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sbi
sbi
13:00
@thecoshman Most likely you haven't found where General Failure hides on your disk either, right? /cc @Sam
@sbi It's on the disk? Now I have to open up the case and find it.
sbi
sbi
@JohnSmith 1. Look at this room's title. 2. Note what's written between those angle brackets. 3. Contemplate. 4. Look for other room.
@sbi your childHOOD is the period of time when you are a child. That time has gone and can not be changed (no talking about time travel for fuck sake people). You may find new childRENS things that you like even more then things had during your childHOOD
sbi
sbi
@SamDeHaan Opening the disk is a sure way to bring out General Failure.
@sbi 1. active room does not exist 2. people talk about things other than C++ here all the time 3. this room is active 4. no need for condescension
sbi
sbi
13:02
@JohnSmith If you think I have been condescending when I wrote that, you ain't seen nuffing yet.
> It is too late to edit this message
i'm not asking for condescension (which I could top if I needed to) -- just asking a question about Excel
I hare chat so much some times
'tis all
@sbi Oh, perfect.
sbi
sbi
13:04
@thecoshman No. The childhood is the period in the live of a human where that human is a child. Childhood books are thus books written for humans to be read (to) during the time they are children.
@JohnSmith Sheesh, no one's going to believe you've been in this room before if you don't have an animal gravatar, duh.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman You might want to try to rabbit chat instead.
@SamDeHaan ...says the guy with the most ridiculous animal avatar in the whole room.
@sbi I tried to edit but ran out of time. They are childRENS books, that you read either during there's or your own childHOOD.
an animal gravatar?
9_9
lol
@sbi may be I do...
sbi
sbi
13:06
@thecoshman No, maybe you do.
@sbi don't abuse @sehe like that
@thecoshman They can be used interchangably. Children's books, childhood books. It's all personal preference and regional dialect.
@sbi stupid words
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Actually he abused a pic I posted here as an avatar. I am fine with that, but I reserve the right to keep using that pic.
@sbi I resemble that remark?
sbi
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13:08
@SamDeHaan You mean you resent it, Shirley?
@SamDeHaan no it's not. They are books aimed at children. You do not have to read them during your childhood, if at 20 you decide you have a new favourite children's book, it does not change what is your favourite childhood book
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman And then there's childhood books which I read during the childhood of my kids. Some of them a really great, and they have become my favorite childhood books.
@thecoshman It's regional dialect. It's not that far of a stretch to acknowledge this, but you'd much rather "win" this argument.
@sbi "And then there's children's books which I read during the childhood of my kids. Some of them a really great, and they have become my favorite children's books."
@SamDeHaan actually, I am starting to believe that some people do actually use the phrase "childhood books" instead of "children's books"
sbi
sbi
@JohnSmith The question is why you would think to find here, of all places!, someone who excels in Excel programming. That sounds..., um, ...odd.
@thecoshman The question is why you would think I would believe you, of all people here!, when it comes to nitpicking about words? That sounds..., um, ...odd.
13:14
@thecoshman Now, to start a real flame-war. Zomg, favourite is wrong, it's favorite.
sbi
sbi
7 mins ago, by thecoshman
@sbi stupid words
@thecoshman Can a childless man have a favorite parenthood book? Of course he can, because parenthood refers to the type of book, not the period in your life in whihc you read it.
Unlike "parenthood" books, "childhood" books can mean period of your life OR book type.
@Neil 'parenthood' would be a subject, it's no different to having a favourite rock book
@SamDeHaan fairly sure we have defaulted to English English rather than American English here
@JohnSmith You do realize that you still haven't actually asked even a partial question on VBA here? I repeat my invitation 1 more time, but it will be the last time:
@thecoshman Right, well so can "childhood" book be interpreted to be a subject.
@sbi Whilst I may not be great a spelling, I sure as hell speak English enough to know which is which
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman What? When did this happen? I must've missed it.
@Neil but the hungry caterpillar is not a book on childhood
@sbi Perhaps I am mistaken, but I don't see that many American spellings, other then code related words of course.
@thecoshman True, but it also doesn't have to be your childhood, as sbi demonstrated.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman That's because you're asleep when the Merkins descent on the room. Also, 90% of the room's population is non-native speakers, and they use Merkin spelling, too.
13:19
@thecoshman Having too many buckets of water.
@sbi I must have some sort of natural filter to all the z's
@EtiennedeMartel use a a bucket of water to knock over the other buckets of water thus reducing them to just buckets
entropy bitch!
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Much to learn you yet have, young padawan.
@thecoshman Alright. Having a bucket.
@Neil but if you did not read it during your childhood, it can not be your favourite book from your childhood
Let's say I'm allergic to buckets.
13:21
@EtiennedeMartel you can use the handle to help swing the bucket as you throw it away
@thecoshman Yeah, but you're not using the bucket to solve the problem. The bucket is the problem.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Let's just say the challenge is worded very fuzzy, so that, disregarding physics and reasoning, he thinks he can wiggle out of it no matter what you throw at it.
@sbi What kind of Merkins descend on the room? And when? I am curious, I have not observed this phenomenon.
The challenge was to find something a bucket of water can't solve. Now you're using your hands to solve the problem, not your bucket.
Bucket of water can't solve a downed power line.
sbi
sbi
13:23

What are merkins?

