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00:16
I was told we have Test Eng around here some where. Apparently my team doesn't really have one. :(
And I am working with NSDate. So it is quite difficult to write test for
00:37
Ah ok lol
I dont mind you asking. My advice, abandon storyboard. I have not used it, and probably never will. Good luck!
Damn it
I didnt mean to edit the question lol
Thanks for your help! :)
 
2 hours later…
02:34
morning
I'm tired.
Was at school from 8:30 to 12:00. Then 5:00 to 9:00
And all the time in between frantically doing work.
Damn, son.
And tonight I need to prepare for this midterm
So I must read 5 short stories again in review, and some other stuff.
I want to sleep.
But I'm a real man, and not a little b****, so work on I will.
*~*
Regain composture
-_-
Tomorrow after morning class it'll be sleep, TV shows, and internet surfing till evening.
I work towards this goal.
My ISP delivered a new modem tonight, and I'll install that too.
user457812
I'm good at naming projects at work
02:40
What mid term are you doing?
user457812
Like the project I named "fuck17".
I was going to do it tonight, but knowing it would require I lose internet access and call them to activate it, I decided it would be better not to tempt fate.
Dear God, nil.
user457812
Listen, that project pissed me off. It had it coming.
On a happier note, have you bought FF XIV yet?
02:41
It's an English midterm
user457812
No. Why would I buy something I can't run?
Maybe he's implying you're stupid?
Enrico called nil stupid
Are you just going to take that Nil? Aren't you going to do anything about it?
fight, fight
Ah, I forgot you don't have Boot Camp.
user457812
owatch is such a gamergator
It's coming out on a Mac next month, make sure you choose Tonberry world so you can raid with me.
user457812
02:43
I have 100gb free. I plan to partition it enough to dual boot.. linux.
user457812
Or FreeBSD. But probably Linux.
What if I told you... You are running FreeBSD?
user457812
I would tell you you were wrong.
Darwin is an open source Unix-like computer operating system released by Apple Inc. in 2000. It is composed of code developed by Apple, as well as code derived from NeXTSTEP, BSD, and other free software projects. Darwin forms the core set of components upon which OS X and iOS are based. It is mostly POSIX compatible, but has never, by itself, been certified as being compatible with any version of POSIX. (OS X, since Leopard, has been certified as compatible with the Single UNIX Specification version 3 (SUSv3).) == History == Darwin's heritage began with NeXT's NeXTSTEP operating system (later...
Okay, a variant of FreeBSD.
PaidBSD.
CommercialBSD.
user457812
OpenBSD and NetBSD, not FreeBSD.
02:44
I used to run Solaris 11.
user457812
OS X includes code from OpenBSD and FreeBSD.
haha.
Guess your memory won't be too sharp.
No, nobody ever need to know the family tree of BSD OS.
user457812
I'd like to run Illumos on something but have nothing to put it on.
02:46
Look at that, nil is wrong!
user457812
Wrong about what?
OS X is not NetBSD/OpenBSD
user457812
I never said it was.
Or maybe you did not imply that.
My bad.
user457812
You should keep in mind that I'm the guy who went trolling around the OS X kernel source code looking for its malloc implementation.
02:47
Jesus Christ, I can't believe I used Solaris, Minix, Linux, and now Darwnin.
I didn't know Solaris branched out Unix at that point of time.
user457812
I do actually have a small idea of what I'm talking about.
@nil LOLOLOLOLOL
Because why? You wanted to see if you can make malloc on Darwin more efficient?
user457812
Because I wanted to show it to someone 'cause it used to have a really neat allocator.
Wait, the source code is not actually here, right? It's only the binary that's shipped with OS X, right?
user457812
I'm sure it still does, but the one I was looking for isn't in the current code, so it's in an older version.
02:49
Because I also want to see that neat allocator.
Time to browse opensource.apple.com
user457812
opensource.apple.com/release/os-x-1010 ← The kernel itself is under xnu, I no longer know where the allocator is
user457812
I was talking with someone in here a while back, I forget who, and he'd pointed out something or other about where it was
Jesus Christ, I didn't know they compile their own OpenSSH --> opensource.apple.com/source/OpenSSH/OpenSSH-189
What significance does the allocator have to you?
Sometimes I wonder how many people at Apple work at things that has been perfected by the open source community.
user457812
02:52
Apple has its own OpenSSL. As far as I know most of the OpenSSH stuff in OS X is OpenBSD's.
I guess it's sometimes good to implement your own OpenSSL, remembering what happened with open source's OpenSSL earlier last year.
