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16:08
I lolled @
You don't even know basic security, dummy <3. — bob bob 2 mins ago
followed by this in my inbox
> Name: '
> Emailaddress: [email protected]
> Subject: '

> '
> Name: '
> Emailaddress: <script>alert(1)</scrip>
> Subject: dsdas

> dasds
Ow noes. I am 1337 hackxored!!!!!
Do you think we should explain to him a contact form is to send a message, and so it's a normal feature to let people to send messages?
hehehe :)
That remembers me Wikipedia in 2005. Sometimes, some people came and explained to us there were a security hole on the site, as they were able to edit content.
lol!
I'm pretty sure he thinks he also hacked SO by posting a "question" :D
@Gordon I think somebody should make it clear to bob bob how SO works. Or how interacting with other people in general works
16:26
@HamZa \o
@AmalMurali ?
nothing. just saying hi :P
@AmalMurali Ah ok, just turned on my pc ...
> I'm going to fuck you up kid
I didn't realize SO was a dating site??
aww
oh.. that comment got deleted...
16:29
@PeeHaa done
graci
@igorw exactly
@PeeHaa It will be once he learns how to curl.
@LeviMorrison I really want to compile a list of every conference a contributor with voting access has gone to in the past 5 years. And show who goes to conferences (and hence interacts with the community), and who doesn't. Not a sure-fire indicator, but I can only think of about 3 or 4 contributors who are routinely at conferences...
16:33
-5
A: PHP Function to Add 'http://www.' to Strings

hakre Does anyone know how I can modify my script to cater for this? Yes, me. You need to check for that and then deal with the case as well, as you did already for the case you deal with. I normally suggest the NetUrl2 class for URL handling as it makes such tasks extremely easy.

I'm going to delete this
go for it :)
oops.your.function.broke.comDoorknob 1 hour ago
(under the question)
This question appears to be off-topic because it is about "it doesn't work" — PeeHaa 42 mins ago
@PeeHaa You should have said
> This question appears to be off-topic because "it doesn't work"
@BoltClock: Revise your delete please content changed.
16:37
@hakre Oh alright. Didn't realize you were updating it
and op actually is concerned about the www. because that triggers wordpress link highlighting.
it's just no-one of the other clever-boys knows that.
@BoltClock Yeah might be, but I'm afraid OP wants to date rape me if I ever interact with him again :P
@PeeHaa :O
BTW it's funny to use google analytics to see your site getting "hacked" in real time :P
    function __construct() {
        global $core;
        $emulator = $core->getStaticVar('settings')->sql->emulator;
        $server_file = $core::getPath('servers') . $emulator . '.php';
        require $server_file;

        $this->server = new $emulator;
    }
How many mistakes can one make in 5 LOC
16:43
@Gordon Looks like an attempt of WP to go OOP :P
@Gordon oh, cake looks handsome again.
It's a pitty all these kids have passed the superstatic times.
> @Gordon What MySQL class does not have anything todo with this error message. And variables are filtered before it's executed! Don't worry.
I like the "Don't worry" to finish it off :)
I give up on coding this weekend. I'm just too stupid. I have to again throw out the code I have written.
well, you complain about that? for me it's the normal procedure. I sometimes have the feeling that if I don't throw away the code something is actually wrong.
Yeah for me the same. But it's now for the second time in a row that I think I have finally thought of a super awesome solution for my problem. Only to find out the solution sucks and I am stuck again. I think I need to go out for a beer for a moment..
16:59
something which didn't compute earlier today for me:
What's a good PHP framework that fits the following?