May 2 at 17:24, 18 seconds total – 5 messages, 1 user, 0 stars

Bookmarked May 2 at 17:27 by sbi

It also can't do anything about being blown out of a hatch in space.
@thecoshman Not your childhood, your favorite childhood book. Your is modifying book, not childhood.
Or falling down a 20-story tall building.
Again, it's subject to interpretation.
Hell, even being stuck in some kinds of fire (you know, the ones that can't be put out by water)
13:24
hello
good afternoon
Being shot at by a trained sniper with a high powered sniper rifle.
Being run over by a car.
Being warterboarded by angry people who hold your head in the bucket.
@sbi I'm under the impression it means Americans. I'm not going to urbandictionary at werk. Is it troll Merkins? Or are there actually a reasonable number of Merkins that know how to play well with others. I find that that's a rarity where I come from.
See, I can find a bunch of those. Your challenge sucks, @thecoshman.
sbi
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@SamDeHaan Despite the room being European-dominated, we do have some regulars here from Merkia.
Yeah, Urope rules the room.
13:28
@Neil the original quote was that a children's book published during the man's 20s is his favourite childhood book. It was published when he was no longer in his childhood, so how can it of been his favourite childhood book?
@thecoshman Maybe because he was still a child back then?
We're talking about George W. Bush here.
@EtiennedeMartel over twenty years old?
Dude, we're talking about George Fucking W. Bush.
The guy's an idiot.
@sehe figured it out
@JohnSmith ok
@sbi Merkistan, FTFY
@EtiennedeMartel None of these are problems in need of a solution
13:32
@sehe Herm, if your head is being stuck in a bucket of water, it might be problem.
Unless you really want to die.
But then, define "problem".
@EtiennedeMartel Well, we don't exactly elect our presidents for their intelligence. I think. I really can't seem to discover any reason our presidents are elected lately.
@EtiennedeMartel you can use a bucket to help bang the other of
@thecoshman I repeat my earlier problem: downed power line.
@thecoshman You're fucking drowning. Do you know how waterboarding works?
Unless you have super strength, but that was not part of the original challenge.
So I'm assuming we're talking about an ordinary human being slowly killed by suffocation through shoving his head in a bucket of water.
waterboarding = drowning
don't care what anyone says
13:34
@EtiennedeMartel Depends on the perspective. Some might say: let nature have it's course. Survival of the fittest most waterproof etc. etc.
i've tried it, haha
it screws you for days
A bucket of water will not save you from waterboarding
@SamDeHaan depends how power line is 'down'
@sehe Again, that wasn't part of the challenge's definition, so I'm assuming the most likely thing: a human being wants to preserve his or her own existence. So dying is a problem.
@EtiennedeMartel Eeck. That sounds scary
13:35
@Pubby it can be used to beat up those who are water-boarding you.
@thecoshman The Merkin meaning is that the line has snapped in some way, and the half of it that's live and moving around on the ground is the problem
@EtiennedeMartel Sorry. In case it wasn't obvious, I'm trolling, just to make it more obvious that this should not be taken seriously. Of course a gazillion of troubles don't go away with or without the help of buckets of water, or indeed, even things resembling that.
The worst is when you can't tell a troll apart from a legitimately bullheaded/uninformed/ignorant person
That's why I said the challenge sucks: it's not even a challenge.
poe's law in full effect
13:37
Fires of Kuwait is a 1992 American documentary film directed by David Douglas. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It solely played in OMNIMAX (now called IMAX dome) theatres. The film was the winner of the 2005 Hall of Fame Award from Giant Screen Cinema Association. See also *Kuwaiti oil fires References External links *
@SamDeHaan for that situation, the bucket cab be upturned and used as a seat untill the power cable is no longer a danger
You should watch that film.
As long as you keep 'pouring' more potential answers on the riddle, I'm tempted to say they aren't good answers. Sometimes I can't help my self
@EtiennedeMartel Then stop answering the challenge :)
@thecoshman That's definitely not a solution to the problem. That's something to do while you wait for a solution to come by.
I can't, it's snark bait waiting to happen.
13:38
@EtiennedeMartel You were there?
No.
I was 3 years old at that time. Even if I wanted to, I wouldn't have been able to.
what is the riddle
@SamDeHaan well, a live power cable would trip if it touched the ground, would it not? thus rendering the problem moot
> Best documentation on the web.
LOL what a joke article.
> Dynamic typing.
That's a reason not to use PHP.
sbi
sbi
Will you cut this stupid bucket-of-water talk? Can't you find something else to waste bandwidth with?!
13:42
@sbi porn? oh sorry, waste bandwidth :P
@thecoshman So, you see a power cable on the ground, you'd consider it a safe situation? You'd go up and touch it?
@sbi One thing you can solve with a bucket of water: wasting time.