But I mean, just how much time can you save not reimplementing things like OpenSSL?
user457812
Well, you should also remember what happened with Apple's OpenSSL then
I like this diagram:
What happened?
Ah, after Googling now I remember it was called Heartbleed by the marketing team.
Heartbleed is a security bug disclosed in April 2014 in the OpenSSL cryptography library, which is a widely used implementation of the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol. Heartbleed may be exploited regardless of whether the party using a vulnerable OpenSSL instance for TLS is a server or a client. It results from improper input validation (due to a missing bounds check) in the implementation of the TLS heartbeat extension, thus the bug's name derives from "heartbeat". The vulnerability is classified as a buffer over-read, a situation where more data can be read than should be allowed....
In my mind it's always called "OpenSSL bug"
user457812
Apple's code was unaffected by the heartbleed issue, so far as I remember
user457812
02:55
It was, however, failing miserably because of a bad merge.
LOL NOW I REMEMBER
Wasn't that where you could receive stuff from memory by doing something to the call responsible for checking whether both computers were still connected or something?
Is that a merge from the official OpenSSL, or their own internal merge?
Correct, iWatch.
user457812
Far as I know, it's entirely their own code.
And then the something did something to the whatnot thing?
02:56
But they didn't make that public though, nil.
user457812
Make what public?
What's OpenSSL's license? GNU?
user457812
Don't know.
They didn't make public whether it's their own code or it's a merge from the master OpenSSL branch.
How useful is that supposed to be? Don't you just get undecipherable data for the most part?
user457812
02:57
Pretty sure it's some weird esoteric blend of a proprietary license and GPL 2
user457812
@Owatch A memory dump contains tons of stuff.
user457812
A lot of it is stuff you do not want shared.
user457812
Especially not when it's memory that OpenSSL is using.
Ok, does that (GPL 2) allow Apple to hide the fact whether the goto fail bug is their own merge or merge from master branach?
Doesn't it depend on how much memory gets dumped?
user457812
02:58
You could get a large chunk of memory, from what I remember.
As in, 50Mb?
user457812
Apple has its own OpenSSL, I don't see why you're asking this.
Okay, I thought OpenSSL is a fork from the master OpenSSL.
Owatch: It doesn't matter how much actually, if the data is sensitive even a few Kb is already severe.
user457812
Actually, looks like they are using a fork of the regular OpenSSL
user457812
'Cause I definitely see Eric Young's name in the source.
user457812
03:00
Either way, the OpenSSL license is unconventional and is fairly permissive, within reason.
What exactly do you do with a chunk of memory anyways?
Right? So if it is a fork of regular OpenSSL, that goto fail bug may be caused by bad merge from the master branch, right?
How are you supposed to interpret it? Don't different applications store or encode stuff differently?
user457812
A chunk of memory from OpenSSL: you mine it for anything that looks vaguely like a string.
user457812
No, not really.
03:00
What nil said.
How do you know where things end, or begin?
user457812
You look for sequences of non-control characters.
oh.
user457812
See: the strings utility.
Or they can just scan for the whole things and strip out all the non alphanumeric characters.
user457812
03:02
Dumb as a rock. Does exactly what it sounds like.
user457812
strings scans for runs of six or more characters.
To be fair, it's something that would need a large amount of data to be useful, but since it was affecting a very large number of people, it was quite severe.
user457812
Incidentally, strings was how that one guy found the komodia password in the superfish crapware on Lenovo laptops.
LOL, seriously?
user457812
Yeah. Stored in plaintext.
03:03
The what?
user457812
Not even freakin' ciphered.
Back
That is seriously dumb.
user457812
You want to make a thing impossible to find using strings? Encode each character as a sequence of 4- or 5-bit integers.
user457812
Don't even need to cipher stuff for that.
03:05
Well, or make your passwords something like 0tfdD6fclwFR!&8Z
user457812
That will show up in strings.
Well Nil, you're going to have to know how to decode that.
Which means storing a cipher somewhere.
user457812
Yes, but at that point you're getting into decompiling and inspecting memory at program runtime
user457812
At which point the burden grows a bit for extracting a password
user457812
Nevermind that you just shouldn't use a damn password.
