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00:02
(women like men with automobiles)
...I just like explosions, violence, and puzzles
I have simple tastes
Nov 15 '15 at 13:29, by chmod 666 telkitty
I do really hope the roads can be taken over by self driving A.I. cars in 50 years time
they only have to modify 10-20 rules to clear the way for driverless cars in 50 years
00:23
warning C4503: '__LINE__Var': decorated name length exceeded, name was truncated
2
almost fixed bug
fucking msvc
> traffic deaths ... at least 200,000 a year
k then
Also the Sydney Herald confused Mark Twain with Samuel Clemens...
Understandable. Mark Twain gets credit for 99% of quotes on the internet
@sehe Who gets the credit for statistics on the internet?
Tufte
00:35
Neat!
He deservers that =)
And who gets the blame when things fail/go bad?
Hitler
because ... it's always Hitlers fault
I was gonna say telkinch
telkinch?
telkitty / cinch
obviously
I'm often old and slow. And my intellect is failing, you'd need to excuse me.
00:40
user image
5
Showing my new summer coat
00:56
I didn't realize you were such a dancer!
01:07
@Mikhail Welcome to the agony.
I'm a real C++ dev now
@Mikhail so you were a fake one before?
No, just wooden
wooden you like to go back to that
01:32
and leaf C++?
@Mikhail That is brilliant.
01:49
@Mikhail I'm so proud! You finally popped that cherry.
02:09
eeuw
02:25
So ... competition between driverless cars & manned mission to Mars: which one do you think will be realised first: 20% of cars in the developed countries replaced by driverless cars or 10 or more people arrived safely on Mars?
how long will the people on Mars be safe
and does it have to be 10 people on Mars at once, or ten people total who landed and were still in good physical and mental condition at the time of landing?
Undoubtedly manned mission to Mars faces a lot more tech challenges than driverless cars
1st I doubt any sane mission would send 10 or more people at once for a manned flight that has never been attempted before
@jaggedSpire they will be safe forever since there's nothing there to HARM THEIR CORPSES HAHAHAHAHAHAAHH
oh, excellent. :)
2nd it's highly unlikely the first few bunch of people would land and still be in good physical and mental condition at the time of landing
might be in ok condition
but if most people would not be in good condition after living in a cave for 3 months, the chance of people being in a better condition when stuck in a small ship with limited food choices and weird toilet routines, no gravity and all other abnormal conditions is very small
 
2 hours later…
04:08
a venus mission is way more feasible. Lots of atmospheric pressure, lots of gravity, lots of carbon dioxide, floating cities at a high enough altitude to be cool enough are the way to go
Might as well build a floating city around earth ...
airships have 93x more lift there than on earth, at ground level
a vacuum chamber would have massive lift due to the high atmospheric pressure. of course you dont stay that low, too hot, but you would have good lift performance at high altitude
hmm maybe not that much lift... but lots
and carbon dioxide. yummy for plants
user406009
I really wonder if we will ever consider suicide mars missions.
user406009
The ethics are murky, but we have plenty of volunteers and it's a lot easier to pull off.
why though?
you would need a really good reason first
user406009
04:21
@doug65536 Well, why did we go to the moon?
user406009
For the sake of exploration.
yeah ok but nobody signed up to die on the moon
I'm not sure what people will do on Mars.
user406009
Yeah, there isn't much to do there.
user406009
04:23
If we want extra land, we would be better off colonizing Antarctica.
Or Siberia, or Canada
or Africa
user406009
@Mikhail Off world colonies would provide some degree of safety if the Earth gets screwed. There is that benefit.
mars has poor radiation protection, that right there ruins it, when there are far safer better places to go
Because maybe one day earth would be destroyed?
Given enough time it's certainty
user406009
@doug65536 Mars is the only other planet around us that we can actually land on and shit though.
04:25
oh absolutely, there are ones that are a lot easier short term. I mean long term - earth destroyed stuff
Also taking baby steps is almost always better than taking no steps at all
Getting a person to step on mars doesn't make any progress towards the goal of leaving earth, we already got to the moon and look how little that mattered.
having correct pressure and radiation shield and correct enough gravity are critical. mars fails on all
The trick is to build a self sustaining system outside earth, Mars is as good as any. Moon is not a planet.
