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00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

ScY
ScY
"An Austrian hotel lost control of its door locks" LOL
@ScY In fairness, that has been debunked.
They were unable to issue new key cards for a while, but no one got locked in nor out.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The story was a lot more fun before you went and dragged facts into it.
ScY
ScY
Oh okay. Would have been funny and terrible if someone actually got locked in their hotel room.
sounds about as funny as being locked with a regular key
IOW not very much
I WANT SPRING ALREADY I'M DYING IN THIS OFFICE GOD
17:34
@ScY What it would be is a truly terrible design (e.g., fire starts, kills power, everybody gets locked in so they can't escape the fire).
Still, the hotel paid.
ScY
ScY
That's why hotels schould not rely on digital keys IMO
At least have backup physical keys or something
@ScY They should not rely on opening unscreened emails, on using privileged accounts, on not doing updates, and on not having backups.
@ScY Again, no door was left unopenable.
@ScY Look at it from their perspective for a moment: before digital keys, the could depend on replacement keys costing approximately $N/year. Digital keys divided N by (at a guess) a factor of 10 or so. Looking at hotels as a whole, this attack probably increased costs by 0.000001% or something. Bottom line: going back to "physical" keys would be a large loss, with little or nothing gained in return.
Staff usually has access to master keys, which, since they had already been issued, still worked.
Ven
Ven
17:39
@Morwenn that's so awesome :)
ScY
ScY
@JerryCoffin Makes sense. Things like that also seem to happen infrequently enough to not be a major concern for hotels.
@R.MartinhoFernandes In the form of a physical or digital key?
@ScY Unless the frequency increases (substantially), I'd agree.
@ScY Digital.
They were unaffected.
18:06
Hi All, May i ask a question?
C++ questions go here
it related to kernel and virtual box. may i proceed?
then no
ok, thanks
18:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes And people here want elections over Internet. sigh
@Borgleader
> write it to [...] using threads
as usual, quality content
well.. newbies shouuld be spammed with notifications like checkoit the rules before posting shit
nwp
nwp
19:19

Teenage Programmers Chatroom

A chat room for everybody! No age restriction, but be mature. ...
I don't understand this.
neither do I
> Teenage Programmers Chatroom
No age restriction, but be mature.
"Teenage", "no age restriction", "be mature"
make up your bloody mind
@набиячлэвэли So you want a Teenage Programmers Chat Room where you prohibit anybody from being (or even acting like) a teenager?
@JerryCoffin Why yes
teenagers are pesky little things
19:53
> Et encore, tu ne parles pas des chars Dassault, des fusils Dassault, ou de son groupe de rap sexion Dassault.
@StackedCrooked It's getting there. Slowly...
I think that chart shows more about the SIMD and core-count than anything else.
@набиячлэвэли lol
@Mysticial ...well, and a little about what code actually tries to use SIMD/multiple cores if available. If he phrased his basic premise narrowly ("new CPUs haven't drastically improved single-core, scalar performance") we'd probably all agree with him (but it would be so trivial the most common reaction would probably be: "well duh").
20:05
@набиячлэвэли wait you mean that here are hex numbers that are not a power of two?
So, hi again.
@StackedCrooked "hex numbers"
planning to call Robot?
20:35
@JerryCoffin On that topic, if he put up a Linpack benchmark, he'd need a logarithmic axis to show it properly.
Or any dense linear algebra benchmark written by Intel itself.
I often find the amount of optimization put into BLAS libraries quite impressive.
@Morwenn So my professor/advisor from grad school joked about it being written by Russians in the middle of winter. I'm not entirely sure he was joking.
^^ Fun times :P
20:47
@Mysticial Those ones who do push-ups whenever the compiler detects an error in their code? :p
@Morwenn That sounds like suicide.
@Mysticial Not really. It takes so long to compile that you've got time before the next error.
@Borgleader
0
Q: Write a Java Code for this please. I'm sorry I am new to coding

JohnWrite a Java Code for this problem please: A mass m = 2 kilograms is attached to the end of a rope of length r = 3 meters. The mass is whirled around at high speed. The rope can withstand a maximum tension of T = 60 Newtons. Write a program that accepts a rotation speed v and ...

