« first day (2401 days earlier)      last day (2774 days later) » 

00:04
@Mysticial as in you're not patched for it?
@Mgetz As in, I don't know.
Since it's right on the day.
Just booted up my sandbox to test all the updates up to today. Then I'll go deploy it to the rest of my Win10 boxes.
My laptop OTOH, hasn't been updated since September. I'll take care of that as well.
01:03
@Mysticial (Defender ver >= 1.1.13704.0) == you're safe
Hello
02:06
@sehe just caught the last 20 minutes of this on the radio getting home. :)
classic :p
indeed :)
Jagged
how is your friday?
It's been excellent :)
@Borgleader you?
it happened xD
idk, wasnt good or bad
02:18
fair 'nuff
02:41
@Borgleader hey
awww wats this little ball of fluff
sea puppers :O
03:20
Somebody submitted a brute force solution to a puzzle I solved using heuristics. Their code executed in under a second while mine took 20 :( All because they used functional programming principles in python while I used declarative ones.
Builtins are too fast for my handwritten and clever code to compete :(
03:40
downside: permanent smell of wet doggo
> wet doggo happy doggos
not so bad once you have enough positive associations with the smell
 
1 hour later…
jww
jww
05:08
Some interesting reading for free and open source in general: "A federal court has ruled that an open-source license is an enforceable contract", qz.com/981029/….
05:23
siri is evi
I said 'I have chicken flu' & siri suggested a bunch of restaurants
then ...
wtf, apple is evil
you just now realized this
05:41
Well, sometimes I give people doubts and just think they are plain stupid
05:57
ok
 
2 hours later…
 
2 hours later…
09:53
Waddup with this room, it's frickin dead
10:04
Woman charged with murder after five men stabbed
no one fought back, no one?!!
@Horttanainen You know. Someone should have informed us that funk got redefined. Apparently Abba was one of the greatest funk bands in history.
@Columbo Now he's wanted as a complicit :)
@Telkitty Come on you can do better
@sehe Is he really? On what grounds, being familiar with the internals?
Oh. God. Never joke on the gullible internets :)
*Never joke with a person that isn't as intelligent as you are
:)
nwp
nwp
10:50
would robot pass the robot test?
Is EOS Portable Archive is library for c++? — Seungsoo 9 mins ago
Man. This gets on my nerve
You can actually LOOK at the link. Use a secure browser if you don't like to visit web pages. It cannot be "completely drop-in compatible with Boost Serialization" if it's not C++, right? — sehe 23 secs ago
Fuck that laziness.
Similarly:
there is many components to generate binary file. so,i want to post it but, it's hard to make sample code... — Seungsoo 11 mins ago
SLAM:
We're not impressed: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/798201d67ba5805a Demonstrating creation of a binary archive from a random 100-node graph and reading it back in. Checking roundtrip using two different created graphs. You're welcome. — sehe 2 mins ago
That grpah!
@nwp I mentioned here before that I, by and large, don't vote.
lol
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes guess you pass
11:03
@Morwenn hi
11:44
@sehe The video is from another song. Maybe it is more funk?
@rightfold finally!
12:01
@Horttanainen did you forget a link?
user1804599
12:26
@JohanLarsson Finally what?
user1804599
Oh the avatar.
You set millenniumbug free.
I set your momma free
How are things puppy?
woofing
12:54
Hello, Cruel World!
world is not cruel if you lower your expectation enough
Maybe that is my problem: expectations are too high
that and your face
13:14
I heard barking dogs don't bite, but I guess some bark AND bite
My face is too high?
no, just your face in general
13:57
@sehe youtube.com/watch?v=Wga5A6R9BJg Yeah it's definitely not more funk
Google dork used to identify infected hosts on the web “Index of / .WNCRY” http://lmgtfy.com/?q=%E2%80%9CIndex+of+%2F+.WNCRY%E2%80%9D https://twitter.com/benkow_/status/863325325148770304
not bad/
14:19
Hmm.. why do we need std::integer_sequence? I can get Indices... from the template parameter directly.
Compiles good with a few examples with std::tuple too.
 
