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02:15
No room in the house big enough to make the track for training the (toy) car
tarp is like 3.7m x 6m
and it has rained the whole weekend so I can't use the backyard
 
3 hours later…
05:33
marketing vs reality
05:45
Yo. Anybody up to anything fun?
I just finished revising a paper on sperm
making track 4 training car
and taming pet roosters
Anybody got any recent picture of Stephen Johnson?
Yissssss
I was going to optimize the fuck out of this c++ code and then I realized I could just do it in MATLAB on a 76 core machine
Also the curve fitting would be hard in c++
one of them decide to peck on my hair repeatedly while I squatting down to pat them, now I have chicken saliva on my hair
@Mikhail coz u have the same hair style?
that dude is like twice your age, so half the hair is reasonable
&*%*&%$&^!!!
it rained, all the mark I made with chalk on the tarp was washed away
and still have chicken saliva on hair
and a very wet tarp in awning
06:07
Recent file photo
Anyways. You can tell his insane push to do everything on the cpu is because the laptop is MacBook
And hence doesn't have a gpu
Decompiling the 2009 Aliens Vs Predator game in IDA Pro
set a breakpoint but it hits the breakpoint while in fullscreen and I can't get out of it
so Alt+Tab doesn't work and I have to sign out then log back in to see what I'm doing
any ideas guys?
btw: I can't toggle fullscreen in the screen settings
don't run it in full screen or run it in full screen mode while on VMware?
Running it on VMware
interesting idea
running windows 10 so I would need to get the trial version iso
not paying for it :P
there's a tutorial online on how to change the normal ISO that asks for a product key to the trial version in some config file
thank you sir
I can't make the track in the drizzle so I am going for the daily jog.
I don't care getting wet
06:23
figured out a more simple solution
turns out on some games you can force windowed mode by using the key combination Alt+Enter ;)
 
1 hour later…
07:50
Good morning old lounge
@Shoe I may be old, but ... well, okay, I am old. What of it?
Nothing I like old :P
And I meant the platform not the people :)
@Shoe This is not a platform. If you weren't as blind as I am, you'd realize it's a walker with mounted oxygen bottle.
That's depressing
@Shoe There are differences in viewpoint. When I was a kid, one of my friends asked me if my dad hated being a wheelchair. I'd never thought about it, so I asked him. He replied that no, quite the contrary. When he was young, his parents couldn't afford a wheelchair, so he had almost no mobility at all. The wheelchair improved his mobility immensely.
08:14
@Shoe So anyway, how have you been lately?
@JerryCoffin Finished uni last december, now finally working as a programmer in a ~20 year old company and ~20 year old codebase.
Let's just say that in my humble opinion there's so much that can be improved.
@Shoe At least it's not 30 years old! :-) But yeah, I can see where there would probably be plenty of room for improvement...
He he, yeah
How about you?
@Shoe My employer is scheduled to cease operation on the 25th of this month, so I've been interviewing a lot. What's truly depressing is the state of recruiting and such. One recruiter especially seems intent on just sending me every job opening imaginable--and a few I wouldn't have imagined.
Their most recent email lists 5 jobs they claim match my profile: 1) "Earn cash taking surveys" 2) Take out service support, 3) Client Service Manager, 4) Customer Service Dispatcher, and 5) Pool Bartender (seasonal part time).
The heck?
08:21
No, I didn't make any of those up.
I wonder what's in "your profile" if those are matches
I'm starting to think my profile basically says: "We're about 60% sure he's not a zombie, so at least you don't have to worry about him going berserk and eating people's brains."
How long have you been working in your current job?
@Shoe Just over 4 years.
It seems like you liked it there, I'm sorry.
08:25
@Shoe The coding aspects have been pretty cool--no 20 year old code bases; almost all brand new code. Management...not really so much. Oh well, interviews have been pretty promising though...
Don't get me wrong: management hasn't been all bad either--just a lot more variable.
I bet. With all those years of experience and you being you they should lay down a red carpet everywhere you interview :P
This is California. The carpets are pink, not red! :-)
I'm not sure I get the reference
@Shoe Just very heavy on feminism and other forms of political correctness. Particularly noticeable when you've read about how equal-opportunity every employer is for the 300th time...