03:07
If it's a password, it would make it somewhat more immune to frequency analysis.
Unless your password was a word or phrase.
Or you store the cipher on a piece of paper and then eat it.
Have you heard of number stations before?
user457812
I'd suggest just using one time pads and moving on with your life.
I knew a kid who ate paper.
Didn't strip them off muffins either.
A numbers station is a type of shortwave radio station characterized by unusual broadcasts, reading out lists of numbers or incomprehensible morse code messages. The voices are often created by speech synthesis and are transmitted in a wide variety of languages. The voices are usually female, although sometimes men's or children's voices are used. Some voices are synthesized and created by machines; however, some stations used to have live readers. In the 1960s, Time magazine reported that the numbers stations first appeared shortly after World War II and were imitating a format that had been used...
Ate them whole. . .
user457812
03:09
Weird kid. Were you that kid?
There are radio stations running in some parts of the world, that just read random sequence of numbers and strings, non stop.
No.
user457812
I should get a radio operator license or whatever so I can set one of those up
I once wanted to set up my own radar unit.
But quickly decided I did not want to do that.
When I was small, I used to eat Nasal Mucus.
03:10
I once wanted to build my own fortress of solitude.
But life got in the way.
WTF
Oh gudiya
You're disgusting.
why?
It used to flow down from nose and directly enter the Mouth
Oh my god. .
Then my Dad used to beat me for that
So I stopped gradually
Our company stopped using OpenSSL and is instead using Common Crypto to get 64-Bit support.
That's a depressing ending.
I am sorry for you.
03:25
Why is it depressing?
It's saddening to hear you stopped because you were beaten.
That's what I meant.
Yes, it's very common for Indian parents to beat their kids.
Because it's not a common practice in India to Sue for uncommon reasons.
I know it's more common, I've had friends from India, and it's also in comedy.
It wasn't entirely uncommon here or in Europe a couple generations back. But it is generally frowned upon now.
If I was behaving exceptionally badly, I would often get spanked when I was younger. Or slapped when I was a bit older.
But never beaten, that's for sure.
hmm
03:46
Man, I really need to upgrade to Yosemite soon.
Xcode 6.3 beta wouldn't run on Mavericks :(
When did this happen? I can run code snippet in Stack Overflow?
I hate it when links force me to download documents on my school's student service website.
I can barely open them on this computer, and it makes everything slow.
Hi Good Morning to all
Albinbino
04:08
@Gudiya hehe...welcome..
user457812
Ok, mostly settled on just installing some lightweight variant of Ubuntu once I find one. Startup disk is taking a while to shrink.
If you are to buy a new machine, what would you buy today?
Macmini
Really, nayoso?
user457812
iMac.
04:19
Really, nil?
user457812
Yes.
user457812
Alternatively, a Surface Pro is on my to buy list for painting.
I wouldn't mind trying out the Google Pixel
I haven't bought desktops since 2004, and probably I won't until I buy an actual house/apartment.
I move every few months or year and also work in various places. It's really a hassle to move desktops.
But considering this current laptop is barely powerful enough to handle Xcode and chrome at once, I think if I can, I'll just buy a newer Macbook.
04:22
Oh yeah, you are using a 4 year old one...
Also, Chrome is RAM eater, use Safari.
But I want to run adblock
There must be an alternative extension for Safari I suppose.
user457812
I use a four year old iMac at work.
Adblock is in Safari, but if you run Yosemite I would use this: github.com/gorhill/uBlock
You wouldn't use this four year old computer/
Or even in Chrome, that extension is better for your CPU and memory.
04:25
yes enrico
it's cheap and nice
user457812
My four year old work iMac is quad core and has 24gb of ram, so I get by.
Xcode takes a minute or two to become responsive.
Same goes for Chrome.
user457812
I just use vim now.
Microsoft Office is extra mad, I might wait around 2.4 - 3 minutes for it to become usable.
user457812
I have been taking a lot of steps to limit my use of OS X specific things.
04:27
I think the screen is 720p
Yeah, you're four year old iMac doesn't sound like a pain to use.
What OS are you Owatch?
Mavericks?
Yeah.
I had to upgrade.
@nayoso I always prefer a laptop than a Mac Mini...
Ah ok.
I already have one ;)
Haha I see
user457812
04:30
Did I mention I'm replacing Mercurial with Git at work yet? Because that's a thing. I won.
I'm out.
Goodnight
 
