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07:00
Especially those with a dead pig copulation fetish.
"Your data is secure... Unless someone can make a vague argument about why it shouldn't be secure... But other than that, it is secure. Pinky swear."
> “I think it is absurd to suggest the police and the security services have a kind of casual desire to intrude on the privacy of the innocent,” he said.
Until someone becomes a thorn in the side of someone with influence. And I believe the Miranda warning is usually worded with "Everything you say or do can and will be used against you." And that's the civilized variant, the Patriot Act variant is black choppers and ESU.
@ElimGarak That's a different matter.
The Miranda rights are a workaround for the US constitution.
(Sigh)
Yeah, but most countries have similar things in place, or don't even require it.
I am merely reflecting on the usual wording of it all. Ideally, it is a "search for the truth, proving beyond reasonable doubt that someome did something." In practice, it is often flinging shit against the wall and seeing if it sticks. And this proposal is merely yet another way of finding a source of type 3 and up shit on the Bristol stool scale.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Works very well with the "masses"
Write a module proposal for C++ titled THINK OF THE CHILDREN
07:15
I am curious, though, how would it look like if it were to pass.
The average citizen has little to no knowledge in these things so the easy strategy is to mention something they can easily identify with
And the politician bringing the proposal forth knows even less. Nobody needs to know about Gregor's propensity for the keyword bukkake. <3
potatokkake
I could change nicks to Buttato with a butt-shaped potato avatar
inb4 criminal offense etc
@GregorMcGregor I don't think you need experience. The difference between "the authorities can read it" and "no one but you can read it" is pretty clear.
There's no technical expertise required to understand the issue.
It's not about technical expertise
07:19
Also, the average citizen knows what the word 'criminal' means.
Go find someone in the street wherever and ask whether encryption should be banned
:confused looks:
You can ask it properly without mentioning child abductors...
Of course but then you'd be unbiased and that doesn't serve your point?
The tech companies manage to advertise their encryption services, after all.
Those are politicians
What is morality
07:21
Just ask "do you think the government should be able to see pictures of your dick?"
Something the average citizen can relate to.
Guise, the answer is no. Even with two people from end to end there is two people too many when encryption is concerned. :P
Robot going full John Oliver <3
yes, I’m trying to share them with everybody
Dick pick and dick pic, wildly different semantics.
I think you completely misunderstood my point somehow lol
Oh well
> the easy strategy is to mention something they can easily identify with
^ that was it btw
Of course you'd mention dick pics if you were on the other side
But if you're trying to pass that bill then you mention criminals terrorist and children
@GregorMcGregor My point is that knowledge of encryption is not relevant at all.
It's simply "the authorities can read it" vs "no one but you can read it".
Encryption is an implementation detail.
07:26
And my point was "if you're trying to justify that bill it's natural to go the criminal/children way because that appeals to the average Joe easily"
It was a direct reply to this
I get you buddy.
^no mention on purpose
Guise, there are criminal terrorists fucking children out there and using satanic AES to do it. You're not taking this shit seriously.
Besides, encryption is similar to bombing in its mechanics: massive increase of entropy, reversible at the cost of energy.
QED encryption is criminal
And given that Cameron is bringing the proposal forth, there are no pictures of him fucking pigs on iCloud.
@Elim I found this novel way of doing ray casting in an insanely fast way with very little code
07:30
@GregorMcGregor You bought an array of lasers? :P
I just reinterpret_cast<Ray*>(...) and bam, ray casting with no runtime overhead.
5
Ahahah, that was my second guess. :P
time to file a patent
However, I am excited the government is having issues with encryption. You know shit is good when the government is having problems getting through it.
I never understood the point of banning encryption really
You're only hampering legitimate uses of it
It's dumb
The evil children rapist criminal communist muslims will use it anyway so whatever
07:34
It makes it not-readily-available. It's the same as banning automatic weapons. Yes, there will be a black market, but it still raises the bar to access one.
It takes no effort to use a commercially available solution.
did you know there are encryption algorithms based of Rubik's cube rotations
@GregorMcGregor more charges to tack on!
Illegal use of proper encryption pursuant to section 4, paragraph 6.
@GregorMcGregor You can't affect the determined ones, but you can affect the ones that have a "too much effort" threshold.
Whether that threshold is high enough for encryption is a different matter, but they believe so.
Politicians should be banned or at least made not readily available
07:38
Decryption key: "h3ll0GCHQh3r3sup"
// Decryption key: this is not a decryption key
Banning encryption will put online child renting out of business...
Good morning, @sehe!
yes yes moanings
While you were sleeping, we banned encryption and made the world a safer place. You can thank us later in plain text.
