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00:01
I can't seem to find a way to fix this...
Might just go ahead and ask this on SO, actually.
Ell
Ell
building from source is a pain for windows
@Ell ..and so it should be. Why bother? Just download the executable images.
@Ell I figured it out.
Noobles wobble but they never fall down.
GLFW has some interesting source trees...
hehehe...
@MartinJames I don't know what to take from this.
00:09
@Nooble You can take it that I'm ratted.
@MartinJames I take it that you have more different words to mean "drunk" than anybody else I can think of.
@JerryCoffin I'm just using the std::set of drunk.
00:26
@sehe For my Diplomacy game.
It came with metal ships and cannons, but cardboard chips instead of flags.
@FredOverflow FINALLY. djesus, ive been waiting for that for like 2 weeks :(
@MartinJames you write remarkably well for a high functioning alcoholic
@Mgetz autocorrect
@Borgleader must not be on an iPhone then... as if he was this would be a lot funnier
Man I want one of them sexy new Nexus 6 phones :3 My Nexus One is showing its age
Ell
Ell
00:31
How much?
> What is it? Google's sixth iteration of its Nexus line
When is it out? Pre-orders start October 23 with it arriving in November
What will it cost? Starts at $649 unlocked (likely around £500, AU$700)
Ell
Ell
Woaaaaah
Pricey
that thing has more pixels than (on of) my desktop's 24" monitors
@Ell the galaxy s5 was more than that at launch IIRC
Ell
Ell
One plus one best value phone
user1646075
will they be doing a smaller variant? not sure I want something another 20mm wider and 45mm taller... Maybe nexus 5's will be available for a bargain price real soon now
user1646075
00:36
unless it can be rolled up like the iPhone 6 I suppose
user1646075
mornin'
@aclarke my need to compensate pushes me to get the Nexus 6 ;)
user1646075
@Borgleader heh - whereas I don't need to have a 6L V8...
These Nintendo DS emulators are tough on my proccesor
It's taking up 15% of my i7-4790
Ugh
00:43
15%, "tough" lel
user1646075
and what do you want to do with the remaining 85% while you're rescuing the princess?
@Borgleader That's a lot for an emulator.
And it's tough especially when I'm running it on x4 res, in which case it goes up t 50%
@Nooble all im saying is, IE probably could do worse :P
and all it does is webpages
@Borgleader lel
@aclarke I want a larger variant. I've gotten pretty accustomed to my 6.3" display.
00:45
In fact, let me test this. I'll open up IE (Shit's getting real) and open up like 40 tabs
2%
@Nooble You clearly need to re-check your Fortran. Shit is real unless declared integer.
4
@JerryCoffin I don't know Fortran but lol.
real*
user1646075
@Nooble but, emulating one cpu in another cpu is, like, going to burn some cycles...
Yep
Emulators have always been ridiculously slow.
user1646075
00:48
@Nooble f'real dawg
fo' shizzle ma nizzle
Got an emulator that bumps up the resolution by 4
user1646075
ooooo
I end up playing Pokemon Black at 1024x768
@Nooble Of course. They're always behind, else how would they imitate? ;)
@Nooble Not necessarily. At one point, DEC had fast enough Alpha chips and a fast enough x86 emulator that it was faster to run x86 code under an emulator on an Alpha than on any actual x86 hardware available at the time.
user1646075
00:49
@JerryCoffin I've gotten used to putting mine in my jeans pocket with enough spare capacity for the ipod
user1646075
/my deepest shame - i'm on the apple bandwagon for portable music. But I insist on annoying the young folks by calling it a walkman
Why not call it a portable electric phonograph instead.
@aclarke Mine plays music perfectly well on its own. My iPod is still a 2G Nano.
user1646075
an apple gramophone
*grammaphone
Huehuehue
00:51
@Nooble I call it a Motorola (named for their intended first product, which was to be a Victrola for use in Motor cars).
user1646075
until I left my Gen 4 (middle model) on the roof of the car one day, I ws very happy with that ;-( had to splash out for a Gen 5
8gb of RAM is no longer enough for me, am deciding on getting 8 moar.
Especially since this emulator takes up 6 GB of ram
I'm all about emulators today....
Oct 16 at 3:56, by Mark Garcia
@StackedCrooked IDRC then. I only have 4GB on this machine. :(
@MarkGarcia Four?
How do you do it man...?
Tell us your ways...
Let me guess, you run raspbian on it don't you?
@Nooble I do less "do".