2 hours later…
06:11
Hello All, I have done one app using coreData, and Now I am heading towards another, so I was thinking whether to use CoreData or sqlite, So I need your valuable suggestions based on your experience what you feel will be better in long run.
I have not used sqlite before, so please throw some light on the learning curve of sqlite
07:10
I prefer CoreData because of NSFetchedResultController, if you want to cross platform scheme maybe you can check realm.io
07:49
Hello people
little question
Can you do something when you receive a local notification and your app is in the background ?
I know that its possible with a remote notification but I don't find a method that does this with a local notification
I have this method
- (void)application:(UIApplication *)application handleActionWithIdentifier:(NSString *)identifier forLocalNotification:(UILocalNotification *)notification completionHandler:(void(^)())completionHandler{
But it's never being called
 
1 hour later…
09:12
Morning
MORNING!
I'm so happy
I just saved about 4 hours of work because I encapsulated some logic pretty neatly in my last project.
I just dragged and dropped that class... And 5 minutes later it worked!
Hi all

I have a question.
1
A: How to store session value common to all system users in OS X

Michael DautermannIf you look within the first few paragraphs of the NSUserDefaults documentation, you'll see this tidbit: The NSUserDefaults class does not currently support per-host preferences. To do this, you must use the CFPreferences API (see Preferences Utilities Reference). However, NSUserDefaults ...

@MichaelDautermann Your answered has been featured in NSChat!
But I agree with Michael, Santosh, you can use CFPreferences.
09:35
thanks @olajuwon
Hello @EnricoSusatyo, how are you doing
thats good Enrico independent modules are always helpful
Yep
But this is kinda the first time when the it became reusable just within a month or two after I wrote it.
09:58
@EnricoSusatyo Edited content of my question

I have used CFPreferences to store the session value for all system users the in reference with the michael's answer.

Code:

To save values in CFPreferences

CFStringRef appID = CFSTR("com.company.test");
CFStringRef textColorKey = CFSTR("test123");
CFStringRef colorBLUE = CFSTR("BLUE");
CFPreferencesSetValue (textColorKey,
colorBLUE,
appID,
kCFPreferencesAnyUser,
kCFPreferencesCurrentHost
);

CFPreferencesSynchronize(appID,
kCFPreferencesAnyUser,
kCFPreferencesCurrentHost);
10:33
please read the rules
it states not to paste code in chat
@nil can i get the ability to put things in the bin in chat?
 
2 hours later…
12:52
Back
13:25
Hello All
This room looks like specific to NS only
No casual chat
Casual chat is allowed
@Gudiya OK..Thanks
@Gudiya how about holi celebration in office?
We actually don't celebrate Holi in our office as I am in US and work in an American Company.
But I may not know as I wasn't here last year. However it looks unlikely.
@Gudiya Oops..In our office it was cancelled due to swine flue
@Gudiya So you recently have been in US?
yes
13:31
@Gudiya Congratulations.. :-)
 
7 hours later…
20:22
I hate Pages-_-
EVERY time I edit my paper, It moves my second page an entire page down, and copies the first page header, and there are only 2 sentences on page 2, then I press delete to move it back and then it brings its header and removes the page 2 header and then it happens all over again and again and again
21:00
it's so quiet here... maybe @Byte is sleeping?
21:26
Or working hard!
do people work hard there? there's so many distractions
and many different kinds of soda in the refrigerator.
It is funny you would think that
You know we have all these nice facilities? 80% of people dont even use them
apparently, the work is so interesting :)
The real question is, when are you working! @MichaelDautermann
whenever I feel like it
like right now, I'm trying to figure out Parse Restful API's
That is not so bad
I used to parse SOAP.. Oh gawd
 
2 hours later…
23:20
I need nil
@nil get on

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