@ElimGarak we don't call them that in the business
07:44
Robot is wiping his drives as we speak.
Why don't I have your keybase anyways
@ElimGarak but wiping is proven to be a form of unbreakable encryption! It's forbidden
Btw, did you guys see that thing about Australia's Foreign Minister wanting to start using cloud passports?
that minister is foreign to me
What does she call them, Cirrus or Cumulostratus
07:48
> The idea of cloud passports is the result of a hipster-style-hackathon held at the Department of Foreign Affairs
These people are so stuck in their own hipster bubble they can't even think properly.
> smh.com.au
The smh is spot on
Passports get lost and stolen all the time, but smartphones never do.
Speaking from experience are we
Wait!
I think they should.
It would be educational.
And it would help them reduce std rates in general
It's also funny how they think passports are a "cultural norm of bureaucracy". I want to see them get stopped by a patrol somewhere in Cambodja or wherever, phone dead, and convince the officers that they do have a valid passport somewhere and should not be brought into custody.
@Rapptz why do they change it in that morbid way
@Rapptz wow
> Surely they noticed this too, but by then it was too late, they had to move fast and publish things.
lol
08:03
> The Facebook iOS app has over 18,000 Objective-C classes, and in a single week 429 people contributing to it. That’s 429 people working, in some way, on the Facebook iOS app. Rather than take the obvious lesson that there are too many people working on this application, the presentation goes on to blame everything from git to Xcode for those 18,000 classes.
topkek
> Last month, Metropolitan assistant commissioner Mark Rowley, the country’s most senior counter-terrorism officer, warned that for some firms it was “a part of their strategy - they design their products in full recognition that they will be unable to help us because of the way they have designed them”.
ugh
Yeah. That's what you should expect. Because if it were any other way, there would effectively not be any privacy
Oh no! People designing products that work!
unacceptable
Oh, no, people not trusting the authorities. Must be because they're all warm and fuzzy.
Huh. I do - generally - trust the authorities. That has nothing to do with things.
But these authorities are proposing bills that will require me to trust any business that ever holds any data for me. Because:
> However, proposals to be published on Wednesday will, for the first time, place a duty on companies to be able to access their customer data in law.
IRTA: they will have a duty to make sure their sysadmins can compromise my privacy at will
This means I cannot trust /those companies/.
alignof not available in VS2013 omg
08:16
Do you trust companies in general?
It's never been about "fuck da police". That's just the "think of the children" fallacy again
Let's find a compromise: think of the police!
@JohanLarsson Certainly not. Nor should we. Commercial interests don't mix with ethics
well put
I have used your stream as a sleeping aid lately :)
It's not about fuck the police, it's about authorities being merely corruptible humans with arbitrarily assigned power, who'd have additional tools at their disposal to abuse. And not to mention how that chances the whole scheme of protecting data in terms of vague access conditions.
08:18
Nice to fall asleep to the sound of c++ being written.
That's... not even flattering :)
Introducing more humans into anything is a security risk in and of itself. Not even speaking of implementation details. In the end, only legit users get fucked.
> “They have enough difficulty finding the guilty. No-one has produced any evidence of casual curiosity on part of the security services."
Wait. Haven't there been cases where homes were raided because people from the same IP address bought bags and pressure-cookers...?
@ElimGarak My theory is that the shit hits the fan exactly when an individual gets scent of a >$1M bonus
My cousin's computers were wrongly impounded during one of those pedophile hammer operations.
08:21
Interesting clickbait:
> 21 Women So Beautiful They Put Nature To Shame
TIL that female androids are now outranking organic models
user1804599
Nice.
@ElimGarak A poor craftsman blames their tools. ALL OF THEM.
> One bear typing more relaxing than a rainforest rain :)
@ElimGarak I guess that's different though. There was a lead there, and they probably just seized too much. But the things that worry me are the intrusions /without/ existing grounds
@R.MartinhoFernandes 429 of them? :)
08:23
He was eventually acquitted (same day), but not before they actually apologized and then slammed him with a fine for an illegal Windows XP installation.
@Elyse Bartek's mom reentering the atmosphere.
@Elyse Cicada, farting
Come to think of it, he had such bad luck his entire life.
@ElimGarak Whaat. Why would they even care. How does microsoft get access to that PC to fend for their interests?
Why does general police investigation fine for invalid licenses?
@sehe No idea, given that their probable cause evaporated, I am not even sure how they made it stick.
08:28
I don't think it's possible.
