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01:02
Fuck, I'm so bored between recompiles and I think they'd send me to jail if they saw the memes I was making
01:15
It may be true that when chickens are outlawed only outlaws will have chickens
Now the Stillwater resident is raising her voice and fighting for the birds she considers beloved pets and a source of emotional support. Wood says chickens were the answer for her because she suffers from anxiety but is allergic to more common species of emotional support animals like cats and dogs.
Owning the 'wrong' pets might make you a criminal.
02:16
My PC tower is making weird sound, but every time I open the case and do some testing with the fans, the sound stops. Close the case, the sound will resume on next startup.
03:04
@Mikhail I just completed another version of our coffe pause brain teaser. That was quite fun. That was GTK though.
03:33
@TelKitty bad fan bearing? try lubrication as temporary fix, but is probably worn (?). a cyclical sound, electric hum, or rattle?
03:46
Loud continuous sound, as if fan is touching something. Temporary fix would be open the box, touching all the fans. Sound would disappear until trying to start the machine next morning.
04:36
Can someone suggest some powerful single board computer that's small in size?
04:56
So, whats a good way to display a number in Qt that can be more than 2^31, maybe subclassing a label or something like that?
 
3 hours later…
07:26
Didn't have the machine booted up at the time to grab this screenie when you posed that.
The 3 GB/s write is actually not sustainable. When the SSD is mostly empty (as is the case here), the controller uses all that free space as an SLC cache. Only when the SSD is idle or out of cache does it properly flush it into MLC.
But that can only happen if the SSD is full or you're sustaining more than its capacity of writes.
08:03
Yeah, in the literature its called the SSD write cliff:flashdba.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/…
Somehow the linked figure confuses latency with throughput, but I suspect the throughput also goes down in proportion to the latency (as there are less IOPS)
Your drive is 1/300 of the array I linked :-)
If I was using an adaptec 8805 the 4KiB Q8T8 would be around 150, which is not great but won't destroy the system when doing OS tasks like writing thumbnails. AKA I should have spent an extra few hundred on a $13k system.
 
4 hours later…
12:06
@Mysticial Crystal Disk mark Weeb edition?
 
5 hours later…
17:28
@Mikhail Probably also at like 1/300 of the cost. :)
@Mgetz It's right there in the title.
17:55
Is there any way to fetch rows while still executing in ODBC?
18:40
is the term weeb reserved for non-Asians or non-Japanese? Like can a Korean be a weeb?
 
1 hour later…
19:49
Unlike, "gamer", the term "weeb" doesn't refer to a race
Have a stack overflow due to a typo, open stack frame viewer in MSVC, MSVC crashes
@Mikhail so what does "weeb" mean?
interesting, so it's an unhealthy obsession with Japanese culture
Doki Doki Literature Club! is a 2017 American visual novel developed by Team Salvato for Microsoft Windows, macOS, and Linux. The game was initially distributed through itch.io, and later became available on Steam. The story follows a male high school student who joins the school's literature club and interacts with its four female members. The game features a mostly linear story, with some alternative scenes and endings depending on the choices the player makes. While the game appears at first glance to be a lighthearted dating simulator, it is in fact a metafictional psychological horror game...
anime makes me cringe sometimes.
20:05
I enjoy reading the summaries on Wikipedia, this makes me an extremely irritating person to hang out with.
irritating because you talk about the Wikipedia summaries?
On an unrelated note, how the fuck do I outsource my job and not tell my employer? Theres gotta be somebody in Elbonia that can do this job for half the pay.
go online and make solicitations, hire someone and follow up with them on a weekly basis or whatever
Okay where do I got online for that?
I'm not sure if Craigslist or Tinder is the best place to find a qt coder.
I don't like the implications behind that
20:17
you can probably hire a whole team on like half your salary
At 70%, this was my plan but I couldn't find any :-(
@cs95 the implication being that people will work for less
yeah, that's not better
We should give up the farce and pay people in proportion to their weight in kilograms
yeah, it's not better. but neither is trying to outsource your work to a third party
@Mikhail you know when you outsource the work you lose the skill that you would have gained by doing the work.
20:24
There is nothing wrong with trying to give the poor and abused folks folks in the 3rd world a chance to contribute to the American dream
economics is complicated, I'm not going to pretend to have an opinion on it.
but I did watch some anime recently and despite the initial cringe factor turned out to be a really cool story It's called Kakegurui
it's about a school where you have to gamble for good grades.
Our zipcode based system is so much more orderly
Also by the central limit theorem, wouldn't they all get the same grade?
no elite weigh the odds in their favor by cheating, they establish hierarchies of oppression
then some alien entity comes along and upends the establish order
@Mikhail Seems quite reasonable to me. I can almost hear the conversation with my wife already: "Jerry! Why are you eating junk food again!" "I thought you'd like a new car dear..."
20:41
I never really understood the whole argument for not having VLAs in C++ seeing that C has it
I feel we have somewhat digressed from the initial theme of the room, so lets post some C++ memes
20:59
@Rick I think the primary argument is that there's simply not much need or even use for them. If you want to avoid dynamic allocation overhead, you can use std::vector with a stack_allocator.
You both are wrong
191
A: Why aren't variable-length arrays part of the C++ standard?

Quuxplusone(Background: I have some experience implementing C and C++ compilers.) Variable-length arrays in C99 were basically a misstep. In order to support VLAs, C99 had to make the following concessions to common sense: sizeof x is no longer always a compile-time constant; the compiler must sometimes ...

21:14
so this is the implementation I should be using
template <class T, std::size_t BufSize = 200>
using SmallVector = std::vector<T, short_alloc<T, BufSize, alignof(T)>>;
to avoid dynamic allocation and promote tight constraints
boost::static_vector
or std::array
std::array pads I think
Are you trying to avoid class padding, if so consider seppuku
21:34
This is worse than seppuku if they are going to pad then pad so we can make use of the the padding. However, if not then at least let us define tight constraints. As it stands we are in no man's land. One is undefined behavior and the other is a loss of control. I want the freedom to fuck up.
22:07
William Wallace would be turning in his grave
22:20
@Rick std::array is basically a (very thin) wrapper around a built-in array. It does no padding that a built-in array wouldn't (which is to say, none between elements, though if your element has struct/class type, it may have some internal padding).

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