00:55
@Nooble One way--"slowly".
@MarkGarcia Why do less do when you can do more do by spending some of the money you got from doing do and buy some more of do-juice to get some more do done
user1646075
YUM! - one of the advantages to having Indian bosses is the festival at this time of year where they hand out foodbags like xmas stockings, containing the most yummy treat on the entire planet
user1646075
user1646075
also fresh mangoes and other goodies.
@MarkGarcia Speaking of your machine? How old is it? Specs?
00:58
@Nooble Had to set aside for a laptop. It runs reasonably fine though. I don't remember complaining either. Another reason for not upgrading? I don't see the immediate need.
@Nooble Ancient. ;)
Noticing how even entry level consumer grade laptops now have about 8gb
@aclarke Looks delicious.
Whoever actually bought this deserves the hate of a thousand flocking pigeons.
Because pigeons are hateful creatures.
@Nooble In here, every consumer electronics almost double their price compared to the US. Except for the China ones. :(
Well, how about Taiwanese electronics?
MSI makes some great laptops
user1646075
01:03
@MarkGarcia it's also a taste-revelation. Not good for diabetics...
@Nooble Don't hate the fanbois. Hate the parents who abused them to the point that they need this kind of affirmation to feel worthy.
@Nooble I haven't seen the gaming ones yet. Only the netbook-y types.
@MarkGarcia I will warn you, gaming laptops in general are not portable :P
If you're going to get one, don't plan to be carrying it around everywhere unless you want to suffer.
I have to carry an 17.3 inch 7lb laptop to school.
Every wednesday, it is not fun.
@Nooble Portable like the ancient "portable" 27 inch (CRT) TV that weighed 78 pounds (but did have a couple handles...)
Handles, obviously portable.
01:07
@Nooble The handle of this would sure come in handy.
CRT has those refresh rates though...
Weighs less than 20 pounds.
lel
What in the world is a co processor?
user1646075
@Nooble HAHAHA
@aclarke Tell me, oh wise one.
Agh fine I'll google it.
@Nooble Believe it or not, before the 486, the CPU didn't support floating point in hardware.
user1646075
heh - wellll, your 8086, 80286, and 80386
user1646075
01:09
came without FPU.
@JerryCoffin Lel
@Nooble FPU.
@JerryCoffin IIRC later 386s had one?
user1646075
but the motherboard had a socket for a dedicated chip at extra cost. otherwise, software emulation of the FP instructions
For the 486, the floating point was still a large enough part of the die that they sold a version with it disabled (called a 486sx).
user1646075
@MarkGarcia that was the 387
01:10
@MarkGarcia Built in floating point you mean? No, I don't think so.
I wonder what else they're going to integrate into the CPU in the future.
user1646075
i recall a 287 existing, but that was a generally Braindead™ processor anyway
user1646075
@Nooble neural nets?
@aclarke Yep. That is the separate one. I seem to remember reading an integrated one...
user1646075
ummmmmmmm
user1646075
01:11
oh right
user1646075
DX vs SX variant?
@aclarke Neurons of a mouse
@Nooble The cloud™. IoT™. SoC™. Whatever.
@aclarke Don't remember.
user1646075
This race to put everything on the cloud probably means the next gen of CPU's probably only need to have native Javascript ;-((
Intel™ 9001 Neural Network™ now with integrated Cloud™
01:13
@aclarke There was an 8087, 287, 387. For the 386 there were also an alternative from Cyrix (I had one of those).
@JerryCoffin AMD makes those too.
user1646075
@JerryCoffin oooo - serious business! is that the one without the infamous bug?
Does anyone else play Kerbal Space Program?
Come on... Anyone?
Ell
Ell
Yes
Not me though
But a lot of regulars do
Ell
Ell
01:15
Or did at least
@aclarke Which infamous bug? The floating point division? If so, that was later (the Pentium). There was a bug on early 386/387 combos, but only really early ones (before the double-sigma 386) that caused a lockup under some conditions. Technically that bug was in the CPU though, not the FPU (just wasn't visible unless you installed an FPU).
@MarkGarcia Hehehe
It's fun, bought it yesterday, killed a couple of kerbals in an attempt to lunar orbit.
@JerryCoffin Or this.
Suffice to say, still have not been to the mun
user1646075
@JerryCoffin oh right. I seem to recall hard-core engineers wanted the Cyrix
01:18
@MarkGarcia Could be, but that was their CPUs, not their FPUs.
