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user7659542
9:14 AM
rofl since when do companies hire so called "happiness officers"?
 
user7659542
Are they paid per joke they tell at the workplace and per coffee they bring to your desk?
 
the bad puns will continue until morale improves
 
 
2 hours later…
11:07 AM
Today I saw 2 kangaroos fighting. It was far away so the photo is a bit blurry.
 
11:21 AM
Looks like kids fighting for fun. Nothing too serious.
 
12:20 PM
 
Is that the countryside resort?
 
Yes, that's the extension to the shed on the rural land :p
Also the solar panel & the water heater. The water was really hot today.
One of the vege patches.
My day as a peasant & construction worker $ Life is so good :p
 
That's nice
 
user7659542
1:21 PM
@TelKitty christ sake. Your place looks like paradise
 
user7659542
well, depends on how you define paradise though. But it looks very nice!
 
That's neighbour's shed :p The one I live in is unsightly :x
 
user7659542
It is very beautifull, but I think it must be very hot there
 
user7659542
I don't like it when the weather is too hot
 
It's about 28 degrees celsius around noon today. But it's only spring. Have to fix the two air conditioners or it would not be pleasant to be there during summer.
Thus more effort to try to finish the extension and fix most the problems before summer.
 
user7659542
1:27 PM
let s be honnest. In such a paradise, working is the last thing you want to do
 
user7659542
I d probably just lay in the grass and stop doing anything
 
user7659542
For the sake of comparison: I live at a very big crossroad, in the 3 store building where I live there is a cafe and a small grocery store
 
user7659542
on the otherside of the street there is a large supermarket and a butcher
 
user7659542
I can see them from my sleepingroom/living room and kitchen
 
user7659542
and there are buses and trams passing in front of my apartment
 
user7659542
1:29 PM
So that s litteraly the opposite of yours
 
Big city life is painful in a number of ways
 
@traducerad Yeah, do that in a summer evening and get carried away by the mosquitoes.
 
user7659542
@Morwenn but very convenient in others
 
Haha, remember when I used to be active here?
Yea, me neither
(lol)
 
1:46 PM
BTW I do love to live there every now and then, but I prefer to work on something, otherwise it gets boring - no shops or restaurants nearby, no electricity from the grid (there is a solar panel & battery operated system). No town water (but there is about 3 tons of rain water, more if more rain). Also there is no books or TV there.
I am relaxed when I am there, everything is slower - I cook part of meal on a wood stove, there is hot water using the solar panel but I need to put it in a camping shower bag so I can use it.
Things will be better once the extension is complete - so there is permanent toilet and hot shower system. Currently there is only portaloo and portable shower. There will be running water in the sink, not just a tap like it is currently.
 
user7659542
@TelKitty indeed, boredom is one of the main reasons why I live in the city center. But I now realize that you actually need to have the possibility to come at rest where you live.
 
user7659542
The apartment I own is fully oriented to the crossroad, ie no sleepingrooms to the backside of the apartment neither.
 
user7659542
I never realised this untill now, but this is quite stressing in the long run as you are never able to fully relax IMO and come at rest at home
 
user7659542
So at the end of the day to me it turns out it is actually all about balance
 
user7659542
you IMO need to be able to feel well on a day to day basis. For me this is living in the city but eg in that one calm street
 
1:56 PM
@traducerad In Chinese companies are known to hire "cheerleaders" to help motivate primarily male employees (dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-3208366/…). This is awful on so many levels but I'd be pretty pissed off if I was working 996 and some bimbo kept interrupting me.
@traducerad Among the stranger attempts to boost morale is probably corporate team building exercises in Mexico which simulate illegally crossing the US border. businessinsider.com/…
 
Yes, it's very quite at night (and during the day most of the times). I live in a suburban area, so it's not too noisy anyways. But only on the farm do I really feel peace at mind. That's why I love it even though it's much less convenient.
 
James Spring recently reported his experience participating in the event held hundreds of miles from the U.S. border, for the radio show This American Life. He spent hours simulating the nighttime border crossing alongside a group of middle-class Mexican salespeople who participated as a corporate team building exercise.
 
user7659542
@Mikhail well, I disagree with this concept $but not for the same reaons...
 
user7659542
I like having my bimbo, as long as she s not anyone else's bimbo
 
user7659542
she s my personal bimbo
 
user7659542
2:00 PM
xD
 
user7659542
@TelKitty how about job opportunities? I presume there are not that many sw firms in your area
 
user7659542
Oh and my bimbo must be good looking!
 