Ben
Ben
Speaking of going to Mars, It would be great if food proteins and other constituents could be manufactured.
user406009
04:27
I think goals like self driving cars would do a lot more good to the common man than building colonies on Mars.
user406009
Self driving cars would vastly improve the quality of life for almost everyone.
user406009
(Well, except taxi and truck drivers)
Depends on how long are we looking at.
since governments obviously hand out licenses to everyone that asks for one, the only option is self driving cars
people that are totally incapable of driving simply need a few more tries, then they get their license anyway
user406009
@Ben I mean, plants and bacteria could do that easily enough.
user406009
04:29
The issue is dragging them over to mars and maintaining the ecosystem.
user406009
The SF book Aurora does a good job of explaining the difficulties of keeping an ecosystem functioning.
user406009
Short answer: It's really, really, really difficult.
user406009
See the biosphere project.
A huge rock could hit earth from space next year, we could all be dead. Chance is small. But given a million years, the chance of things of such a devastating consequence happening is not so small. Looking at the dinosaurs.
Mars might be toxic for terrestrial bacteria? Or alternatively, they might not grow.
user406009
04:33
@Telkitty We could just build a bunker system here.
they have to eat
user406009
I mean, we are already going to need a bunker type system on Mars for that colony to work.
user406009
And, if we are going through all the trouble of building a bunker, we might as well install it here.
user406009
@Mikhail You would have a sealed environment.
user406009
And there are bacteria that can grow on mars.
04:34
how do you make the lounge play master of orion II music
user406009
But all the useful ones and our crops and shit need earthlike conditions.
@Lalaland annnnd building a spaceship the size of an aircraft carrier? U.S. tax payer is going to pay for that?
user406009
@Telkitty I'm just that the "Mars is our only hope against extinction" argument is countered pretty effectively that we could build a bunker system here on Earth.
user406009
Like the vaults in Fallout.
user406009
Expensive and difficult, yet technically possible.
04:37
Curiously, you can recreate martian conditions on earth, if you want to test bacteria or terraforming strategies.
lol, yeah you can in near freefall accelerating at 23km/h/s
it has quite a bit less gravity and hardly any atmosphere
user406009
@Mikhail Terraforming is a pipedream.
How the hell are we going to live there then?
user406009
Bunkers.
user406009
Domed cities.
user406009
04:39
Underground tunnels.
Ben
Ben
What about finding an alternative to sunlight?
is has 0.38g gravity
user406009
@Ben ? In what sense?
user406009
An alternative to sunlight for what? Growing food?
user406009
We have grow lamp things already.
Ben
Ben
04:40
@Lalaland yeah, silly question.
user406009
People use them all the time for marijuana and shit.
you could probably do a running jump over a 2 storey house
as your mushy weak shin snaps from your strong earth gravity muscles
we will simply build a higher wall
@Lalaland the only hope at the moment ... Only the first step in the long run ...
04:55
@Lalaland Where do you get the energy for the lamps?
Morning.
My face wants to kill me or something.
Ben
Ben
@wilx you have the resemblance of one of my Mathematics teachers from high school.
I don't know if thats a good thing.
@Ben I assure you I am not mathematics teacher. :)
You can relax. :)
Ben
Ben
yay
Ben
Ben
05:09
@Bartek Would you be willing to play your guitar with me at the mumble server?
No
how did an idea that fills the global namespace get into html5 lol
Ben
Ben
@doug65536 haha
nobody in w3c body knew globals are not very good
AFAIK it's the document namespace, not global.
it is reachable implicitly as a global, look at the fiddle js code
it is in the scope chain
jsfiddle.net/c68prupn/4 <-- added to window
strangely though jsfiddle.net/c68prupn/5
05:21
@Telkitty Chance is zero
Space rocks don't materialise out of nowhere.
05:34
@Lalaland mars-one.com
@Telkitty planet is a useless taxonomy in this context. There's no relation between planet and suitability for life.