- Very non-opinionated, and is flexible with different styles of coding
- No composer, has a ready to deploy folder structure (archive etc.)
- Redis/MongoDB support out of the box (wrappers etc.)
- Minimal memory footprint and solid performance
Yours.
@ink.robot Have you experienced yourself with "vanilla" PHP before trying frameworks?
Yes, quite a bit.
If you have custom requirements and would like to use them for several sites, start a site from scratch, you'll end with something very similar to a framework.
Test in on another site.
17:10
The app requirements have grown over time, so we'd have to do a fair bit of porting to this new framework.
Out team is very used to Spring MVC, and would like something similar.
If it still works, release it and congratulations you provided a new useful Redis/MongoDB/miniam footprint/etc. framework.
Clean layers and separation, and almost no restrictions on how we code the layers.
@ink.robot springs is not a php framework
I said we would like something SIMILAR. Of course spring in not a PHP framework, and where did I claim that?
also, your requirements pretty much demand an in-house framework
and no php framework will be similar to springs
you have a bunch of Java devs , so stick to java
17:19
I wish I could tell our clients that - "...let's do it in Java....". We don't have that luxury.
then you need a different client, because you have no resources .. at least that's the impressions that I got
you cannot plop down Java developers in front of PHP and expect them magically to be good at it
Don't mean to sound rude, but instead of commenting on what I should and should not and going into the philosophical aspects of it all, I'd really appreciate it if you could stick to answering the questions - which you already have, by stating that we'd need to write our own framework. If that sums it up, you could stop this incessant advice session which is uncalled for?
@ink.robot out of curiosity, why does the client have a say in the technical solution?
17:24
Existing apps are all in PHP for this particular client.
They don't have a java architecture to begin with
@ink.robot would running them on Quercus be an option?
0
Q: Third party API off-topic?

phwdI recently stumbled across a question although poorly written as well as lack of detail, is borderline on-topic, though from a response given by an 80K user I am unsure whether it is on-topic anymore Yes, and the vendor of the API - if intended to be used with PHP - should have given that to ...