1 hour later…
15:21
Reading a proposal n3658, it makes sense now. open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2013/n3658.html
17:00
> Little known fact that "Internet of Things" is actually the short form of the full technical phrase "Internet of Things That Shouldn't Be On The Internet"
10
WAIT
THAT IS MY LECTURER
Hahaha
No shit
That guy is right now lecturing me on Economics Law and Ethics
He seems very smart and eloquent.
And has lectured me on Software Engineering before
We like him
@fredoverflow Yeah no shit. He works in the Computer Lab at Cambridge ;P
But he's a particularly articulate one.
@BoundaryImposition lol what was that
Is that some form of communication or just the sudden realization that life is meaningless and short :)
@BoundaryImposition that is pure awesome
good evening gentelemen
17:42
@iksemyonov I feel so left out...
2
@JerryCoffin gotta be your best one in over half a year. and i've seen a few
so yeah.. ok, the Q. is it "well-fashioned" to pass a whole container to a function instead of begin && end iterators? came across such a necessity when implementing a task for an interview, you know, i have to send them the code, and it's about shuffling a linked list
pretty darn easy to implement but it's a single linked list and i need to insert at the front. so, obv, no way to accomplish that using an iterator
@iksemyonov guess you have no choice so go ahead and do that
re-usability is nice but sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do
I pass references to containers all the time, when it's appropriate to do so
@BoundaryImposition i was thinking maybe create an additional list and push those items into that. but i see your point
Ell
Ell
@iksemyonov it has to be a singly linked list?
@Ell yep
Ell
Ell
17:48
hmm
what's the task? out of curiosity
Ell
Ell
just have to shuffle the list randomly?
@Ell bit more complex than that, it goes like.. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 -> 1 8 2 7 3 6 4 5 so interleave first, past, second, past -1, etc..
@iksemyonov It may not be immediately obvious how, but actually it is entirely possible.
@JerryCoffin for all i know, there is no direct reference from the iterator to the container?
though i recall there were helper funcs like back_inserter so maybe one of those can help
17:50
@iksemyonov Well, doing so does take for granted that modifying the iterator you received does what it obviously should.
But, if necessary, you can create an iterator that holds a reference (or pointer) to the container.
@JerryCoffin wrong link? "doing so" refers to?
@iksemyonov Modifying a container via an iterator.
@JerryCoffin oh, that. yeah, i've been thinking about that, too, but this brings me back to the start of the discussion: is it better to pass a pair of iterators or the whole container
@iksemyonov "better" would be to pass a range (but that's a whole 'nother can of worms).
@JerryCoffin a range? do we have ranges in c++ 11?
i was under the impr. that D had ranges
17:58
Windows XP. Strong and stable. https://t.co/SiXPifCDsE
lol
@iksemyonov Not standardized, but various people have created range classes. For example, Boost ranges and Eric Neibler's range V3.
@JerryCoffin note taken, appreciated
user1804599
Implement Rust iterators.
user784668
18:41
@Mysticial Do you know if sub [rsp + offset], 1 can be fused with the following jnz?
user784668
18:56
Wait, that… doesn't make much sense, does it?
user784668
In µops, that's like calculate address, load, subtract, store.
user784668
Subtract by itself could fuse with jump, but store is the last µop.
user784668
Obligatory: Intel, step up your game, this instruction is a single µop on AMD.
@ProblemSlover yawn
love xp remixes :P
19:11
can we live tweet lounge Eurovision lols
Ell
Ell
@Code-Apprentice really interesting
user784668
19:31
Hi @BartekBanachewicz
hi @Fanael
I just got back home, apparently chat logged me in
So I can only add"accidentally stopped an international cyber attack" to my Résumé. ^^
@Ell Agreed. I first saw the above tweet and had to find out wtf he was talking about?
@Code-Apprentice The hero we needed.
I know next to nothing about malware. I want to find out more about how this one propagates. Often malware is spread because someone clicks a link or downloads an infected file and opens it, as I'm sure you know. Apparently there are other vectors that do not require an uninformed user to take action. I'm interested in learning more about how that works exactly.
user784668
@Code-Apprentice Browsers are awful pieces of shit
user784668
19:36
^ probably the most important infection vector
still, a browser requires the user to start it to begin with...and then go to a webpage.
so if I turn my computer on and just let it run without touching the keyboard or mouse, how can it become infected?
user784668
@Code-Apprentice In this case, by using one of the bajillion unpatched Windows XP holes
that's what I am interested in learning more about
not that I'm gonna do anything malicious. I just want to know how this kind of thing even happens.
and I want to protect myself from it. Not that I'm running XP, but I want to know if more recent operating systems might have similar flaws.
@BartekBanachewicz you never get to leave
user784668
@Code-Apprentice It depends. Is your OS developed by merkins?
user784668
19:40
If it is, it has NSA backdoors anyway, so you're screwed.
I'm on a windows machine atm. My primary machine is Arch Linux, though.
and government snooping is a different, albeit related, issue
user784668
@Code-Apprentice It really is not.
@jaggedSpire almost like my 2nd car
user784668
@Code-Apprentice The very same NSA backdoors can be used by malware authors.
jokes aside we actually made a lot of progress today