05:59
@R.MartinhoFernandes s/Space rocks/celestial objects
06:10
As if you really need them... http://spr.ly/6011BWhyD Here's 6 really good reasons to move your C++ code to #VS2015 https://t.co/cHAC8PN4nu
06:23
CUDA support or bust
I wrote 4 gotos, starting at 54 minutes in.
freddy attention whoring again <3
It's in my nature, there's nothing you can do about it ;)
But actually, I was interested on getting some feedback on the gotos.
Its hard to understand what you're saying under that thick German accent.
The code speaks for itself ;)
06:31
Oops, I engaged with libertarians again
Dammit, I never learn.
Prefer libertines, they are more fun.
I've heard good things about librarians.
> Me: I think your description of that court case is unfair because it doesn't reflect what actually happened.
> lolbertarian: courts are stupid.
@R.MartinhoFernandes VS 2015 can compile Linux binaries? wow
I think it supports different compilers now.
Something like that.
06:35
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think your description of the discussion is unfair
VC++ is still crap.
Do you think they're just gonna steal LLVM?
I like the bit about writing portable code.
VC++ encourages writing portable code by virtue of being the LCD itself when it comes to actual C++.
@Ben sure, but dunno if mumble
something with music codecs
Ven
Ven
Hello.
06:39
@LucDanton Discussions are stupid.
Ben
Ben
@BartekBanachewicz Discord?
TS had some music codecs iirc
> DefinitionParser(…).parse_declaration(…)
names that make so much sense I keep getting it wrong every which way
Ben
Ben
@BartekBanachewicz which TS client should I download?
3th
i mean don't expect wonders really
I've played some recordings from yesterday through my laptop speakers today
man was that shit
mastering is srs bsns
Ben
Ben
06:47
true.
maybe we should write our own guitar jam software
I think there is a gap on the market for that
Hmm...
Is it possible to use UNIX sockets instead of pipes to redirect standard input/output at all?
Ben
Ben
@BartekBanachewicz I have experience with the Portaudio library on Windows.
well the problem is obviously detecting the network capabilities
Ben
Ben
brb
06:52
So, I wrote this nice inline C++14 code obfuscator for OCL kernels that works in MSVC and gcc, but in MSVC the compile time is like 14 minutes and gcc its so small I didn't even time. Should I submit a bug report?
@Mikhail Do.
user1804599
Hi
user1804599
@wilx you need a proxy
user1804599
You can't directly write to socket files
> Hello, msvc is shit, kthxbai
06:59
@Zoidberg Why? You do get normal integer file handle from socketpair(), don't you?
user1804599
Yeah
user1804599
But you can't do it with open
user1804599
In Bash you can use netcat
user1804599
In C++ I think dup2 should work
if three hours is not fast enough, perhaps you should hire someone :) — sehe 9 secs ago
07:02
@Zoidberg No, I mean for "piping" input and output to forked subprocess.
@wilx I love socketpair () or bidirectional pipe() on UNIX-en
@Mikhail 14 minutes? That's awesome. I'd expect it to have crashed a lot sooner than that
Maybe in c++17 it will be 17 minutes
3
@BartekBanachewicz More "business" than "serious", really. It's like "sugar and fats are serious business"
It used to crash until I replaced my custom function with std::index_sequence, now it just takes a boatload of economic migrants to compile.
Or whatever unit is used in Europe
g2g _sleep
@R.MartinhoFernandes Those bullets. They were the reedickuloses
@Mikhail :)
Units of distance I see people regularly using in Europe: minutes, hours, train stops, 5-minute walks.
Sometimes even metres.
nwp
nwp
there are also lunch break minutes
30 of them are quite long
07:12
Units of volume: small beers, large beers, cocktails, gas tanks, water bottles.
Commonly used measure of distance: walking distance to XXX
The one dimension I would say people overwhelmingly use SI units by default is room surface area.
(For other surface areas, you're likely to see football fields)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought that was decibels
Ben
Ben
@Bartek are you on the main teamspeak server?
Well, firstly, I am at work now
Ben
Ben
07:19
oh, sorry :)
well nothing to be sorry about
7 hours to go anyway
@BartekBanachewicz decibels are ratios.
