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22:02
in C#, 6 mins ago, by Steve G
ก็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็‌​็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็o
@caps I already pointed out, going as far away from releasing early and often as humanly possible. Another was not just trying to live with requirements being changed by outsiders, but every time they even got close to something working, changing their own requirements. That goes with yet another: never setting a goal that would constitute a finished product--as far as I can tell, it's always been: "with more time, we can do something really amazing!"
They've also failed to decide on who their customers are, why they want this, what they want, or what they're going to accomplish with it. They've almost religiously avoided getting input from potential customers, to produce something that anybody really wanted or could use. Oh, and most of their system also depends on the rest of the world changing to conform to their idea of what copyright should be.
Now, don't get me wrong, I'm not particularly disagreeing with their idea of how copyright should work. I do, however, think that from a viewpoint of software engineering, it's barely short of guaranteeing failure when you predicate your success on the whole rest of the world not just adopting your new ideas, but actively tossing out their existing ideas (and laws) to suit.
Hi
@orlp I like it
It's quite developed and the chord progression is okay but the melody is great
I wanted to read about their idea of copyright, but I found that link unintelligible.
@JerryCoffin wat wat wat do you think about infer
@Puppy Same here
22:16
@Puppy That's part of why I only said I'm not particularly disagreeing with it--I'm not sure exactly what it is or claims--but it's pretty clear that they think what we're doing now needs to change significantly, and (at least as far as I can tell) that the success of their project depends on everybody making significant changes in what they do.
@JerryCoffin Well, I think that copyright as it is now cannot survive and it's just a matter of time.
@VermillionAzure Do you mean this infer, or something else?
but on the other hand, I'm not sure that I'd stake 54 years of producing absolutely nothing at all on the idea.
@Puppy Keep in mind: not just on the fact that it'll change (with which I'd agree) but that it'll change in the ways you want.
yeah.
kinda feels to me like the most logical route for copyright is to make mass copyright deals with the state and then provide free copies to all citizens.
I kinda feel like you cannot prevent people from copying and all you can do is make a bulk deal to allow them to do so
22:35
@Puppy I dunno. Current copyright law is a hodge-podge of compromises, largely because of the large variety of people involved in various aspects of creating, publishing, etc., copyrighted works. Maybe I'm just tired and pessimistic, but I kind of doubt that we're suddenly going to end up with a single, simple policy that makes everybody happy.
VermillionAzure is Cinch is Hubert Applebaum?
2
@caps Hubert Applebaum was Cicada
Ah, so, not VermillionAzure
user1804599
22:54
Hubert Applebaum is Cicada and Merkel is the goat of Erdogan.
user406009
@caps One trick for telling who is Cicada is looking at Cicada's old comments.
user406009
The pictures always match if the account is the same.
Oct 7 '15 at 15:45, by milleniumbug
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Cicada detector
user406009
Yeah, you could also remember his user id, as that always stays constant.
23:13
Just realized that reading from memory is a non-destructive operation. A read can never change the state of your program. Which makes them useless. Improve your code today and stop reading from memory.
All you need is write.
user406009
@StackedCrooked Is it really possible to do a pure read though?
> A read can never change the state of your program.
user406009
I mean, the information must go somewhere.
@StackedCrooked unless volatile!
19
Q: What to do with the "rm -rf" hoax question

SvenIt turns out the the recent question regarding the misuse of rm -rf in Ansible was actually just a hoax in some kind of viral marketing effort. It become quite famous on various media and gathered a large number of views. Since I don't think we should allow ServerFault to be abused in such way...