> though from a response given by an 80K user
guess who
@Gordon Could be, but translation layers would follow the same rules of leaky abstractions, wouldn't they? I don't mean to judge, but I'd be somewhat apprehensive of translations happening at the language level.
However, worth a look.
17:26
@BoltClock hmm, guilty. And yes, the comment was quickly typed.
@Gordon
@Gordon Hey, very interesting indeed - I think we might have something here - dropping off to play with this for a while.
@ink.robot the current darlings at PHP Conferences in terms of frameworks are Symfony2 and ZF2. Along with Doctrine2 for a Hibernate like ORM (incl. MongoDB support). I don't think they meet your stated requirements as much as a custom tailored approach would do though. An option would be to use just use selected components of these frameworks and build the remaining stuff by hand.
-1 This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful (click again to undo) — hakre 2 mins ago
click again to undo? :D
@Gordon Symfony2 is an impressive framework indeed, but ZF2 I've no idea - I heard people complain about its performance, although anecdotal mentions lack any sort of validity.
@AmalMurali I copy that reason from the title. It's just from the voting button.
17:30
@ink.robot given you have capable devs, both sf2 and zf2 will not have the same performance as a custom tailored approach will have. but the question is, are they fast enough for your needs. I mean, even if they are slower, it doesnt mean they are too slow.
@Gordon I would assume SF2 would likely meet the perf requirements. Our client (e-commerce) claims a customer base of around 40,000 registered and active users which is growing rapidly. We've got a fairly good stats on concurrent connections averages and other load statistics for one of their main webapps. since this newapp will automatically start with the entire existing userbase, we know what we want from the code we will write.
@ink.robot 40000 can be handled by any fw
framework is not magic dust
you you have developers that are good at writing php applications ?
@tereško Thank you for all your advice. I'm pretty sure I
'd not be able to meet whatever you are suggesting
are any of them proficient at some php framework ?
17:36
because of many constraints.
Now that was really offending me. — hakre 7 secs ago
Stupid geek do not be suprised if you do not fuck with girls — user2206906 3 mins ago
Sounds familiar
@ink.robot 40k shouldnt pose a problem. fwiw, youporn is using Sf2 and I am sure they have many more load to handle (pun intended)
@BoltClock hmmmmm
17:38
@Gordon Lol@youporn, but seriously, they have more traffic and load than this client of ours will ever hope to have. Thanks for the help Gordon, time to put SF2 to the test.
and ZF as well.
@ink.robot you can also use them together btw.
it's food time people!
29 mins ago, by ink.robot
Out team is very used to Spring MVC, and would like something similar.
Now what do I order? :P
@PeeHaa Where are you?
17:40
@PeeHaa tru dat .. I'm gonna make an omelet
@BoltClock Netherlands
@PeeHaa Ah
@ink.robot you might also want to consider Flow3. It was heralded as PHP's answer to Spring. However, I didn't see it get much attention afterwards. Oh, and there is code.google.com/p/springphp but I've never heard of it before and doubt it has any usefulness.
@ircmaxell Can you give me an example where $this->foo() != static::foo() (in a context with a $this is available)
For some reason I'm too stupid to find an example for it
@alex you have to add -lynx-opacity: 0.5. Also, make sure you adjust the volume level of the background image to 50% in the aural stylesheet (div{volume:50%}) for best accessibility of screen-reader users. — Camilo Martin Sep 1 '12 at 14:34
17:59
wat
(Fun fact: no implementations of aural stylesheets actually exist)
@NikiC doesn't seem like that can happen ...
18:17
why does everybody a lot people on the internals want that php syntax is not too far away from perl and py? ._.
Because they all start with the letter P
monrings
@PeeHaa I recommend garlic and cheese in some format
garlic + cheese = savoury deliciousness
18:34
@DaveRandom Howdy
@BoltClock Would that make them the... pilluminati?
Thank you, thank you. I'm here all night
18:51
@JoeWatkins It seems so, but I don't get why. lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_TRUNK/Zend/zend_vm_def.h#2516 looks like I should be able to get any CE to be the called_scope
user895378
19:08
Lol@JoeWatkins and @ircmaxell the funny thing is I wasn't calling anyone out or trying to be antagonistic ... I was just honestly frustrated by all the people on the list who throw up roadblocks to progress at every time useful features are proposed.
All 9,866,539 buildings in the Netherlands, shaded according to year of construction. Super cool. http://dev.citysdk.waag.org/buildings/#53.2418,6.5877,11
@PeeHaa ^
@NikiC or @ircmaxell can you give me a tl;dr of the current state of discussion about the RFCs?
@NikiC hmmm...
@rdlowrey completely understood
@NikiC not off hand
@Gordon Some trouble makers are making trouble, and there's not a hell of a lot of people sticking up for either of the 2 controversial RFCs on list...
@ircmaxell what are the general objections against them?
19:24
stupid ones
example: We don't need function autoloading, because you can use static methods instead
Or: OMG, we can't withstand the performance hit (hint: the current patch has NO performance hit for existing code)
Or for splat: Nobody needs that, it's too hard to read.
or for function autoloading: Nobody uses namespaced functions anyway
@ircmaxell I must admit that I am not entirely sure why we need function or constant autoloading, but that's mostly because I don't use global functions or global constants
@ircmaxell thats something you could probably prove with a quick benchmark then
Is that a reason to not include it in the language though?
@Gordon I have, people ignore that fact
@ircmaxell I agree that ... is ugly and harder to read than * and think it's a mistake to dictate the syntax instead of making it a result of a discussion
@ircmaxell I also somewhat agree that not many people need that. Or rather, I can think of features that would yield more benefit
@ircmaxell that's cleary nonsense
@Gordon have you ever used call_user_func_array?
can anybody help me with mindbody online API ?
i cant access there fields
19:31
function autloading, this was posted earlier today:
> As I already asked, tell us about realworld use case, for example where this could improve say big projects like Symfony or ZF.
@ircmaxell well, you know what they say about perfection. it's what you can add but what you can reasonably leave out. I am not sure we cannot reasonably leave it out but I dont have objections including it.
@ircmaxell yes, and I never found it to be problematic with what's currently available
@teresko : i need help in understanding the API
@Gordon I think if you want to go that way, splat is a whole hell of a lot more useful than levinstein
19:33
can you help me please
@Divyanshunegi then read the documentation
@ircmaxell that commentor clearly lacks perspective
@Gordon except that it's slow as crap?
@Gordon Couldn't disagree more. It may just be sugar but cufa is so clunky.
@ircmaxell thats for sure, but levenshtein is already in there :)
19:34
@teresko , i have read it , i have even implemented the code at my server , it works for the sandbox siteID but not for other
@Gordon my point being if you're going to start playing the perfection card, let's add the completeness operators (splat and variadics), and then start cutting cruft
@ircmaxell slow only matters in the full context and so far it didnt matter in the projects I had. also, I am sure you can somehow improve how it works, right?
@Gordon No. It's slow because it requires multiple function calls.
17
A: Calling a function with explicit parameters vs. call_user_func_array()

ircmaxellThe reason is that there is overhead on call_user_func_array. It has the overhead of an additional function call. Typically this is in the range of microseconds, but it can become important in two cases: Recursive Function Calls Since it's adding another call to the stack, it will double the...