I want to order the parts ASAP now and hopefully it'll actually be running by the next weekend
19:42
what are you building, Bartek?
@Code-Apprentice fixing an old car
user784668
@Code-Apprentice IIRC this time it was "just" a remote execution vuln in Windows SMB server.
@Fanael true dat. I meant they are different primarily from a social stand point, rather than a technical one.
those eyebrows though
ey @BoundaryImposition do you still live in Nottingham or around?
19:44
@Fanael that's what I read in a SE post. I'm still not sure what that means or how it is even possible. Got to do more research and reading, I guess.
@BartekBanachewicz fun times!
@Code-Apprentice it's super enlighting (as to how cars work and are built). we've already learnt sooooo much just by taking it apart
user784668
@Code-Apprentice Basically, you send a specially-crafted message to the server, so it gets massively confused and starts executing portions of the message, or other addresses that can be controlled by the message, as code.
user784668
How it is even possible? Crappy code.
@BartekBanachewicz we?
nwp
nwp
@BoundaryImposition I curse my school for having such terrible music classes that never taught me about major/minor keys.
19:47
@Code-Apprentice got a friend who's helping me
actually I haven't posted a photo of it
cool...even better, get to socialize while you nerd out
user784668
@Code-Apprentice Disallowing data execution helps, but the exploit could still use return-oriented programming then.
@nwp don't need to know much to understand the difference in tone between that and the original vader theme
user784668
Look that term up, it's a fun thing.
I'll add it to my back log
19:48
needs a huge spoiler on the trunk :D
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz what car
did you take apart the whole thing?
@Code-Apprentice rear suspension and all brakes so far
19:49
And another one on the bonnet
@BartekBanachewicz gonna take apart the body, too? Or just the innards?
Then just a gigantic knob on the steering wheel, or effectively, you could just sit there instead.
@Code-Apprentice the next milestone is getting it to run and pass the MOT
so we're focusing on fixing the brakes and will do basic maintenance like fluids, plugs etc
I'll probably do the basic engine tuneup as well (compression check, valve clearances etc)
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz I can only tell it's a Peugeot 306 sedan.
What's MOT?
19:52
@Code-Apprentice annual vehicle check (that's the UK name for it at least)
in europe, I take it?
user784668
@Code-Apprentice Yes, we don't allow people to ride in deathtraps.
actually those checks aren't too comprehensive
well they test basic suspension coherence so that's something at least
I guessed that's what it was. I live in very rural U.S. and we don't have emissions tests here, afaik.
19:53
but other than that it's "does it have all lights" and "does it stay roughly in one piece"
But then I don't own a vehicle, either.
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, engineless cars passes them just fine.
user784668
At least my car did.
@Fanael where's your sense of adventure?
19:54
I did one on one of my bikes and the brake test was "oh did you drive it there? then I'm marking brakes as fine"
it was actually just after I did the brake cleanup on it but still funny
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz I mean, is it an engine if I have water bottles bigger than that?
there are 5L bottles you know :) but yeah downsizing is a bitch
user784668
Wanna laugh at me?
user784668
I drive a Peugeot 107.
lol
did you get it in a cereal box
user784668
19:57
@BartekBanachewicz Why yes, how do you know?
@BartekBanachewicz yes
I mean I typically don't laugh at people's cars anyway, after you drive a moped for a while you learn respect for all kinds of transportation
7
@nwp is that a major problem? suppose you don't know :D
@BoundaryImposition what would you say if I was nearby around summer?
@BartekBanachewicz "fuck"
nwp
nwp
19:58
a minor regret about possibly missing out
lol
so no crashing over and pajama party then I guess
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz I'd rather walk than drive a moped
@Fanael well I wouldn't have a proper bike now if I haven't started on it
also it had a "proper" gearbox and a clutch and stuff
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz So do my legs.
@NeilButterworth Is that how a mature person behaves? Sheesh. — freakish 1 min ago
same old
20:03
also I learned basics of engine maintenance on it which was nice as well
just one cylinder
@BoundaryImposition just wonder if came up with an idea of your abstract nickname by yourself or something served you an inspiration :P
@ProblemSlover I don't remember exactly where it came from; I was in a bit of a hurry at the time. I suspect some online "random bollocks" generator was the original inspiration, then I tweaked it a bit.
Ah ok. thanks for detailed answer.
no problem [solver]
Ell
Ell
20:41
@Fanael mopeds are really useful
especially when you're 14 and don't have a drivers license :D
IRTA monads
@Ell Weren't you 14 like 4 years ago? Grow up!
Ell
Ell
lol
@BoundaryImposition 7 years ago actually ;)
pfft
wow the lighting rig looks like the Endurance from Interstellar haha
Ell
Ell
Feel old yet?
20:47
learnt that std::forward_list<T> is a really minimalist design..
20:58
before_begin lol
21:44
Let's not go jumping to conclusions about his nationality, there's no way we could know #Eurovision https://t.co/rILrCuiOu6
a few moments ago lol
@BoundaryImposition Wait 30 years and think again
22:25
Hmm, anybody know how to convert SolidWorks to Google SketchUp?
0
A: How to load a TIFF image like a graph in C++ BOOST