Oh right
08:34
I guess I shouldn't complain though. Years ago I went to the holocaust museum in Washington DC. Among other things, they had a display trying to point out that the German anti-Semitic stance wasn't really all that strange at the time. They had a page of job ads from the New York Times, shortly before WW II. Lots of ads read almost like personal ads. "Wanted: pretty blonde girl 20-23 to answer the phone. No Irish, jews, or wops."
At the time, that apparently wasn't seen as particularly racist at all though. Kind of hard to imagine any more.
Eh, yeah
What if they needed somebody with that look?
...to answer the phone.
Indeed, no clear how you can tell wop or not from a phone call
@JerryCoffin Is KnuEdge going down?
@Mikhail ...and keep in mind, this wasn't a single isolate ad. Entire pages of this stuff. Simple fact is 1) unemployment was high, and 2) there was no law to prevent it--so business owners were basically free to choose whoever they felt like.
@Mikhail Definitely looking that way, anyhow.
08:42
@JerryCoffin go work for Cray
There is a wikihow to for part of my research: wikihow.com/…
@Mikhail Cray has an office in La Jolla (near where I currently work) but zero current openings there. Only one opening in California at all, and that's for an intern.
Better get your Tinder profile ready for the job search
@Mikhail Maybe not. I've worked with some really good people at KnuEdge, a fair number of whom have already moved to other jobs, and are now soliciting me to come work with them...
Yeah, you're SO rep and chat history show you know "what's up"
My current dilemma is the old one: do I take a job at a startup that pays kind of poorly now, but includes stock that might be worth a lot soon, or do I opt for more pay now, but little chance of actually getting rich, regardless of how well the company does?
08:54
Seems like you're doing something wrong because the "sell out" route should include a raise up the career hierarchy
Personally, as somebody who has gone the startup route, I can't fucking go back to pleb tier work. But it has come at somewhat of a personal cost.
Idk, is D-Wave still hiring? I assume they are a real company since when I spoke with them in 2012.
@Mikhail They don't have an office local to me, and with 4 kids in school I'm resistant to moving (I know--a pretty serious handicap in high-tech unless you live in the bay area).
Indeed. Most people would have amalgamated their children into a more manageable clump.
@JerryCoffin Well I think the useful guideline here is, as usual, don't gamble money you can't afford to lose.
:42513371 auto *kid = new kid(mom, dad);
if everything would be fine if the startup went tits up and the stock worth nothing, then sounds like it would be an interesting thing to take the startup job
09:01
@Puppy I tend to agree--but my wife not so much.
well I think in this case afford includes affording the relationship problems with your wife ;p
wait, I thought you got a divorce?
You need to play on her most banal qualities, and tell you're going to make a shite ton of money working at the startup.
@Puppy No. It's been close a few times, but we're still together.
nice
in that case I might recommend taking the safe job ;p
@Mikhail She's well enough informed to have at least some reasonable idea of the risks involved.
09:03
From prior experience :-)
@Mikhail Well, now that you mention it, yes--I do have a few tens of thousands of options in KnuEdge that almost certainly will never have any value...
Well as Douglas Adams noted, we create our own obstacles. Problem with engineers is that we learn, grow, when we create those obstacles. Fuck rationality.
@Mikhail So do I take a job with Insulet or GigaIO, or possibly a military contractor that would pay even more and wouldn't even allow me to work more than 40 hours/week? That's my question in more concrete terms.
Whats the status of Insulet's FDA approval, etc?
@Mikhail I guess maybe I'm just too old, but I can't remember seeing many goths I found very attractive.
@Mikhail Pump itself has been approved and in use for ~10 years. They have some new things they can't talk to me about much without an NDA that are in approval process.
09:14
Anyhow, it's after 2 AM. I guess I'd better get to bed. Later all!
@JerryCoffin Wow, those two choices are very different. I don't know because I can't do technical diligence on these companies. Companies that have an FDA approved product and customers are really stable, rarely do any work, and often don't have growth opportunities.
@JerryCoffin You're going to show up to work, and if you do anything, they will get pissed off.
@Mikhail Yeah, they just happen to be where two of my former coworkers ended up, and they've both been pushing to recruit me.
@Mikhail Although they can't tell me many details, they've been pretty clear that they are developing something new and (at least somewhat) different. From what they're saying, FDA approval is particularly long and drawn out because it's something nobody's even tried to get approved before (but exactly what it is or how it differs, I'm uncertain).