I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it doesn't have any question marks. — Mysticial 13 secs ago
ScY
ScY
Just be helpful and do it for him...
21:03
@ScY WTF, no.
ScY
ScY
Why not?
He's basically asking us to do his homework assignment.
@StackedCrooked OP says it isn't homework. And yet there's this "hint" in the question.
user406009
21:16
Isn't homework allowed on SO though? As long as it's a good quality question that might also help other users.
@Lalaland It is allowed, but not homework dumps or requests for writing code.
The site doesn't discriminate against homework questions. They're treated the same as everything else. It's just that homework questions have a higher tendency to suck. Which creates the impression that they aren't allowed.
@StackedCrooked what about 0x69
It's a good number.
Anti-Trump graffiti spree a sign of emerging alt-left, liberal activist says http://fxn.ws/2kt9TIx https://t.co/CGlRsYUKKm
Freudian slip
@R.MartinhoFernandes IOW, the US is headed towards civil war.
ScY
ScY
How many terrorist attacks have there been since 9/11? I reckon that countries like France and England have been hit more often after 9/11?
So why focus so much on external threats if the internal problems are much more severe?
21:56
Eh~, unless I'm mistaken std::next can't be optimized when called with a single argument D:
22:06
@R.MartinhoFernandes: One more notch into what's wrong with Canada and how is Trudeau bad: youtube.com/watch?v=Wb55teb1gJ0
@ScY Because people are lousy at assessing risk.
nwp
nwp
@StackedCrooked Could you apt-get install libasan1 libasan2 libasan3 (I think) to make this work?
would be a massive upgrade to coliru from my perspective
@nwp Done. However, the program still doesn't work.
Seems to work with g++ though.
nwp
nwp
maybe it is a caching thing
Xeo
Xeo
@Morwenn how the hell would you optimise std::next for single increment?
nwp
nwp
22:17
and I don't know how to make apt/aptitude tell me which package installed a file (apparently it is apt-file search)
@Xeo Call ++it instead of std::advance(it, 1), which might make a slight difference for std::deque iterators.
Xeo
Xeo
wasn't the standard allowed to provide overloads as it pleases?
nwp
nwp
@StackedCrooked apparently the correct package is libclang-common-3.8-dev
Xeo
Xeo
especially when it could implement default arguments that way
@Xeo I'm not sure. libc++ at least doesn't provide single-parameter overloads.
Xeo
Xeo
22:19
hm. neither does msvc
@nwp installed it
nwp
nwp
@StackedCrooked didn't seem to help :(
Xeo
Xeo
anyways, shouldn't the compiler be able to optimize what is effectively for(; 0 < 1; --1) ++it?
For random-access iterators it'll call operator+= instead of operator++, and I don't know whether a compiler can always optimize operator+= until it's equivalent to operator++.
Ven
Ven
@Xeo isn't it allowed to do some refactoring considering it's provably infinitely looping?
Xeo
Xeo
22:23
@Morwenn oh right, deque was RA
@Ven that's not infinitely looping
Ven
Ven
@Xeo until ++it throws?
Xeo
Xeo
no
nwp
nwp
until 1 becomes lower than 0
Ven
Ven
how is 0 < 1 not infinite?
Xeo
Xeo
I was liberally replacing the n parameter by 1.
Ven
Ven
22:25
ah, ECONTEXTMISSED
Xeo
Xeo
for(; 0 < n; --n) -> for(; 0 < 1; --1) to make clear what the optimiser will effectively see in the end
(--1 also doesn't work :P)
Ven
Ven
true :D
Xeo
Xeo
and if it did, and made 1 == 0, then it also wouldn't be an infinite loop!
Ven
Ven
this is haskell-style let 3+4 in 3+4=5 level of bullshit :P
23:16
@JerryCoffin and lousy at assessing their own risk assessment skills.
au·di·o·phile /ˈɔ.di.oʊ.ˌfaɪl/ noun someone who listens to the stereo, not the music
23:35
ants have found where I am storing opened can of condensed milk 2 days ago
every morning I can find a few more ants in the condensed milk
@R.MartinhoFernandes Reminds me of a quote I found somewhere.
> Music fans use their music players to listen to music; audiophiles use music to listen to their music players.
pedofile is not a file about pedos
@EtiennedeMartel probably the same source, but one of them suffered from signal degradation
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