@RadekdaknokSlupik "I won’t need experts" There aren't any!
@SamDeHaan I wouldn't consider it my problem
> I won’t need experts
Fuuuck off.
13:45
@thecoshman You asked for a problem. You didn't state that your character in this drama is as a bystander. I assume that it's your problem.
5 pts… Stupid morons.
@RadekdaknokSlupik I like how he talks about weak typing instead.
> The best and brightest are expensive, moody and prone to boredom.
news flash: not everything on the Internet is serious
Fuck that guy.
> PHP is bound directly to HTTP. You can run it in non-HTTP environments but it is built for HTTP.
Oh, since when being able to do only one thing means you're good at it?
13:46
> Tried my hand at C but pointers keep messing me up, even to this day.
@EtiennedeMartel oh I love that argument so much. PHP needs HTTP to be worth while, so if I use HTTP I must have to use PHP
Afraid of pointers, not willing to learn or practice, though still complaining about them.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman I think this only applies to high-voltage cables, and, frankly, the only place I have heard/seen that happening was movies, so it might not even apply to these.
What? Movies unrealistic? You gotta be kidding me.
13:47
Does that mean I'm not getting any flying cars?
C's pointers are much worse than pointers really are
because, y'know, C abuses them like that Austrian guy abused his daughter
If movies weren't realistic, I would have trouble believing that I'm talking to a Robot (@RM)
Hmm what shall I eat today? I'm home alone.
13:49
soup, obviously
Spread cheese?
what kinda tool doesn't eat soup when faced with that scenario?
I was considering soup followed by noodles, actually.
man
Or maybe a pizza.
13:50
@DeadMG One without soup ingredients in the fridge.
I had a dream about getting a nice job
What kind of job?
@sbi well, I don't think high voltage cables are insulated. Normal house old ones are, so are safe to pick up when live, assuming no holes in the insulation
@RadekdaknokSlupik A software job.
13:50
@DeadMG I thought you said a nice job?
@RadekdaknokSlupik Quick backpedalling
@thecoshman Depends on the cable. The ones which are strung between pylons aren't insulated because the air insulates them.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman If you think they are safe, try to apply a bucket of water first.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Anything, as long as there's bacon on it.
@DeadMG those are the ones I was on about
13:51
Diagnostic y u no get emitted!
@thecoshman Well, they're only safe when, y'know, strung in midair. Bad things would probably happen if you completed a circuit between them and the ground
@sbi I'm not suggesting you go hump a mains cable. But the insulation on hous hold mains cables is sufficient that you can hold the live cable. Of course not near the end or when damaged
@DeadMG like, the circuit tripping?
314:42: warning: no bacon left
314:42: note: go to the supermarket and buy bacon to suppress this warning
@thecoshman Probably not before you get fried.
Enough speculation. I suggest one of you goes out and tries it for science.
5
13:54
@RadekdaknokSlupik That's another problem that can't be solved with a bucket of water.
@DeadMG is the cable hitting me as it falls? if so, yes I am getting fried. If not, and I am not near it, I'm perfectly safe
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah. And if anyone dies, I call first dibs on your stuff.
Im feeling hungry all of a sudden.
I hope it wasn't the talk of fried human.
13:55
There is no bacon at my office. /sad
@RadekdaknokSlupik That's an error, not a warning! Blasphemy!
@RMartinhoFernandes Rotfl , nope. Someone said bacon here?
:D
@Neil -Werror
my compiler will emit that on April fools day
13:56
@EtiennedeMartel It's not enough that I can make it that way. It must be an error to ALL who love bacon!
Now everyone's hungry. Muhahahaha.
sbi
sbi
> Advertisement Scheme For Use With Interactive Content (A method for use in advertising, comprising: initiating, through a processor system, playing of interactive content; suspending, through the processor system, playing of the interactive content; displaying an advertisement; and resuming playing of the interactive content.) — a patent Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC
long story short, electricity is not dangerous in and of it self. It's far to well behaved to be dangerous. Yes, it can be used to hurt/kill, but I don't have to worry about it deciding to come up behind me and slit my thoat
Does that mean they have a patent for "showing ads in the middle of games"?
sbi
sbi
13:58
Uh, food porn again.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yep.
fuck sake, the shit you can patents for (patent pending)
@thecoshman Yes, it is.
Oct 4 '11 at 19:14, by R. Martinho Fernandes
> Electricity is like a girl's bottom. You can't see it, but when you touch it, you get zapped.
hmmm
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Only in Merkia, I think.
can't find the ICU function for comparing Unicode strings non-bitwise
13:59
@RMartinhoFernandes well behaved or dangerous?
or do I need to normalize before using?
@DeadMG search harder

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