Did your cousin not object?
user1804599
> the existence of the magnetic field is not in doubt
He did, but it's Croatia. They'll do anything to appease their western overlords.
Not making any sense.
This is not the first time, several arrests have been made for downloading (not sharing) illegal copies of Microsoft Word here (made the news). As well as movies.
sbi
sbi
08:29
@sehe Ah, but my excuse is that I didn't have access to a computer earlier, and could only buy my own after the Iron Curtain fell. Yours, OTOH, is probably that you're too young to have bought one earlier.
Not even microsoft would be able to indulge with that kind of bureaucracy IYAM
@ElimGarak Yeah, it could happen if the initiative lies with the plaintive. They can file charges, upon which investigation could be ordered
@sbi s/too young/not enough money/. But yeah, my first was the "family computer".
I am not surprised it seems off to you, like I said he had terrrible luck all his life. Orphaned at a young age, all that crap with pedo stuff and died at 25 (recently).
Damn. What happened? Weird stuff happens around you ... :S
He just collapsed at work a few months ago. And that was it. :/
08:32
(here too I guess, but I digress)
sbi
sbi
@ScottW Just think of it as: "Instead of calling f(), and then doing stuff, you pass stuff to f(), in order to be called by f() whenever f() would be ready to return."
IMO this is mainly good if you want f() to be called asynchronously. It shifts the burden of checking whether f() has produced its result and stuff could be done with it from the caller.
@ElimGarak wth. Did they establish any medical cause?
@sehe I haven't really prodded, but I guess it is something hereditary. His brother, also my cousin, has been admitted to the hospital just recently due to similar heart issues, probably triggered by all the bad shit that must affect one's psyche.
Ok. That makes a bit of sense. Not nice though
It's terrible, but worse still is that I actually kind of got used to it. My neighbor drowned at age 17 last year.
sbi
sbi
08:36
Please tell me you live far away from my kids. :-/
THINK OF THE CHILDREN
And one of my schoolmates / friends died from cancer while in elementary. That was my first loss.
> These two data points seem to suggest that when Facebook employees are not actively making changes to infrastructure because they are busy with other things (weekends, holidays, or even performance reviews), the site experiences higher levels of reliability.
sbi
sbi
@sehe Actually, my "first" was a Z80. However, this is still only a bunch of chips in a drawer, which I never got around soldering together...
It works better when they're not working
08:37
@R.MartinhoFernandes I loved that part
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes LOL! What's that from?
> We believe this is not a result of carelessness on the part of people making changes but rather evidence that our infrastructure is largely self-healing in the face of non-human causes of errors such as machine failure.
user1804599
"Our site works only when we're not working." => "Our site even works when we're not working."
Jedi Mind Trick.
3
take credit for anything that might look good, blame everything else for what doesn’t
sbi
sbi
Oh, robot, did you get that email you were waiting for?
A bug is just a feature that you haven’t yet befriended.
sbi
sbi
> [...] the posters hung around the walls of our Menlo Park headquarters: "What Would You Do If You Weren't Afraid?" and "Fortune Favors the Bold."
Ugh. I wouldn't want to work there.
@Nican That reminds me of the review of Legends of Dawn!
sbi
sbi
08:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes Really? Damn. on it
@BobRossGameDev remember, we don't make bugs, only Easter eggs.
> LEVEL commented in their review: "A crappy system, technologically speaking it's an unfinished, irritating, and every now and then arrogant action RPG, with flaws as merits, demonstrating how to not make a game.", giving it 20/100.
@sbi Funny, because I just linked this to some friends that are always asking "why don't you want to work for Google/Facebook/Amazon/whatever".
@ElimGarak Never heard of it. Do you have a link to said review?
@sehe lol
@Nican I cannot give you the specific scold (LEVEL is a printed publication), but I can give you the IGN version of the burn.
user1804599
08:42
> Because, in the English-speaking world, the latter sounds like "your anus", the former pronunciation also saves embarrassment: as Pamela Gay, an astronomer at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, noted on her podcast, to avoid "being made fun of by any small schoolchildren ... when in doubt, don't emphasise anything and just say /ˈjʊərənəs/. And then run, quickly."
> Legends Of Dawn isn’t just bad, it’s an embarrassment to its developers and @steam_games for selling it.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes A company which bases their management on such mental manipulation bullshit is not something I'd fit in well. TBH, I'd probably get myself fired after two weeks.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, the public image of those hipster "dreamspace" work environments with balls instead of chairs... Not knowing that quality is best produced in private cubicles and environment dampening headphones.