@aclarke Yes--the Cyrix was quite a bit more accurate than the Intel (of the time) for some operations. In fact, the post earlier today about inaccuracy in the Intel fsin sounded distressingly familiar from the Cyrix docs (though I certainly can't guarantee it's one they documented, it sure looks like it).
user1646075
01:34
time for a new avatar - how long does it take to flush out to chats?
By the time one diligently reloads.
Welp, not yet.
user1646075
still no.
user1646075
patience is a virtue. or so I'm told.
user1646075
changing avatar and handle is a two-stage process. A few days should be enough continuity I guess...
user1646075
youse can all relax, I'm not going to pick some hot chick's pic and then have a complete personality meltdown
01:41
@aclarke To have a personality meltdown, first you'd need a personality. SCNR!
user1646075
@JerryCoffin oooo - BURN!
Shots fired
Intel® Xeon Phi™ Coprocessor 3120A
(6GB, 1.100 GHz, 57 core)
Lel
@aclarke You broke my combo of my messages.
Anyways, found a co processor
for $1600
user1646075
01:44
@Nooble 57 cores???
user1646075
what does that do, emulate DS chip instructions?
user1646075
The DS has a mini power-PC, doesn't it?
user1646075
no, ARM. Ooooo - 67MHz!!!
I have no clue what it does. I'm also surprised it has an odd number of cores. It's a modern coprocessor apparently.
For 1.6k
It's for supercomputers. Intel wants the share nvidia has with their GPGPUs.
01:48
Oh, I was just about to say it looks a lot like a GPU
@aclarke You can't leave an opening like that and ask me to pass it up, can you?
57 cored GPGPU?
user1646075
I was thinking you're all being a bit slow actually
@Nooble It's still an x86. That one you mentioned has 57 Pentium cores.
Or rather, much-shrunk ones.
So they're using this in competition with NVidia Tesla?
01:50
The one I linked has Silvermont (Atom) cores instead.
@Nooble Yes. They already dominate the supercomputer CPU market though.
@Nooble It's intended as kind of a halfway point between a normal CPU, and a GPU. It has lots of low-end Pentium cores, so you can run existing software (even assembly language, as long as it doesn't use too modern of instructions) and each core can operate independently, where GPUs mostly operate lots of cores pretty much in lock-step.
user1646075
The Intel 8087, announced in 1980, was the first x87 floating-point coprocessor for the 8086 line of microprocessors. The purpose of the 8087 was to speed up computations for floating-point arithmetic, such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and square root. It also computed transcendental functions such as exponential, logarithmic or trigonometric calculations, and besides floating-point it could also operate on large binary and decimal integers. The performance enhancements were from approximately 20% to over 500%, depending on the specific application. The 8087 could perform...
Also because those precious PCIe lanes cannot be wasted.
user1646075
Also Intel's first abortive attempt at a better architecture, which was all-co-processor in architecture
user1646075
The iAPX 432 (Intel Advanced Performance Architecture), introduced in 1981 as a set of three components, was Intel's first 32-bit processor design. Originally named 8800 (after the 8008 and 8080), it was intended to be Intel's major design for the 1980s. The instruction set architecture was entirely new and a significant departure from Intel's previous 8008 and 8080 processors as the iAPX 432 programming model was a stack machine with no visible general-purpose registers. The iAPX 432 was referred to as a micromainframe designed to be programmed entirely in high-level languages. It supported object...
user1646075
01:54
The Itanium isn't their first failed new model
@aclarke The 432 was a much more resounding failure than the Itanic though. In a way, the 8088 was an equally resounding failure though: at last according to stories at the time, they intentionally designed the 8088 to be crappy so it wouldn't eat the entire market, and keep the 432 from succeeding. Assuming those claims were correct, their attempt failed badly.
I once saw an open sourced project on github that used OpenCL to communicate with GPU's as a means of software rendering
@JerryCoffin IBM mentality™
> It supported object-oriented programming, garbage collection and advanced multitasking
WTF
user1646075
@JerryCoffin heh - i like that theory. I was really looking forward to 432's after reading an article about the concept and test machines. Very sad it was ahead of it's time and under-resourced. ANY step away from the crappy x86 model would be teh bom
user1646075
@MarkGarcia exactly!
01:57
@MarkGarcia Unless I'm badly mistaken, IBM owned something like 30% of Intel at the time.
user1646075
In the article, the author said he witnessed the engineers hot-plug more chips, and the throughput jumped accordingly every time. That was mind-boggling.
@Nooble Related.
@JerryCoffin lol. It makes sense now.