Err, there is a good chance you will become a farmer if you live in the farming area? :p For suburban area, you just travel to where your employment is, 20-60 minutes travel time each way is normal.
But if you can work remotely, then there is no problem - I got pretty fast internet on that farm :p
 
2:18 PM
@Mikhail I've got some trailing u here and there that I could definitely get rid of
@Mgetz Improving indirect_adapter to sort a collection indirectly, I had a variety of similar-but-different solutions to try
 
@Morwenn Also use of auto :-)
 
What about it?
 
`for (int val: arr) {
std::cout << val << ' ';
}
for (auto val: arr) {
std::cout << val << ' ';
}
:-)
sorry I can't help myself, reshaper C++ gave me autism :-)
 
C'mon it's non-generic example code, where int is shorter x)
 
2:35 PM
Also somebody should make a partially functional sorting library called cpp::sort_of
 
 
5 hours later…
user7659542
7:32 PM
Urgh...
 
user7659542
The struggle of working with non technical clients is deffinitely a thing
 
user7659542
Was requested to write a document describing how to test their software. They never ever tested their software in the last 10 years, ie no unit or integration tests. Straight to system testing.

But in order to write that document I obviously need to find suitable tools to test their software
 
user7659542
Test those tools and make sure it does what is expected before writing those documents.
 
user7659542
Spent a couple of days figuring out how to test their entire assembly code base
 
user7659542
and some minor C code parts
 
user7659542
7:35 PM
Today they are surprised that I spent more than 2-3 days to write those documents...
 
user7659542
"But you were supposed to only write those documents. A day or two should have been enough."
 
user7659542
It's a 15 page long document I had to fill in describing every aspect of the testing.
 
@Mgetz Decided to ask :-)
@traducerad Wow, that sounds like a really fast job for a 15 page document. Overall, what you did could easily take a week.
 
user7659542
7:51 PM
@Mikhail As I did have no prior experience with Assembly, it took +/- 10 days. Well, I can read assembly snippets and dabble a bit of assembly on 8051. But don't know about about software testing specifically for assembly
 
user7659542
neither did I ever have to go through a project of 20k+ lines of Assembly
 
What you did was hard, you should be proud from a technical perspective
On the other hand they may have wanted something else...
Honestly, you should propose rewriting everything a language like C++ :-)
 
user7659542
@Mikhail Thanks, appreciated. I almost felt bad when they told me they expected 2-3 days. I was like "am I being incompetent? Did I really take too long?"
 
Unlikely, the issue may have been they wanted something else for example, just a quick glance
 
user7659542
@Mikhail Hahaha, yhea they have been using their system for more than 20 years now. I think that if I suddenly come up with a suggestion to refactor everything to cpp they ll want to kill me
 
7:55 PM
Hard to say, mostly because refactor everything to CPP is a gig i've done before
 
user7659542
@Mikhail I think, as they are non technical, their understanding was different. They thought I d just have to write some stuff in those documents, ie more of an administrative formality. But writing those docs entails more than it looks like at first sight
 
user7659542
@Mikhail frankly speaking, sounds like fun
 
Its more stress free
 
user7659542
This being said...
 
user7659542
Their system is a safety critical device. Timing is crucial. Which is why they wrote everything in asm to run on a microcontroller (I presume)
 
user7659542
7:57 PM
With cpp there is so much going on in the background that you don't have a full grasp on that aspect
 
user7659542
with assembly WYSIWYG
 
user7659542
On a more funny sidenote, celina powell is one hell of an American chick
 
user7659542
I feel very ashamed, but her interviews (on nojumper) are so entertaining
 
8:57 PM
I don't think there is anything going on in the background with C++, they probably were just a bunch of old people
 
user7659542
@Mikhail eg vectors are based on dynamic memory (re)allocation
 
user7659542
dynamic memory allocation is not deterministic
 
9:15 PM
@traducerad actually... not necessarily
the compiler is actually allowed to elide the allocation if it can figure out the size at compile time
or it's small enough (provably so) that it can treat it as non-dynamic
 
user7659542
9:48 PM
@Mgetz TIL
 
user7659542
those compiler engineers must be some incredibly clever people. Knowing all of a language's peculiarities and loopholes
 

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