For devices its pretty easy, but takes a long time. Typically you're team is burning cash during that time, for more than half a decade.Everybody gets paid, and nobody is doing very much.
@Mikhail I dunno--my friend seems to be putting in a fair number of hours, but I'm not sure how much is real work, and how much just required to show up N hours/week. On the other hand, they are hiring, and plan to ~double team size this summer.
Anyway, almost 2:30 now. I really do need to get to bed.
09:26
peace
Good (night|morning|afternoon|evening) all.
09:43
Medicine is a weird discipline ... most of the things medicine can cure, human body is able to do that itself. Most of the things human bodies can not cure - HIV, cancer etc, medicine can not do anything either.
09:56
And often, a medicine is developed for one thing ... and ends up being used to cure something else
Everything you wrote is wrong.
please explain?
Antibiotics can cure bacteria when the human body can't. HIV can be kept in check with only drugs. Struggling to find modern drugs that were developed for one thing but found a use for something else.
humans can not recover from bacterial caused flu or infection??
that's new </sarcasm>
Medical fields are weird because everyone is a lying scum bag, and the tech might be impossible but the market is guaranteed. Contrast with sass where the tech is easy but there is no market.
@TelKitty not without great difficulty, this is how people used to die. Perhaps half of infants didn't reach adult hood.
10:07
but even smallpox only had fatality rate of 30%
human body can cure itself
I stand correct
Not once the infection has progressed past a certain point.
but it's still fighting against it up until death
@Mikhail if the infection did not everyone else around then you should blame it on the immune system of the defeated person instead
Hard to say. In the case of an open wound the body will seal of a part. Antibiotics can actually target the bacteria when the active immune system has given up.
Not to mention HIV and PrEP
Anyways modern medicine does a lot of stuff the body can't
not everyone dies from HIV
10:15
like removing a gangrenous infection
@TelKitty Actually everybody dies when not treated. Like the one time somebody had hiv and didn't a decade later it was a major news story.
I am not saying medicine is not helpful, it is
but it's more of a facilitator
eventually you expect your body to heal itself
of course there are medical equipment that can do more
No... Your body is not going to heal itself of the hiv virus.
but no can any medicine, prevention is not cure
Modern medicine destroys the stuff that's killing you when your body isn't able to.
10:20
like?
Hiv and herpies treatment actively inhibit the systhesis of viral transcription factors. Antibiotics break bacterial cells walls.
Modern treatments are to open lesions and apply topical antibiotics while the natural immune response is to give up and seal the area off.
Also vaccines force your body to produce antibodies it would not produce otherwise.
see above, prevention is not cure
still acting as a facilitator
No
You can't cure hiv or herpes because you'd need to kill the cells. You can block the virus from replicating which is what's done.
At the end of the day modern medicine is successful precisely because it does what your body can't or doesn't normally do.
10:32
yes, modern medicine is successful and useful ... but only as a facilitator - give you a 110 year old person whose body is old and run down, medicine would not be as useful
nwp
nwp
How is that even an argument? That's like saying "Cars are nice and all, but when we have personal space ships they are not as useful".
Visual Studio and/or Unreal Engine are slowly killing my soul. Send help.
we will send you some FDA unproved medicine to help out
Much appreciated.
there might be unknown side effects
10:37
Seems much the same as having to use UE at this point
nwp
nwp
Obviously you need to make your own IDE and game engine.
It is clearly not designed for someone who understands programming in the slightest, somehow it's inordinately difficult to do basic things
@nwp I mean /I/ probably would, but the rest of my Final Year Project team would have kittens
nwp
nwp
To be fair, having an IDE and game engine vs having kittens is a tough choice.
Fair xD
I would rather have kittens than doing something that's slowly killing my soul too, but that's just me
10:40
I'm going to gradually try and convince them to consider trying some open source freely licensed engine instead (since I'm the only one that has managed to even /create/ a C++ project in unreal so far anyway, how much can they really argue?)
probably godot
looks like you are going to end up doing 80%-90% of the whole project
that was always inevitable
As long as I'm not doing the graphics assets, it was always inevitable
Unfortunately we can't just use unity or such because the project has a commercial client and Unity aint cheap
All I really ask, is that I don't have to do the graphics assets and fiddly/precision positioning of game entities/paths
But I mean, have you had a positive experience with unreal?