@aclarke It was certainly an ambitious design. Its release was delayed for years, and when it finally did come out, it was fairly slow and buggy as hell.
user1646075
I heard that IBM wanted the 8-bit bussed 8088 so it didn't compete with more 'professional' machines they really wanted to make. They only made an Intel belatedly because so many other companies were.
user1646075
@JerryCoffin yes - poor thing. For a short while it was possible to buy boards and chipsets here. might have been from a warehouse clearance fire-sale for all I know.
02:01
Around the same time, I spent quite a bit of time drooling over the specs of the National 16032 (later renamed as the 32016). When originally announced, its specs were almost astounding--but by the time you could get them, it was pretty pedestrian at best.
user1646075
yeah -a few went that way. The Z8000 was only-but-for. A few too many bugs crippled interest in it.
user1646075
32032 got some mileage. Bell labs made a halo machine with it. What was that called ....
user1646075
hmmm - maybe a different chip /shrugs
@aclarke I don't think that's really accurate. As far as I can tell, they chose the 8088 over the 8086 for the simple reason that it cut costs quite substantially (~1/3rd cost) and supply was much more dependable as well (they'd been in production for years, where the 16-bit chips were brand new at the time).
user1646075
maybe. They also had their on-chip APL/Basic personal computers that they were dreaming a new generation for. Probably all of the above + random coin tossing as well
02:04
@aclarke Yeah--late 1970s/early 1980s there were a lot of new chips being announced, but the PC kind of killed most of that market for quite a while (just starting to recover now, really).
user1646075
@JerryCoffin I so wish we could get away from the retarded x86 model. I had so much hope for the Alpha and an Itanium
user1646075
I blame AMD for making a successful x86 in 64 bits. Silly bunts.
@aclarke I had a lot of hope for the Alpha, but by the time the Itanium came along, I thought it was doomed to failure from day one. Itanium never had even close to the performance advantage Alphas did over x86, so I never saw it as having any real chance.
@aclarke Yes and no. It really is a much cleaner model than 32-bit x86, and has quite a few more registers as well. Personally, I'd like to see something closer to the Xeon Phi, but with even more, even smaller cores--something like 128 MIPS or SPARC cores would be pretty cool.
user1646075
@JerryCoffin ummm. Probably the silliness was that multi-instruction set idea being a massive millstone on the developers.
user1646075
PA-RISC was already looking at the writing on the wall, getting duped by HP to keep it alive seemed like a really dumb idea
02:17
Apparently Disney now uses a 55,000 core supercomputer to render its animations. They bragged by saying that it could render Tangled from start to finish in 10 days. A 10 day render! Holy crap that's long. With beautiful games being rendered in real-time, how is this even a thing?
user1646075
@Nooble not beautiful enough...
user1646075
also scenery. Beautifuls all the way down
I understand that
but on 55k cores
@Nooble That's pretty typical. I remember reading about Toy Story when it first came out--rendering took something like months.
user1646075
@Nooble yeah, a beast for sure. Individual hairs rendered and blowing in the breeze
02:19
The hairs...
@Nooble And their characters still look cartoonish...
user1646075
Monsters Inc was very proud of their breakthrough hair rendering
Yep, have yet to see any games with real time hair
@JerryCoffin Pretty sure they used Alphas on that one. IIRC they were pretty prevalent in the creative industry.
02:22
Toy Story was ahead of its time.
mobile client really sucks. Expect me to make a lot of typos.
user1646075
Didn't MIPS keep themselves alive for far too long on the movie industry?
@MarkGarcia I tried to figure out at the time, and could never find anything that made it entirely clear whether they used Alphas or MIPS. They did use Windows NT, which supported both back then.
user1646075
@MarkGarcia Looking cartoonish is good. Much more opportunity for characterisation
I wonder if Disney has ever heard of occlusion culling
They're ray tracing!
02:26
@aclarke MIPS strikes me as having a really strange history--started out at the very top of the high-end market, then that all collapsed rather suddenly, and it seems like their primary market is now things like WAP/routers (though they do seem to have a solid share there).
user1646075
The 3B2 and above! just remembered the bell labs chip. popped into me 'ead i' did
Does disney render their entire 3D world? They have to be doing some culling and optimisation right?
user1646075
@JerryCoffin i never saw a lot of MIPS installed in the server world - compared to the HP's, Suns, et. al. I think that lack of commodity throughput killed them. I recall sitting on one and feeling it was a bit of a clumsy outlier for a UNIX.
nice profile...
user1646075
ahhhh - new avatar has arrived. Guru Adrian. Phase 1 is complete.