Plus no one commonly uses that.
monads are burritos
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, volume is in watts typically
but when eating a bowl of cereal, it's more common to say how many Wh, not W that was
aren't units weird ;)
@BartekBanachewicz If people want to express how loud something is, they use something akin to a spatial scale.
07:25
"If more than the basic work object were executing on the service, you very quickly begin to deal with undefined behavior" is misleading. It's UB regardless — sehe 12 secs ago
@BartekBanachewicz And actually, that's power. Volume is a subjective measure.
Ven
Ven
here we go, work
user1804599
@Ven have fun :)
> Chronopost vous informe que l'envoi […] a été déposé ce jour dans votre boite aux lettres
c’était hier mais okay
user1804599
@Ven Scala gets function types with implicits \o/
Ven
Ven
07:41
@Zoidberg wait, link? I might need to update my SO answer about that
user1804599
Ven
Ven
where's that from
user1804599
#scaladays
Ven
Ven
I mean, do you have a link?
user1804599
No.
07:43
So, you took that picture yourself
user1804599
:)
Ven
Ven
I have a hard time believing you're in new york :P
might be tho
user1804599
No I just found it on Twitter.
Ven
Ven
:P
> I know, I know, most MySQL users don't need that, but most MySQL users also never learn about those things because MySQL doesn't support any of it. Not knowing that it exists is not the same as not having a use for it.
Ven
Ven
07:49
YX problem?
:P
grilled 🍆
user1804599
Most MySQL users never learn about those things because they're uninterested ignorant cargo-culters.
was looking for an emoji capsicum, couldn't find one
The followup was throttled :(
Ven
Ven
@sehe I don't into twitter, sorry ;)
07:51
That's why the service :)
@Shoe Relevant:
Nissan developers copied code from the internet, pasted it into a remote-access app: http://qz.com/679084/nissan-developers-copied-code-from-the-internet-pasted-it-into-a-remote-access-app/
Ven
Ven
oh my lord.
user1804599
> sprit
Ven
Ven
boost.sprit
user1804599
It's 2016 and MySQL, backed by a hundred billion dollar company, still doesn't have window functions.
user1804599
(lol)
Ven
Ven
07:54
just use GROUP_CONCAT(), amirite
user1804599
Feb 12 '14 at 19:14, by Cat Plus Plus
The only acid in MySQL is the one you'll want to bathe in to end your misery
Ven
Ven
I like this one.
wait, where did I get a link to this blog?
@sehe "To put this in context, it’s kind of like copying something from Wikipedia into a term paper and forgetting to take out the bit that says “citation needed.”" :D
@Zoidberg meh
@Shoe lol seriously "smart cars are so great"
We need to go all electric and self-driving and broccoli and IoT
Self toasting toasters
Self fridging fridges
Self caring cars
Ven
Ven
08:12
Self-harming humans
wait.
if you need a machine to drive for you, you're a pussy
there.
Ven
Ven
ITT bartek calls people names.
oh wait...
@BartekBanachewicz Being connected to the Internet is the vulnerability here. (Though Bluetooth is also vulnerable and doesn't require physical access)
any complicated system is potentially a vulnerability
Ven
Ven
having a bad day, bartek?
08:16
@BartekBanachewicz Physical vulnerabilities aren't such a problem.
@Ven no, why?
Ven
Ven
you seem very rant-y
The lack of driving is getting to me
user1804599
I'm proud to be a pussy.
The problem here isn't it being a self-driving car (it isn't at all!).
08:17
We're talking cars and I can't drive
It's having an exposed vulnerability that doesn't require physical access.
@Zoidberg you're essentially the beginning of the end of our civilization
The hack used that to flash new ECU firmware, and after that it works on pretty much any contemporaneous car, self-driving or not.
Ven
Ven
fuck off, bartek
user1804599
I couldn't care less.
08:18
I know, if you did, you wouldn't be
duh
Smartphone cars != self-driving cars, basically.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, self driving cars also scan their surroundings and stuff
in theory you could make it see things it doesn't
user1804599
So do humans.
@BartekBanachewicz It's much much harder to fool radars and cameras.
user1804599
Always automate everything.
08:20
They take their input from physical measurements, not from a remote system.