 
5 hours later…
15:32
@Mikhail Viagra was originally used for dealing with circulatory problems (and is still useful for that as well as ED). Of course, you can make a perfectly good case that this is because ED is a circulatory problem, but most people don't think of it that way.
16:21
Is it just me or am I the only person I know that prefers CodeBlocks over VS?
my personal laptop has Windows 10 and I use CB 90% of the time bc I prefer it's minimalist style
besides, when I make programs for my own hobbies or fun they usually don't have a GUI. like developing dll's and rn I'm working on a hand-made library for SSL/TLS
however I have to say I would use VS for anything GUI related bc frankly CB is a pain in the ass in that regard. It has wx for making GUI but I don't like its interface
 
1 hour later…
17:33
@JerryCoffin Amitriptyline is an antidepressant but is also beneficial for IBS.
18:25
@EdwardSeverinsen Yes because codeblocks does less than msvc
@Mikhail Indeed it does. Sounds counter intuitive but that's what I like about it.
18:47
I like the smallish things added by the Ranges TS
19:53
Who's Barney Starsoup? :)
Brandy Stormtrooper
20:41
@StackedCrooked A friend of Hurt Supper
nwp
nwp
21:25
@fredoverflow That's the trump of programming. It makes me angry listening to that guy and knowing that people believe what he says.
@nwp Have any interesting videos by other speakers regarding C++?
nwp
nwp
@Annabelle Sure, there are plenty.
Cool!
Thank you.
22:06
@fredoverflow At first I thought the person made a game, then I noticed something else on the screen.
22:20
@nwp at least Casey has a core message that makes sense; understand how what you are programming works and cut through the library cruft when appropriate.
nwp
nwp
If only he would understand the merit of abstractions.
though he is a bit extreme in that. He recently did a stream where he wanted an "ISA" back to the hardware. He actually meant a kernel interface that wasn't so bogged down by decades of backwards compatibility requirements.
in his ideal world every program would have full access to the hardware and alt tab is instead a reboot to program, killing the previous one
nwp
nwp
People did that for a while, minus the alt-tab reboot nonsense. A lot of progress was made when they stopped doing that somewhere around the 70s.
Arguably it was much earlier than that, but I suck at dates.
22:42
wasn't that the DOS days (sometime in the 90's) where the transition away from full access happened
nwp
nwp
I thought it was PDP11 days when people got annoyed that their printouts got screwed up because of multiple programs trying to control the printer and thus deciding that programs may not access the printer and have to instead use a certain printer function that does proper serializing.
But I guess different systems did that at different times.
People knew it was a good idea, but it wasn't until the early 90s that hardware enforced virtualization became affordable
you need the MMU for that to work in the face of incompetent and adversarial programs
Yeah, and even if you had that I think classic apple OS's famously screwed their implementation up
Some applications, such as scanning programs or hard disk formatters, need to call the SCSI or ATA Managers directly. These applications must take special care when VM is enabled. For example, if such an application was to grab exclusive access to the SCSI bus and then take a page fault, VM would be unable to swap in the new page, making the page fault fatal.
^ legacy compatibility at its finest, although I can understand Apple in the sense that they couldn't afford to loose their eco system
23:02
See also stackoverflow.com/questions/19663336/…. Or: imgur.com/a/BZP7jsB - That took me ~45 minutes to create. And people wonder why I prefer the command line. — sehe 34 secs ago
@Mikhail Curing bacteria. That's dedication to detail
23:28
Freaking annoyed, citibank got balance wrong again. A bank that can not do simple arithmetics ...
all caused by a problem with another bank and their equally shitty IT system that caused 3 days delay in the transaction.
23:56
@Mikhail Do you encounter this a lot when reading academic papers?
in Maid Café (メイド喫茶) on The Stack Exchange Network Chat, 1 min ago, by Mysticial
Read the intro, scroll through 5 pages explaining a concept that everybody should already know. Find maybe 1 or 2 paragraphs of actual content. Then 3 more pages of benchmarks. A 1 page conclusion saying how they didn't really accomplish anything. And then 4 pages of citations.
Oh and I forgot: 3 or 4 pages trying to distinguish themselves from a dozen other papers doing the same thing. All of which are used to pad the citations section.

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