Who'd've thought /cc @JerryCoffin
23:20
@sehe Well, as I recall, "who'd've thought" would be "both of us."
among others :)
@sehe Well, yes--I'm certainly not trying to claim any degree of exclusivity here.
@orlp what makes it 12 tone? Also, compare! (perhaps you knew):
@sehe the melody uses all twelve tones
WinAPI has an old Beep() function. I wonder how this gets implemented at the lowest level. What eventually triggers the signal for the beep. Is it a write to a certain memory address?
23:22
@orlp I thought the recipe included "without dupes"
@sehe dno
in my book that'd be 'twelve tones without dupes'
The melody strikes my ear as very explicitly tonal.
@sehe yes, it was intended to
I haven't checked, but it even feels like I'm not hearing all pitch classes. In that respect it's a good trompe l'oreille?
> A long time ago, all PC computers shared a common 8254 programable interval timer chip for the generation of primitive sounds. The Beep function was written specifically to emit a beep on that piece of hardware.
23:24
@orlp that's why I thought of the Bill Evans tune
@sehe I don't know what 'trompe l'oreille' means
@milleniumbug I used to program that PIC maually to make it emit sounds. Later I made a PCI (or what was it back then when you made PC extension cards) that used such a chip for timing control
@orlp It's a jeu de mots on trompe l'oeil
@StackedCrooked It goes through a device driver. At one time it used the PC's built-in speaker, but most reasonably new computers don't have one any more, so they now use a driver that sends it to the primary sound device.
I don't know what either of those are either :P
@sehe quite cool
I also played with the speaker, however this one was much less impressive, I just used the corresponding beep function from Turbo Pascal because Free Pascal didn't support it
23:28
@JerryCoffin Hm. How would the driver code that triggers the beep typically look like? A memory write? A function call? Or something else?
@milleniumbug BASIC did have PLAY, BEEP. Later came SOUND. Which is when we started to see fake polyphonic pieces
A write to a hard-coded pointer address probably?
later I wrote a program that reads from a file in a format that was like Nokia's composer notes, and played a melody
...I should rewrite it to a newer system
@sehe in order, E D# G D F# C C# B D B F# G# B B D B F# F G# A A# B
Yeah. The chromatic run is cheating of course
23:35
@StackedCrooked You mean when it talked to the built-in speaker? It was accessed via a couple of I/O ports (but I'd have to look things up to find the actual addresses). It had an oscillator (~1 MHz, if memory serves). You wrote a value to divide that by into one port, then wrote a 0/1 somewhere else to enable/disable it, if memory serves. I don't recall for sure, but it kind of seems like it was 15-bit divider, with bit 0 or one of the ports devoted to the on/off function, or something on that order.
It was really just a programmable timer with an output connected to the speaker though, so there was quite a bit more you could do if you were ambitious.
@sehe the chromatic run is to get A, A#
A would be no problem to do elsewhere
the big problem is A#
@JerryCoffin It was 18.2 or 19.2 Hz IIRC. And that was so 65535 ticks would make some neat period?
@orlp A true 12 tone melody would - by definition - have no "big problem" pitches. If any particular pitch is "a big problem" then clearly it's not atonal anymore (Schoenberg wants to have a word)
Maybe I'm misremembering for the default value of the divisor or something @JerryCoffin
@sehe What was 18.2 Hz? The oscillator was much faster than that (definitely well above audible frequencies). It wouldn't surprise me if the slowest it could go (i.e., what you got with the largest possible divisor) was 18.2 or 19.2 Hz--I do recall that the lowest "notes" were basically inaudible on the built-in speaker.
23:40
@JerryCoffin yeah that makes some sense. I thought I was misremembering indeed
I did use it myself with a different (higher frequency) crystal oscillator
@JerryCoffin Yup. That is true. The lowest "pitch" would sound like rattling of the piezzo
@sehe Yeah--they used a couple of frequencies quite a bit. One was the frequency of an NTSC color TV's color burst crystal (widely used in the US, so they were really accurate and cheap), which was 3.5... MHz. I don't remember the source of the other, but it was something else mostly unrelated, but was (if memory serves) something like 1.2 MHz, and I think that's what they used here.
Yup. It all jells with my memory again
I could - of course - hit WIP, but that would mean having to face those horribul donation banners
@sehe actually, I've solved it
o.O
only problem now is that the melody is a bit.. sparse without repeats
(one note in the last measure)
@sehe am I allowed to repeat the first note as the last note?
23:45
You know what the best part is: you can do Fisher-Yates shuffle to get more 12 tone melodies :)
@orlp Yes. It's okay to start a new series.
Anyways. It's ok to not be 12-tone religious
@sehe Much of my memory was how disappointed I was. I had a Commodore 64 at one time, and it had a drastically more sophisticated synth chip that let you program an Attack-Decay-Sustain-Release envelope into, and it'd take things from there.
@orlp one never fails to recognize true 12-tone technique
@JerryCoffin Yup. Amiga2, Atari, Commodore all were way more advanced. As in: had something to deal with sounds at all
@sehe wait, your allowed to repeat/alternate two adjacent notes under these rules, right?
Not within a series
any idea why i cant reference a void method from a class into a void (*ftpr)() ?
23:55
Hi there. Nice to meet you too.
Also, I bet it has to do with type safety and type mismatch.
yes hello there how are you
Stack Overflow has a boatload of questions like this
yes im reading some atm
@sciencefyll So there you go stackoverflow.com/questions/2402579/…
in my original post link of picture of my code — Saad 8 hours ago
Oh wow. The question was improved
@sehe thank you
23:59
@sehe by adding a picture? wait were you ironic? you know you can't do that right
@sciencefyll I just googled "pointer to member function" and picked the first hit on stackoverflow

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