Fucking hipsters.
sbi
sbi
@Elyse There's a joke in there about the similarity of toilet paper and Startreck: mutter...something...Uranus...something...Klingons...mutter
@ElimGarak "Balls instead of chairs?" Wouldn't that hurt?
SCNR
08:46
@Elyse heehee, Gay Uranus
I like how news reports write up on the work environment at those hipster internet companies and in every picture there is nobody working.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Haha, this is the first time I heard that performance reviews were good for something.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
> Facebook has developed a methodology called DERP (for detection, escalation, remediation, and prevention) to aid in productive incident reviews.
Bipeds pushing buttons, bipeds playing pool, bipeds taking a nap in hipster contraptions, bipeds playing guitars while their hipster friends complain about having heard it before it was cool. Bipeds eating, bipeds watching TV, bipeds exercising, bipeds sliding down contraptions.
@ElimGarak "WHO THE FUCK BROKE THE SITE TODAY?" doesn't work well on national television.
@sbi They keep the engineers from breaking the system.
"Engineers" :D
I use the word mockingly now.
My current job title is "Software Enginier" (sic).
sbi
sbi
@ElimGarak "Packed Array of Programmers"
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, that's what I was referring to.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Grin. Those Germans using English terms but being unable to correctly spell them...
08:54
@sehe I answered a boost question! fite me
user1804599
> 10,000 years from now: Humanity has a 95% probability of being extinct by this date.
> 7.8 million years from now: Humanity has a 95% probability of being extinct by this date.
> I get the feeling that they don't have code reviews. Or that they are like : wow 20 new classes in a month! Congratulations!
Ell
Ell
I am very much struggling to get out of bed
sbi
sbi
@Ell Yeah, same here. That was 5:45, though.
@GregorMcGregor where where
08:57
I hate that first walk at 6am, though. When you're cold and everything is weird to your body.
Also, lolwut, Google interview panels don't contain the hiring manager.
They have better things to do with their time!
o.O
user1804599
@Ell Get out of bed.
@GregorMcGregor already upvoted
08:58
@ElimGarak Its a good way to wake up though
@sehe inb4 voting ring
You rang?
user1804599
lol
Now it is clear why they made Dogmeat invincible. He'd die in the first 10 minutes.
09:00
hi @chmod711telkitty
@ElimGarak excuse them, they had to spend time to get that crosshair to dance
It works and it does exactly what I want, but the compilation times is slow (it's ok I think is not a big problem) and also I need to learn the boost library , how to use it with separate project files, but thank you anyway. I am looking now to modify this code in my needs ! — Ro Stel 1 min ago
lel
Gonna find that vid now
> What the fuck? Are you implying that teams/departments within companies don't work together unless it involves politics? I work/worked for the Evil Empire, Comcast, and our dev department constantly worked with other departments on projects. Operations, design, marketing, etc. And with other dev/engineering teams. I don't understand how it's weird in the least to ask how departments and teams interact and manage projects/code.
lol, Comcast does it better.
@ElimGarak TBH I don't see what's wrong. Seems like a rush accident that could happen IRL
@sehe Usually, games which feature AI companions impose special rules on stuff like elevators. Not activating before the dog is inside the bounding box of it, for example.
09:05
that's not realistic though
Wellp, realism or loading a 20 minute old save just before that asshole super mutant? :P
I'm sure that companions teleport to you when far away or entering a new area just like in fallout 3 :A
More realistic :P
of course :P
Want to talk realism?
09:08
I am wondering whether I can still kill people, cut them up and then arrange their body parts as ornaments.
Try to remember Sacred and its horses.
well they were fast :P
the horse in two worlds tho LOL
was going backwards like a fucking car
lol
Hmm, wasn't Two Worlds the only game that actually cared about realistic horses, at least when moving forward?
09:10
> Dietmar Kuehl popularized the base-from-member idiom in his IOStream example classes.
Dead links in Boost documentation
yep they were focused on horses now that you mention it
(I mean not jumping straight into gallop, not jumping off cliffs, ...)
err, "cliffs"
fucking 40cm higher ground on a side of the road
Reverse moonwalking horse :D
09:14
@ElimGarak dat moment when you get stuck like that inside that staircase or w/e
so you have to reload
bartek's been awfully quiet lately
despite visiting
Xeo
Xeo
Hm. I need another English word for "Hill" or "Mountain" that starts with "D"... or another word for "Dwarf". (I want a "Hill Dwarf", but with an alliteration)
denivelation ‎
ok not really hills but
> the difference in level (depth) between two parts of a cave system, usually the highest and lowest known point.