02:31
@aclarke IIRC, the 3B series used a custom CPU built out of AMD bit-slice processor elements.
What's phase II?
@aclarke There's a rather funny story about that. When SGI bought out Cray, they (Cray) had a half-finished server project, but it was based on the SPARC. Since it was SPARC-based, they did a quick inventory and offered to sell it to Sun for basically the cost of the parts on hand (and such) -- something like $250 million, IIRC.
@Nooble I think until the rays reach their threshold in the diminishing returns graph.
user1646075
@Nooble match the name. "Guru Adrian says: Be Greatful". Also, "having fun is half the fun". Well worth joining his cult.
You have a cult?
user1646075
02:34
No, Guru Adrian does.
And who's this?
user1646075
see also guruadrian.com - BUGGER - it seems a bit broken? it's an oldish thing, done by an australian artist/comedian for surf magazines and radio - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Art_Wales
I liked your old avatar, it looked like a minion.
Sun bought it, and that became their Enterprise series serves that basically dominated the market (and pretty much put SGI out of business). Shortly after Sun bought it (while SGI was still doing pretty well), the negotiators from Sun and SGI ran into each other at a conference. The SGI guy was kind of laughing at the Sun guy, saying: "Silly you--we'd have sold it to you for only $100 million." The Sun guy replied: "Silly you--we'd have paid a billion". History says Sun was right.
But this is fine too, a child is a lot like a minion anyways.
user1646075
02:37
@JerryCoffin hah - nice story. Suns are still grunty when you get a chance to sit on one.
user1646075
@Nooble thing is, I had G.A.'s slogan in my about, but the creature was Waldoor Sockbat from "drawn together" who is also silly and child-like and occasionally a mad scientist.
user1646075
@JerryCoffin just reading about it now, the 3B* seems madder than I was ever aware of
user1646075
and the ones I was aware of used the WE-32000
03:12
@aclarke Hmm....thinking about it, I think you're right--I think it was something else that used the AMD bit-slice processors. Can't remember what for sure though.
user1646075
@JerryCoffin you were right also - the early models did use that. Seems they went through a few completely-different-from-each-other chipsets
user1646075
user1646075
I love these kinds of comparisons: "The machine was approximately the size of a dishwasher, though adding the reel-to-reel tape drive increased it to the size of a refrigerator."
user1646075
My current laptop is the size of two jumbo-sized childrens books, stacked, but my first one was as big as a heavy commercial grade chopping board.
04:12
Ah-makes sense I guess.
 
1 hour later…
@aclarke The MIPS design is in lots of embedded stuff, I think.
@StackedCrooked Can you not leave the step 3 out, getting still the same result?
@VáclavZeman keen observation
@VáclavZeman Nice.
Also Comic Sans.
@VáclavZeman Also 6.
06:14
@MarkGarcia Yeah. :D
hm.. just bought myself a white mac keyboard with the plan of erasing all the markings on it, having it completely blank. I started erasing letters E and Z, and now I realize that I could have rearranged the letters to write something clever
can anyone think of a word (or short phrase) only using a subset of [A-Z], but not E and Z?
maybe I should just erase everything but HJKL, maybe that will be a nice touch
or fcuk it, I'll just have it blank
@StackedCrooked nice man!
;)
@StackedCrooked at first I was like "well, this is nothing new.. we've been able to do that through geordi (freenode), codepad, ideone, coliru- oh snap, he links it because it's using his service"
@StackedCrooked btw, mad props for giving the world coliru, it's the only pastebin which code execution that is constantly upgrading the compilers, which is wicked!
Thanks :)
@FilipRoséen-refp If I forget to upgrade a compiler this room keeps nagging me about it. So that's probably the reason Coliru is up-to-date.
@StackedCrooked geordi (the bot at freenode) is up-to-date for the very same reason
I'm guessing the community isn't always just a massive pain in the arse (or well, it is; but it certainly has a few positive effects)
07:00
I have a few weeks to complete an unfinished US states quarter collection so that it can be buried with my Grandfather... I hope I don't have to make too many trips to the bank...
ask for $100 in quarters
I'm probably gonna end up doing that.
@Mysticial oh, I forgot I said that. It is pretty good though :D
My grandfather also left behind two boxes of quarters. So we'll probably use that.
user1804599
Lounge
07:08
Those are the leftovers from the 5+ sets that he already completed.