seheOk, so read the PNG: I've cropped the whitespace border since it wasn't consistent anyways Reading And Sampling The Image using Img = boost::gil::rgb8_image_t; // gray8_image_t; using Px = Img::value_type; Img img; //boost::gil::png_read_image("graph.png", img); boost::gil::png_read_and_...

I went a bit overboard, I guess
Anyhoops, the image looks more like a height/heat map. As such the optimization problem smells a bit more like A-star or Simulated Annealing to me. You might want to look at these. E.g. en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Simulated_Annealing_Projectsehe 8 secs ago
Also tiff files can be 16 bit, or even 32bit floating point
22:42
@sehe hugest spoon I’ve ever seen, but otoh the result looks fun
It did. Sole reason to bother
@Mikhail He didn't exactly supply a TIF to begin with. (I left out the optional normalization of edge weights)
btw you have Graph g({{w,h}}, false); as a typo in your detailed analysis
Oh yeah. You can spot that I was using bad names in the quick & dirty
so that's Eurovision done for another year
blergh
Completely missed it.
23:21
> -Who are the enemies of USA?
> -First are the USA, for sure!
3
heh, that's hard to deny
We are are own worst enemy.
relax, drink a crab
@sehe you here?
I have a lot of trouble with the third measure
I just.. can't get it right
@orlp sorta
(the upbeat doesn't count as a measure right?)
(if it does just pretend I started counting from 0)
23:32
@orlp That's. Easy. Ornamentation is always subjective. And the rendering on that YT vid is not even accurate (by a long shot) without the ornament
@orlp accacciatura/apoggiatura doesn't count to the measure total, indeed
So, to stay in time you "must" shorten the preceding note to squeeze it in.
@orlp On prolonged listening, I think what makes it work is that there's a "global time warp" (a natural rubato) speeding up the 8ths. And then the rest is slightly exaggerated. It's interesting, manyu people do it, but if you focus on the 3rd bar, the first 8th is way too late and a little short.
@sehe this is the best I've produced so far :(
I agree with sehe
@orlp you're very close. just nick more time off the preceding note as sehe says
@orlp Try to de-emphasize the grace note. It's not far off/bad
you could rewrite the bar without the ornament and with a 𝅘𝅥𝅯.𝅘𝅥𝅰 instead. ish.
just let your finger slap the ornamental on its way to its target, almost as if it were a typo
those are unicode boxes for me
@BoundaryImposition that's my issue
that's what I normally do with ornamentals
but that's just not how the fingering works out here
23:46
well I didn't mean literally :P
you've just gotta move off that G# faster
the second treble voice does make it a little trickier to get the hang of that it would be with some other pieces
I'd probably put most of my weight on my thumb there
another big issue is that the F# is repeated 4 times in that measure and I feel that when I play it it's an incredibly obnoxious note that I play way too loud but I don't have the control to subdue it =/
just tried it and yeah weight on thumb
@orlp exactly
you can't do much about that other than practice. personally I quite like the emphasis on that note
(for the record, regardless of what's written, I think rubinstein's interpretation is beautiful and would love to be able to play it like that)
yeah I like it
oh wait you put your thumb on the F#? I've been putting my index finger there
23:55
@BoundaryImposition Wtf you play piano?
I'm starting to wonder how many people in this room do. At least four so far.
I guess it's not that uncommon, though.
I think you'll find it much easier with your thumb on the bottom note
2-4-3 up top
slide your thumb down to the E later
disclaimer: I've only tinkered with this piece for like 3 seconds ;p
I haven't got a keyboard around at this time, but I think I'd put 5 on the B (or 4 perhaps...)
I can have a look tomorrow morning

« first day (2401 days earlier)      last day (2774 days later) »