@ircmaxell but still, it only matters when it matters
@Gordon which is often enough not to be ignored
19:36
@ircmaxell not from my experience but I accept that it might from yours
@Gordon depends also… in critical situations one might just use another approach then call_user_func_array (e.g. rewrite a method to accept arrays etc.) and you notice no problems.
I guess where I am standing here is that while these additions might be useful, they address very minor things IMO. There is lots of room for improvements that would make a bigger impact. For instance my suggestion with the auto assigning ctors would offer me much more benefit than any of the 3 rfcs combined because I write ctors all the time.
but really… do most PHP devs make benchmarks? or rewrite it if they don't notice a really slow thing?
@Gordon the problem is often: the bigger the impact of one change is, the lesser votes will be there…
@bwoebi I don't make benchmarks in in-development process.
I benchmark after a unit is done.
19:47
@bwoebi but that's only because internals is a toxic kindergarden with no healthy discussion culture
@Gordon None of that is grounds for rejecting well-intentioned contributions. This will sound a lot more arsey than it's meant to but... if you want that, write a patch for it. I've been making a concerted effort to stop bitching about things and learn how to fix them instead.
@DaveRandom well, it is arsey. It's like throwing someone who cant swim from a cliff and tell him to swim
@Gordon Tell him to swim after you through him off the cliff.
My C skills are about as good as my Spanish skills.
@DaveRandom this is how you are supposed to go about an RFC: blogs.oracle.com/opal/entry/the_mysterious_php_rfc_process
and this step makes it virtually impossible for anyone not familiar with C let alone PHP's C:
> There are many really good ideas for improving PHP, however some of them are really tedious or technically risky or hard. If you are about to email the "internals" mail list saying "someone should do ...", then don't hit "Send". Work out how you could do it, and then send a patch.
and that's just stupid
Someone with no C knowledge whatsoever cannot judge whether it's hard to implement a good idea
@Gordon Yeh I know, that's not really how I meant it, it's more that I see a lot of things proposed and then a lot of other people say "I'll never use that" and nothing happens. That's just not a solid argument. The very fact that someone bothered to propose it and write patch means that someone will use it. And no, that doesn't mean that every proposal should make it in, but it does mean that every proposal should considered on its general merit.
@Gordon Yeh that is stupid in the opposite direction. I'm not really suggesting that you go and spend the hundreds of hours on creating it.
It seems like there are hundreds of people playing for a team of one here, and little-to-no desire to work together
19:59
@Gordon The flaw in the logic is that not doing these proposals would lead to other proposals with more impact. That's not so. Common misconception, because many people don't understand that PHP development is 100% voluntary. So there is no "allotted time" that is shared between all features, so that dropping one would give time for another.
@Gordon Also, I'd do your ctor proposal (not hard to implement after all), but a) I have not yet seen a suggestion with a syntax I like and b) I'm fairly confident that it will be declined. I don't like to waste time on writing proposals that I'm pretty sure will not go in.
@NikiC there is no flaw. it's about perspective and value. I consider the variadic RFCs to be low business value
In particular, I can tell you with 150% confidence that your suggestion of using function __construct($foo, $bar); will not be accepted
@NikiC What's that?
Honestly I think that while there are plenty of things the PHP language needs to take out before it should start including new things in. Also, I think that more serious alternatives to the SAPI should be developed.
@Gordon What I pointed out is that not doing these RFCs does not increase chances to have an RFC with more "business value"
20:03
@NikiC that's a flaw then because when I suggested that to my usergroups they were thrilled about the idea. And they are seasoned PHP users. So why is it that the userbase is ignored by internals?
@Gordon That's true of any syntactic sugar, but it's ridiculous to reject things on those grounds when the work has already been done.
@Gordon Because we see it's a bad way to implement it?
@NikiC that's a problem then. there should be some ideas about where PHP is headed and what desirable features are.
@Gordon Yes, it is a problem, but nothing we can do about it. Changing that would require having paid people working full time on PHP in a way that goes for the maximum "business value"
@DaveRandom no. that would mean whenever someones writes a patch AND an RFC we should accept it.
@NikiC how do other OSS communities do that?
20:07
@Gordon No, it means that it should be considered on the merit of whether it adds something potentially useful to somebody to the language. Nothing more, nothing less.
@NikiC you said it's easy to implement so I don't see what's bad about it.