@StackedCrooked my current tenant is a new zealander, he's going to be really thrilled to see that ...
hi.. I am trying to use IConverterSession::MAPIToMIMEStm to convert EML message to MSG format.
please help me in the usage of the same
...
huh, that's weird
how come I can no longer edit my posts? (oh, refreshing the page helped)
07:12
posted on October 21, 2014 by Eric Niebler

(Disclaimer: here be esoteric language wonkery. Abandon all hope.) If you read or write Generic-code-with-a-capitol-‘G’, you may have written or seen code like this: using std::swap; swap( a, b ); The first line brings std::swap into consideration, and the second Continue reading →

Hm?
@jalf You have probably logged out.
then he would not able to post?
> capitol
also, why is the starboard so depressing? So much grumpiness being starred
Xeo
Xeo
07:15
My message is sarcastic!
maybe I should get on more ... bad things always happen when I am not around often </shameless self promotion>
@Feeds that post.. not sure if I agree with what he's saying :-/
@Xeo yeah, but it still looks pretty negative when singled out in the starboard
I mean, using std::swap; swap (a, b) basically says "I'd like to use std::swap, unless there's a more suitable overload found through ADL", it doesn't say "I'd like to do the right thing, hence I need to type more"
Happy thoughts, GO!
07:19
if using std::swap is the right thing, then write std::swap (a, b), if ADL is the right thing swap (a, b). if it's both? express both with using std::swap.
@FilipRoséen-refp The ADL case is brittle so you almost always want to using std::swap for a fallback.
@MarkGarcia I'm just saying that I don't agree with the main argument of the post previously linked by the feed bot
I haven't read. :)
wtf
just got a message CNN, Cartoon Network and other Turner channels were removed from my package
user1804599
CNN is terrible, so that one doesn't matter.
07:34
So after going through all the coins we had accumulated in the house, we're still missing 7 states and several of the ones we have are fairly low quality.
So yeah, we'll be going to the bank.
When my grandfather started collecting these in 1999, we weren't sure if he'd live long enough (to 2008) to actually finish it. He did and completed at least 5+ sets (and we're still finding them as we go through his stuff). But shortly after that, his health had deteriorated enough that he couldn't go out by himself and therefore couldn't start on the national parks quarters collection.
did everyone already link to this?
user1804599
two birds in the picture above ... good luck with finding them with image recognition system ...
s/with image recognition system//
imagine you are borned to look like sticks ... must be really flattering to be that bird ~_~
@chmod711telkitty oh aha. I just found them. I was looking for tiny birds or leaf-coloured birds
08:10
@sehe lol, wonderful creatures aren't they :p
user1804599
Wt is such a hack.
user1804599
Button click does an AJAX request, which calls C++ function and then responds with JS that gets run. :/
@jalf I read about that earlier this morning.
@rightføld Wt?
@chmod711telkitty There's also a gorilla.
@rightføld sweet
08:19
Everyone calm down, I'm here.
I'm so zen now.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked no, it's horrible.
user1804599
It's like the slowest thing ever.
user1804599
Now if it would use Emscripten that would be cool.
> Alaska is the northernmost, westernmost, and easternmost U.S. state.
But not southernmost? Lame.
08:25
@Cicada if people were any more calm, they'd slip into a comma.
@StackedCrooked o_0 how is the either the westernmost or easternmost? What about Hawaii for most western, and like, most of mainland USA for easternmost?
@Cicada go take your.
user1804599
> C++ does have a bit of a learning curve.
Hi TRex!
@rightføld
user1804599
08:28
That was a citation.
@rightføld arguably even a straight line is a curve.
@rightføld
user1804599
When plotting the C++ learning curve on the complex plane, the real part would remain zero.
@Cicada Yay!
@Cicada ... why is that tag so milky white?
user1804599
08:29
Because it's a meta tag, you lazy non-clicking scum.
> fature
my fingers are cold damn it
it's like typing with two club hands!
user1804599
it's "dammit" dammit
08:30
@rightføld Damn you!
youthinkIamGermanorsomething?
user1804599
user1804599
godverdomme
potvolkoffie
Duizendbommenengranaten!
user1804599
kanker
user1804599
08:34
@StackedCrooked Alaska is great.
user1804599
I heard you get a thousand dollars if you enter it.
I heard you turn stupid and run for President if you live there long enough.
@rightføld cool
08:54
@thecoshman Whoaaah
@Cicada I know, actual news from sky!
That's such a massive breakthrough

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