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04:44
Gm all
ASR
ASR
@SweetWisherツ vgm
 
4 hours later…
08:46
Hello Everybody, I am new to this room
I am having 4 Years of experience in various technologies like VC++ and MFC
 
2 hours later…
11:08
@CreativeMind welcome to the room
11:24
@Shadow@SweetWisherツ how are u all
@Simmant hi
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 Hi .. after a long long time :)
all well. u say
hi.. good.you? @BlueBerry-vignesh4303
in this country only? can't find you for many days..
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 hi
hi
yes
@Shadow i m back
lol
long time
@Simmant hi
@SweetWisherツ how is u
11:49
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 M awesome :)
@SweetWisherツ how are u these days
hello world seems turn to be hell world
@BigByte hi
bigb :P
@silentkiller seems busy
these days
same hell will turns to hello one day ;)
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 Hi
@Shadow if shadow remains at hell then everyone will wave hi :) and turn it to be heaven
@BigByte hi bigb how many pb u are :P
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 BigB, thats right
11:56
Mar 2 at 12:16, by Shadow
There is a proverb! @Gajini once king, now become an ordinary person.. ordinary person one day becomes king! :)
same once busy world now silent world. now silent world one day becomes busy world :)- in a hope..life too runs with hope na. hope this too will bounce back 1 day ;)
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 ??
@Shadow change is the only thing which doesnt change
@BigByte hi bigb so u are from python?
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 yep
@BigByte great good to know u shoot python questions
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 may i know you are you ? :P
INTRODUCE YOURSELF IF YOU ARE NEW TO THIS ROOM
11:59
@SilentKiller lol
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 , why so big name? i had a friend named vignesh, known as viki.
@BigByte lol just an nick
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 :P
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 hi .. lolzz that was the reply of your message XD
@Simmant yep
@SilentKiller :P
12:12
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 :P
so whats going on this room
nothing
@SilentKiller good lets fill the empty space and convert into something
from now on let me come everyday
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 thats good idea
@SilentKiller lol copycat why u copied my profile :P
12:22
@BlueBerry-vignesh4303 its different. :P
Sk has own yo yo style ;)
@Shadow lol
Feb 26 '13 at 13:09, by Shreya S
Copy cat
lols
Feb 26 '13 at 13:09, by S.K.
that's Smart Work..
Feb 8 '13 at 10:19, by SilentKiller
@billgates me as always awesome...:)
lols past was awesome like me ;)
12:31
posted on November 24, 2014 by Herb Sutter

(this is an echo of what I also just posted on isocpp.org) I wanted to add a few more things to my meeting trip report. I updated the trip report in-place, but for those who want to see the “diffs” I’ll also post just the new parts here as a standalone post: There were 106 […]

posted on December 01, 2014 by Herb Sutter

Consider this program fragment: std::vector<int> v = { 0, 0 }; int i = 0; v[i++] = i++; std::cout << v[0] << v[1] << endl; My question is not what it might print under today’s C++ rules. The third line runs afoul of two different categories of undefined and unspecified behavior. Rather, my question is […]

posted on January 15, 2015 by Herb Sutter

[Edit: I really like the ‘range of values’ several commenters proposed. We do need something like that in the standard library, and it may well come in with ranges, but as you can see there are several simple ways to roll your own in the meantime, and some third-party libraries have similar features already.] Today […]

posted on April 16, 2015 by Herb Sutter

Today, Vikram Ojha asked via email: I was just thinking why we removed “int” as default return type from C++ which was there in our traditional C type. Why we made such changes, is it to make language more safer? Short answer: Because it’s ‘inherently dangerous’ in the words of the C committee. For C++, see […]

posted on May 05, 2015 by Herb Sutter

Today it was my pleasure to announce a financial assistance policy for ISO C++ meetings. You can read about it at the announcement here.Filed under: Uncategorized

posted on December 01, 2010 by Steve Yegge

The worldwide Haskell community met up over beers today to celebrate their unprecedented discovery of an industry programmer who gives a shit about Haskell. On Wednesday, researchers issued a press release revealing that 27-year-old Seth Briars of North Carolina, a Java programmer at Blackwater accounting firm Ross and Fordham, actually gives a shit about Haskell. "Mr. Briars has followed eve

posted on July 22, 2011 by Steve Yegge

San Jose, CA (Reuters) — Online auctions cartel eBay (NASDAQ: EBAY) and its collections and incarceration arm PayPal announced that on July 21, 2011, the two companies had jointly been awarded United States Patent No. 105960411 for their innovative 10-click “Buy it Now” purchasing pipeline. The newly-patented buying system guides users through an intuitive, step-by-step process of clicki

posted on July 27, 2011 by Steve Yegge

I woke up this morning...ish... to discover that Hacker News had finally had enough of me being at Google, so they forced me into early retirement. On Monday I was honored to be able to deliver a keynote talk at OSCON Data. In the talk, I announce at the end that I am quitting a project that I had very publicly signed up for, one that I am not passionate about and don't personally think is ve

posted on March 12, 2012 by Steve Yegge

.dropcap { font-weight:bold; font-size:120px; float:left; padding:0; margin:-4px 5px 0px 0px; position: relative; background-color:none; line-height:0.9; } .note { color: #4169e1; font-style: italic; } Craw is so damn frustrating!!! He and his sidekicks have killed me so many times that I think I am starting to get sore in real life....arghhh need better weapon!! He will d

posted on October 08, 2012 by Steve Yegge

This is basically a review of, and a pros/cons rant about, Borderlands 2. If you're not into it, just don't read it! I'll write about stuff you like some other time. Maybe. So! I'm not the kind of person to say "I told you so." Noooo. Never. Well, never, unless, of course, I get to say it loudly, within hearing of a biggish stadium full of people. Which I can. So here goes: I told

