>
@thecoshman Are you trying to make sense of it?
@DeadMG ... yes... yes it is.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes, how do you go from computer language with no pronounceable acronym to intercal?
By being INTERCAL.
Silliness is a goal.
11:49
¬_¬ I see... (wiki)
INTERCAL calls & "ampersand" because what could be sillier?
I always pronounce it "and".
it's unfortunate reading T&& because I always internally call it T and and.
Jargon File lists "andpersand" as another name for it.
I suppose it tries to document even names that idiots use.
> In C, it took less than half a second; the same program in INTERCAL took over seventeen hours.[7]
o_0 now that is esoteric
@DeadMG I pronounce it "Computer Language With No Pronounceable Acronym" :P
11:58
cluwn-pa, has a slightly welsh twang to it
I'd IPA that, but I suck at IPA
@YellowSkies you there?
guess not
@thecoshman was just testing chat thread
3
Q: Why should I use pointer rather than the object itself?

gEdringerSo I started working with objects in C++ but one thing that occurred to me is that it's a very often phenomenon to see people use pointers to objects rather than the object itself, for example this declaration: Object *myObject = new Object; rather than: Object myObject; So given this...

there's hope
Or maybe it's just some preliminary investigation
12:18
meh
monads won't work without changes in language
sincerely, FUCK YOU MONADS
nope, they are ok, sort of
personally
I get that monads are an interface but I still don't see what that interface is actually good for
12:33
well for asynchronous stuff CPS+coroutines are the best. n = async_write(socket, buffer, yield);
That one is nice
@AndyProwl sure as hell is
finally someone who's not afraid to use at least a bit of mathematics to introduce monads
You may also like this one
(not a video)
I don't know where this: "oh god just avoid math" is coming from in the context of computer science
@ScarletAmaranth I think one of the reasons perhaps is that category theory in particular is quite tough math
pretty abstract
12:56
@ScarletAmaranth They all use far too much mathematics.
as far as I've observed, the problem with every single monad tutorial ever is that all they do is blather on about category theory bullshit instead of focusing on the actual code.
you just don't understand why it's relevant, and refuse to ask questions in order to find out why, which is pretty typical :)
3
@ScarletAmaranth Brian's awesome.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I've seen a whole bunch of people writing various tutorials and videos which try to explain it. It's just that none of them actually go anywhere useful with it.
13:00
@DeadMG I remember you saying Eric Lippert's tutorial was different in that sense
it was a bit in that he actually explained what monads are.
but he didn't really explain what they're useful for.
user1804599
% source ~/.zshrc
<Silvrbear> Oxymorons?  I saw one yesterday - the pamphlet on "Taco Bell
            Nutritional Information"
user1804599
lol
@DeadMG I guess, for writing generic algorithms that work with anything that is a monad.
that's not an oxymoron. but okay.
13:02
@AndyProwl Yes- I just haven't seen any. Or heard of any. Or imagined any.
There's plenty of them in Haskell
user1804599
@DeadMG as far as I've observed, there is no monad tutorial that talks about category other than mentioning it without going into it.
@NKShukla ą² _ą² 
user1804599
@DeadMG sequence, mapM, forever and when are simple examples.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit well, that's the joke.
13:04
filterM too
and what do those things actually do?
user1804599
sequence performs a list of actions in sequence and returns a list of their results.
how is that any different to regular map?
@ScottW It's CMake.
user1804599
mapM is like foreach in C#.
user1804599
13:06
@DeadMG regular map doesn't work on monadic actions but on regular functions.
@ScottW shhh, just keep acting like you do.
@DeadMG Almost but not quite entirely unlike it?
@rightfold What's the difference?
user1804599
The difference is that mapM uses monadic bind and map doesn't.
@DeadMG that's quite untrue, I usually read stuff like: "you have probably already invented monad" blog.sigfpe.com/2006/08/you-could-have-invented-monads-and.html
user1804599
13:08
So you can say, mapM readFile ["a.txt", "b.txt"] and the result is a list of the contents of those files.
@ScarletAmaranth Cue description of monads in terms of endless category theory.
@DeadMG Cue FUD by puppy?
user1804599
But with map readFile ["a.txt", "b.txt"] the result is a list of monadic actions that yield the contents of the files when used with >>=.
> Category Theory