09:20
@Xeo Dome
caves, dwarves, basically the same shit
@Xeo Have you guys had any metrics on how well VH is doing? Not necessarily anything specific, but is it doing well?
Who won the word competition?
me of course
you all lost the moment I joined
but you can't even wpf :)
09:23
Hi guys
that's like saying that I can't even drown myself in shit
not sure
@Xeo Don’t suppose those dorfs go uphill to dig there, in which case they’d possibly be dorfs of the deeps or something
reserve instead for submarine dorfs
Drow Dwarf
@Xeo this is a very good resource btw thesaurus.com/browse/hill
you use it to search for synonyms and antonyms
@Xeo "Butte Dwarf"
No alliteration; I just wanted to use the word "butte".
2
09:27
how did you write that clefted D
a lot of people died in the capital because a band thought it was a good idea to do fireworks and stuff in a club hmm
@Rerito hi jacked
@GregorMcGregor Deadlift day
Ell
Ell
There is a man hoovering outside
@Ell is he wearing a suit?
09:31
Also there's this fucking rude guy at my company who takes the shower for his personal dressing room
And just leaves all his dirty sportswear...
@Rerito Where do you get the corpses to lift
@GregorMcGregor Now that you mention it, since I get stronger it's more and more difficult to find heavy enough people. I should move to the US
@Rerito imminent bartek joke
@GregorMcGregor No I'm not strong enough to lift bartek's mom
09:37
Seems like Anno 2205 is out today.
Did Feeds already holler about dis blogs.msdn.com/b/vcblog/archive/2015/11/02/…
@ElimGarak is it good?
@sehe No I got rolled back too soon
meh
@Mr.kbok Will find out after work today, I suppose. Not sure how big it is, though. Might take some time to pull down.
2
09:39
(joke aside it's really nice news)
I think so. Will look at it some day
@ElimGarak Tonight I have to choose between programming and gaming. hard choice :p
Good PC games to play seems to pile up these days
Yeah, they also take a while to come out. It's been a drought and now Anno 2205, Fallout 4... Shiet.
I don't see the reviews, though. Probably classic embargo.
user1804599
09:43
> When would you use & on a bool?
user1804599
On a scale from "doing so is absolutely retarded" to "this shouldn't be allowed in the first place"? Never.
... elyse, you're not bartek
not a bartek
ENOBARTEK
bool a, b, c; /*...*/ c = a & &b; // lel
09:45
Anyone here enjoys drinking soup?
Depends on what it's drinking
Not here
no, you’re the only one weirdo
user1804599
@sehe terrible.
you fell for it. you suck
09:46
Except if its borscht
user1804599
Fell for what?
Xeo
Xeo
@ElimGarak It seems to be, since we're still working on it :P
with 2 DLCs planned
user1804599
It should work. &b is a pointer, and pointers are implicitly convertible to bool.
user1804599
Your code make c equal to a, since !!&b is true.
@Elyse ok, more realistic then :)
bool is_it_true = foo();
bool is_is_it_the_whole_truth = std::all_of(&is_it_true, &is_it_true+1);
user1804599
09:48
Assuming /*...*/ initialises a.
user1804599
@sehe Oh, wrong &.
@Elyse Oh. Nice! Not only did you fall for it, but you missed the point too
I have a sucky design of a thing
user1804599
I meant the C# binary &. In C# the unary & cannot be used on Booleans.
user1804599
@Elyse Oh well. I kinda like the pattern bool b = foo(); b &= bar(); b &= qux();
@Elyse that's way too much effort. Why not "Everytime they fire me, I just go back in time and wait for them to fire me again"
inb4 do-notation rant
user1804599
As with all patterns (aka duplicate code), signifies a language shortcoming.
user1804599
Should be &&=.
8 mins ago, by sehe
... elyse, you're not bartek
@Elyse I know, but that doesn't exist
user1804599
09:52
Also, that's &=, not &.
user1804599
It's a different operator.
Pffft. Shall I up my game to make it more obvious, Radek
@LucDanton Fair enough.
Just pointing out he risks being the new bartek now that the noise threshold has gone so much lower
user1804599
Do notation is irrelevant.
user1804599
This is about an obscure operator of which the use indicates your program is wrong because it has side-effects or is partial.
user1804599
09:55
There's no need to have two logical AND operators.
user image
6
lolwut
@Elyse Rant more!
@sehe thank me later
Thank you :) I've just seen the changes
My typing isn't improved by streaming
My awareness of bad typing is improved, but awareness of typos is hampered... :(
> Will CUDA API affect CPU's Ram access performance?
Can I use a non-blocking register to offload the TCP out-of-band shared x86 memory file system?

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