@DaveRandom @Gordon FYI, I think "adds something potentially useful to somebody" is not enough. That way too many things with very small scope could go in. It's needs to be something that is applicable to a larger audience
^^ I was just about to edit to say pretty much that
@BenjaminGruenbaum that's what I mean. All these syntactic sugar things are nice but they dont advance the language that much
I think that variadics/arg unpack are applicable to a larger audience. Every codebase has at least one variadic function. It's not much used, but it's still present all over the place
20:10
@NikiC yes, but these RFCs are exactly that small scope
Obviously if somebody wrote a patch it will be useful to somebody (the patch author, at least), it does need to be useful to a sizeable group of people. But for ex. variadics, I was discussing with somebody in this room, not two days before the RFC was published, something exactly like that.
@NikiC every codebase has tons of ctors (unless its a procedural codebase)
You should start by getting rid of all your global namespace pollution and case in-sensitive constructs, imo. I know that's probably not a very popular opinion though.
@Gordon See, I don't disagree with you, at all. I think your suggestion is useful. If provided in a reasonable syntax ;)
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes, that's daydreaming really ;)
@NikiC public function __construct($foo, $bar); is not unreasonable syntax according to my usergroup and me. And you probably know who is in my usergroup.
20:14
@Gordon eh, I don't know. I never got as many happy responses on twitter as for the variadics proposal. those small things are what counts to many a lot more than some fancy "generators" that they don't understand anyway...
@Gordon no, I don't know. Who is in your usergroup?
@Gordon Sorry, just so I'm clear, that would automatically assign $foo and $bar to $this->foo and $this->bar?
@DaveRandom yes
@DaveRandom yes
Well I'm definitely +1 on that then
(not that its really relevant)
@DaveRandom using that syntax?! that looks like a signature declaration in an interface? (actually, that is a signature declaration in an interface...)
20:15
@NikiC the entire qafoo gang plus other regular speakers
I must be going crazy
I find it totally unacceptable
Maybe I'm really wrong
I heard that can happen :P
@NikiC Personally I'd probably go with public function __construct(=$foo, =$bar);, I'll admit I'm not crazy about the "just declare a signature" approach, but it shouldn't be much more than just a signature otherwise it doesn't really gain much.
I'd kinda like to just do it on the property declaration but then the arg order would get hard to infer from the code, or too easy to break when refactoring
What are you talking about? Automatic assignments of parameters in constructors?
@BenjaminGruenbaum yes
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeh, although the underlying theme is "ain't gonna happen"
20:19
@Gordon Write a proposal. In a gist if you like. A full one, mind you (including the details like how Reflection will report the param names, etc). I'll provide an implementation and you can give it a try
@Gordon CoffeeScript does this nicely, then again it's very different syntactically.
hello can anyone help me in understanding this line $this->class->getclass->getDescription(); i am new to php
@BenjaminGruenbaum example?
@NikiC thanks. will do. though probably not before next weekend
@Divyanshunegi Fetch the class property of the current object, fetch the getclass property of the object in the class property, and call the getDescription() method of the resulting object
That line is horrible, for the record
20:21
@Gordon Oh, nevermind about what I said about reflection. My mind was wandering
@NikiC and just for the record, I would be much more in favor of the variadic RFCs if you would at least consider putting the splat to discussion. What really bothers me the most about it is the attitude that it's not debatable.
@Gordon It is debatable... someone even posted a mail debating it
@Gordon What element? The syntax?
@NikiC but would you be willing to implement it as * if the majority wants that?
Everything about an RFC is debatable, always. What would be the point of it otherwise?
20:22
class Animal
   constructor: (@name,@age,type) ->  #@name and @age are assigned
       @otherprop = type # type is non assigned
@DaveRandom
@DaveRandom yes, I think ... is less readable than *
@Gordon I would think on that. I'd have to weight how ugly I find * versus not having it at all ;)
myAnimal = new Animal "Cat", 15, 1
# The above created an animal with this.name = "Cat", this.age = 15, this.otherprop=type
(If brackets make you feel comfier () work around the constructor call too)
@NikiC the part about bikeshedding made me read the RFC like it was either ... or nothing
@Gordon I'm not a fan of *, but I'm currently trying to learn C and it looks like a pointer and it's confusing. That's not a solid argument though.
20:24
@DaveRandom yup, because it only applies to people doing C flavors :)
@DaveRandom I especially like it in the context of function foo(array *$bar) ^^ That totally looks like an array pointer ^^