One last thing. Monads were originally developed in the context of category theory. I'll leave the connection for another day.
That's all the category theory in that article.
Clearly endless.
Xeo
Xeo
mornin
13:09
morning
Xeo
Xeo
monads again?
how's the leg doing?
"the leg"
:D
Xeo
Xeo
better
ah good to hear
Xeo
Xeo
13:10
more physio tomorrow, and another injection on tuesday
user1804599
Remember that you cannot do arbitrary side-effects in Haskell, but you can emulate them with monads in a restricted scope.
@Xeo oh, nice!
@DeadMG Also, as you usually say, can't you just look up the category theory stuff as you go?
user1804599
So map cannot pretend to modify any state, but mapM can.
user1804599
It is a branch of mathematics, like algebra.
13:12
Mathematics.
It's mathematics of mathematics.
user1804599
It's meth.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I could do, but I have little desire to, since I don't see how it's going to be of use.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes to be fair, mapM is map and then some
user1804599
@DeadMG I recommend you actually go ahead and use this stuff if you want to understand it (and if you don't want to use it, don't try to understand it either).
@R.MartinhoFernandes You're right that this particular article doesn't mention it explicitly, but it does open right away with complaining that functions are not functions from mathematics, which I'm pretty sure actually is category theory right there.
13:13
@DeadMG Yes, we know.
user1804599
One or the other, but not both.
@DeadMG Yes, you are sure. And wrong too.
2
in any case, he doesn't demonstrate why differentiating between pure and impure functions is actually important, or what code benefits are offered by monads
You're a fast reader, I must say.
I am a pretty fast reader (and also it looks kinda familiar but I'm not sure)
13:15
@R.MartinhoFernandes I can jump to conclusions very quickly too :)
Differentiating between pure and impure functions is only (mildly) relevant in the first case study.
alright, switching topic... TABS AND SPACES, GO!
There are three in the article.
You might want to consider slowing down on your reading.
user1804599
@ScarletAmaranth Indeed, I use tabs in Go and spaces in other languages. :)
user1804599
Also, time to get a screwdriver and remove this fucking Insert key.
13:17
@R.MartinhoFernandes which article?
i need to remove mine as well
user1804599
Go is a programming language and it is not to be confused with the Go! programming language.
@jalf sigfpe's monad introduction that Scarlet linked a few messages above.
user1804599
YAMT
user1804599
> Joining The Monadic Revolution
user1804599
13:19
Dat pun.
Btw @jalf, set PreferredToolArchitecture=x64 didn't change a thing.
And now I ICEd GCC.
Sigh.
Can I perform the file command asynchronously in linux?
file whatever >output &?
@BenjaminGruenbaum what do you mean?
@R.MartinhoFernandes -_-
@thecoshman I want to run file on a large number of files - the first intuition is to fire processes for each - I was wondering if there is a way that doesn't block waiting for i/o
@ScottW :P
13:32
@BenjaminGruenbaum file can take multiple file arguments.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah wow, I didn't know that - feel like an idiot.
as always, explain what you actually want to do, not your failing attempts.
If file doesn't go parallel, you can group the files and fire off a few files instead of one per file.
Yeah, that's what I figured I'd do.
are design meetings always lame? :|
13:36
@ScottW I'm at work.
yeah I was in a design meeting... it was lame.
@R.MartinhoFernandes awesome
> A game should have simple and logical rules like Dwarf Fortress.
Xeo
Xeo
wait wat
@R.MartinhoFernandes source
13:42
> Wnderer wrote:
Xeo
Xeo
ugh, why is it so damn cold today
user1804599
jQuery each y u index as first argument and not as second argument you piece of shit.
Xeo
Xeo
8.5°C, ugh
too cold for my comfort
user1804599
Nine degrees here. :3
@Xeo When you said "so damn cold" I thought you mean really cold.
Xeo
Xeo
13:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes maybe it just feels a lot colder than it actually is. whatever the case, I find it to be too cold
so, I see these comments that say /* static */ and /* Prototype */... what do those usually mean?

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