Ven
Ven
I automated your mom
ooh someone on a F800S just passed under my window; the internet seemed to be right, the seat is really low
You'd have to fake reality (not impossible, but I'd say it's difficult enough to not be worrisome)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think it's easier to make a false positive than a false negative
@BartekBanachewicz A false positive of what?
Radar readings?
But a false positive of what?
What's being detected here?
user1804599
@Ven yay I found it
@R.MartinhoFernandes anything in front of the car to make it slam the brakes, I suppose
Ven
Ven
GG
08:23
@BartekBanachewicz That sounds extremely tame to me. (Especially when you compare it to flashing the firmware of ECU)
Safety distance should minimise the problems.
@Ven tell that to him
Ven
Ven
no. he's not the reason you're being annoying right now.
@BartekBanachewicz The main difference is that this doesn't override any of the safety mechanisms of the software. It only makes the car act more cautiously than it needs. Gaining control of the ECU means you can cause it to drive recklessly instead.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well I'm not doubting that flashing the ECU is pretty terrible
Oh yeah, about reckless driving
did we actually talk the topic of different riding preferences for self-driving cars?
I personally see no big problem with difficult scenarios that make cars be too cautious.
It's essentially the equivalent as a boar jumping onto the highway.
The fact that there's no actual boar doesn't add danger, only inconvenience.
user1804599
08:30
@Ven guess I'll just do HM-like unification
user1804599
(flip append)
;   flip : forall a b c. (a -> b -> c) -> b -> a -> c
; append :                t -> t -> t
; unify (t -> t -> t) with (a -> b -> c), then a, b and c are known
user1804599
Hmm, well, not even unification.
user1804599
Just replacement. :P Or "one-way" unification.
user1804599
Well that shouldn't be too hard.
@R.MartinhoFernandes maybe we should include laser turrets as standard equipment instead
08:33
@BartekBanachewicz The opposite, putting up an obstacle that is invisible to radar is a bigger problem, but still nothing compared to remote access: it requires physical access to the location; it has almost no possibilities of direct targeting; and it is hard to replicate because it requires physical replication. Remote access attacks can be executed over and over again without ever leaving your basement.
(And you'd also have to fool all the other sensors; I'd expect some kind of safe mode with conservative decision making for when the sensors report contradictory readings)
What I'm seeing in all this is a population that can be absolutely controlled and kept in place with EMPs
@BartekBanachewicz That's already true with contemporary cars, no?
All gasoline cars made after 1992 have EFI.
I wonder how hard comparatively it is to damage via an EMP though
08:36
I'm guessing "contemporary" is quite a stretch there when 1992 was more than 20 years ago.
Basically any car made in the past two decades is inoperable if you fry their electronics, self-driving or not.
well, the chip in my bike costs about 10€ to replace
I can imagine computers in modern cars to be the part of overall price more and more
They are putting shittier engines in, so that leaves more money for more complex computers
And in any case, what you're describing is hard to believe outside of a war scenario.
@BartekBanachewicz If they're throwing EMPs around, you probably won't have access to the shops.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What about terrorism?
have there been actually any terrorist attack with EMPs recorded?
I doubt it. Bombs are just as effective and much more affordable.
@BartekBanachewicz I don't think there's value in drawing a distinction between that and war when it gets to the scale of "a population that can be absolutely controlled and kept in place", but if you want it, rephrase as "a war or large-scale terrorism scenario"; that's what I meant.
okay then, I'm not done yet
what if the government actually imposes a requirement for the car to have a remote disable mechanism
that doesn't so improbable does it
08:45
That's bad but, again, self-driving ability is irrelevant.
It can work for any contemporaneous car.
It's a problem for what I called "smartphone cars" above, regardless of who's driving.
(I call "smartphone cars" to cars that have smartphone features like Bluetooth and Internet access, primarily)
Legislation like DMCA is also a problem because it stifles third-party security research, and I think that's where efforts should be focused in present.
We need a healthy and thriving independent security research community to minimise vulnerabilities.
Ven
Ven
@Zoidberg where's your plonk list already? can't find it anymore
@BartekBanachewicz You can always stock up, I guess :D
Or build makeshift Faraday cages.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was thinking about that
but there's also the option to buy a WW2 fighter plane :D

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