@BenjaminGruenbaum Interesting. I generally like that, although I personally would choose = over @, because it seems more descriptive (and certainly in the context of PHP)
@DaveRandom @ is CoffeeScript notation for this. While you can do this.name people mostly prefer @name over it because it is shorter and also because a lot of CoffeeScript users come from a Ruby background
@BenjaminGruenbaum The equivalent for PHP would be function __construct($this->name, $this->age, $type) { ... } which is somewhat verbose
I'd still prefer that to the ctor-as-signature syntax though
@NikiC I never got why PHP uses -> instead of .
20:28
Because C
@BenjaminGruenbaum because . is the concat operator ^^
Note: Having an explicit concat operator rather than + is one of the few really good things PHP did
That and requiring global to access globals ;)
@NikiC I like the fact string concat isn't + like in JavaScript, I find that strange, I like the fact PHP doesn't use the same operator for addition and string concat, but -> for a member seems verbose.
@NikiC Code shouldn't have globals to begin with :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum Exactly. That's why I like that PHP makes them so hard to use (as opposed to virtually all other languages)
Sadly PHP broke that feature when it introduced static properties ... ^^
@NikiC I've been doing a lot of VB of late. If intFoo And intBar And intBaz = 0 Then <-- 3 guesses what the compiler thinks that means
You'll need more than 3, I guarantee it
@NikiC In JavaScript we have a global scope (and some shitty features about it), however in new JS environments like WebWorkers there is no notion of a global scope, you simply can't have globals - that's a darn good call.
@DaveRandom LOL
20:31
The best part is in VB6 and VB.net, that line means different things, even though the operators are the same
@DaveRandom Maybe it tries to assign 0 to intFoo And intBar And intBaz?
or compare it to zero, I don't know what = means in VB
It's both assignment and comparison
at least that's the stupidest thing it can do there I think
Depending on context
And is both bitwise and logical
It is a ridiculous language
20:32
The only guy I met who likes it is @minitech
On the upside, I really like C#, although it made me very angry last week with its generics.
Maybe he was trolling you. Surely nobody is that sadistic
No, no, he really does like it.
@DaveRandom they have frameworks that fix that
Although I have to admit writing mobile with C# feels kind of... klunky.
That's just the WPF framework though and not C# I guess.
@igorw Sorry, fix what specifically?
20:34
nevermind me :)
@Grady_Booch
geek, philosopher, storyteller
5.9k tweets, 5.8k followers, following 256 users
sudo follow naow!
@Gordon 'sudo' is not recognised as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file
Morning
Finally using Windows improves my internet security!
20:38
@DaveRandom but not necessarily your horizon ;)
@Gordon I have so far managed to avoid the twittersphere in general.
Basically my only exposure to it is what people post in here
@DaveRandom thats okay. the noise to signal ratio is horrible tbh
I have a post-it on my screen saying: build tool to rank tweets by relevance
[PHP-DEV] windows.php.net <= finally something useful :)
So I believe. I own a FB account which I sign in to once a year or so because for some reason I don't want it to be GC'd (assuming they will do that at some point) but really, social networking just seems like a pointless exercise to me. I SO, I GitHub, I own a mobile phone, that provides me with enough junk for my liking
@DaveRandom Having a twitter account with relevant followers is somewhat useful though. (Unlike a Facebook account with all the people you talked to once)
20:45
@NikiC Yeh but even the people I might find interesting to follow seem to post all sorts of random shit. "<something interesting> -> I've just bought some broccoli for dinner LOLzOMG -> <something interesting>"
@NikiC I only have people on FB that I know IRL
Sure
Doesn't really change the fact that most of the feed there is totally uninteresting to me ^^
@DaveRandom that's why I try to limit my tweets to content I deem relevant to my audience. For brokkoli I have FB. you'd hate my FB posts :)
Twitter on the other hand is more like, I don't know, a news channel for things I'm interested in
Whereas FB is - as mentioned - pictures of brokkoli :)
@NikiC yup, but it's still generating a lot of noise
Power to the PHP! Make executable builds not war! Give Perl a chance! #GeekActivistSlogans http://sdt.bz/64063
20:51
@Gordon true
to see one of the Old Ones mention PHP always feels odd
given that most of them actively ignore it in favor of compiled languages or Ruby and Python
Is it just me, or does the title of this article make it sound like the oceans are taking heat and putting it inside the report?
Also, same article, this just looks like the most awesome water slide ever
@DaveRandom The water might just be slightly ... cold :)
I realise it's serious, not a laughing-matter stuff, but that still looks awesome
@NikiC Meh, put a wetsuit on, you'll be fine
I'll send you a postcard
@Gordon Vernunft ist schwer

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