BlueBerry - vignesh4303 has stopped a feed from being posted into this room
BlueBerry - vignesh4303 has stopped a feed from being posted into this room
BlueBerry - vignesh4303 has stopped a feed from being posted into this room
BlueBerry - vignesh4303 has stopped a feed from being posted into this room
posted on December 02, 2010 by tytso

Bruce Schneier has written an absolutely powerful essay in his blog, with the modest proposal that in response to the security worries at the Washington Monument, we should close it. If you haven’t read it yet, run, don’t walk, to his blog and read it.  Then if you live in the States, write to your congresscritters, and ask them … Continue reading » Related Posts: “

posted on December 07, 2010 by tytso

Richard Tibbetts has called me out for conflating Web 2.0 startups with all startups in my recent blog posting, “Google has a problem retaining great engineers? Bullcrap”. His complaint was that I was over generalizing from Web 2.0 startups to all startups. He’s right, of course. The traditional “technology startup” by definition does have a large amount technology … Continue rea

posted on December 12, 2010 by tytso

I received a trackback from Tim Bray’s Saving Data Safely post on the Android Developer’s blog to my Don’t fear the fsync! blog entry, so I guess the cat’s out of the bag.  Starting with Gingerbread, newer Android phones (starting with the Nexus S) will be using the ext4 file system.  Very cool!  So just as IBM used to promote … Continue reading » Related Posts: 

posted on December 14, 2010 by tytso

There’s been a lot of discussion regarding whether or not Nokia is Doomed or not.   The people who say Nokia are doomed basically point out that Nokia doesn’t have any attractive products at the high end, and at the low end the margins are extremely thin.  The high end products suffer from the Symbian being essentially dead (even Nokia is … Continue reading » Related Post

posted on September 24, 2014 by tytso

The authors of “How Google Works” have given electronic versions of “How Google Works” to all Google employees. Since I had already purchased a copy via pre-order, to make life interesting, I’ve decided to give my Google Play coupon code to someone via an electronic lottery.  (Edit: the coupon code will only work for people with Google … Continue reading »

posted on April 02, 2013 by Joel Spolsky

The fastest growing industry in the US right now, even during this time of slow economic growth, is probably the patent troll protection racket industry. Lawsuits surrounding software patents have more than tripled since 1999. It’s a great business model. Step one: buy a software patent. There are millions of them, and they’re all quite vague and impossible to understand. Step two: FedEx

posted on April 30, 2013 by Joel Spolsky

Trello has been out for less than two years and it’s been growing like wildfire. We recently hit 1.5 million members, of whom about 1/3 perform some action every month, and our MongoDB database now contains more than 70 million cards on 3.7 million boards. So the obvious question I get all the time is, “How exactly are you supposed to make money with that?” You may have noticed that Trello

posted on July 22, 2013 by Joel Spolsky

There are a lot of people complaining about lousy software patents these days. I say, stop complaining, and start killing them. It took me about fifteen minutes to stop a crappy Microsoft patent from being approved. Got fifteen minutes? You can do it too. In a minute, I’ll tell you that story. But first, a little background. Software developers don’t actually invent very much. The number of

posted on July 25, 2014 by Joel Spolsky

Hello? is this thing on? I’m not sure if I even know how to operate this “blog” device any more. It’s been a year since my last post. I’m retired from blogging, remember? Want to hear something funny? The only way I can post blog posts is by remote-desktopping into a carefully preserved Windows 7 machine which we keep in a server closet running a bizarrely messed-up old copy of CityDes

posted on January 20, 2015 by Joel Spolsky

Today Stack Exchange is pleased to announce that we have raised $40 million, mostly from Andreessen Horowitz. Everybody wants to know what we’re going to do with all that money. First of all, of course we’re going to gold-plate the Aeron chairs in the office. Then we’re going to upgrade the game room, and we’re already sending lox platters to our highest-rep users. But I’ll get into that in

posted on March 09, 2015 by Jeff Atwood

These two imaginary guys influenced me heavily as a programmer. Instead of guaranteeing fancy features or compatibility or error free operation, Beagle Bros software promised something else altogether: fun. Playing with the Beagle Bros quirky Apple II floppies in middle school and high school, and the smorgasboard of oddball hobbyist

posted on March 28, 2015 by Jeff Atwood

It's always surprised me when people, especially technical people, say they don't know Markdown. Do you not use GitHub? Stack Overflow? Reddit? I get that an average person may not understand how Markdown is based on simple old-school plaintext ASCII typing conventions. Like when you're *really* excited about something, you

posted on April 03, 2015 by Jeff Atwood

Eric Raymond, in The Cathedral and the Bazaar, famously wrote Given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow. The idea is that open source software, by virtue of allowing anyone and everyone to view the source code, is inherently less buggy than closed source software. He dubbed this "Linus's Law". Insofar

posted on April 23, 2015 by Jeff Atwood

I'm a little tired of writing about passwords. But like taxes, email, and pinkeye, they're not going away any time soon. Here's what I know to be true, and backed up by plenty of empirical data: No matter what you tell them, users will always choose simple passwords. No matter

posted on April 30, 2015 by Jeff Atwood

If you engage in discussion on the Internet long enough, you're bound to encounter it: someone calling someone else a troll. The common interpretation of Troll is the Grimms' Fairy Tales, Lord of the Rings, "hangs out under a bridge" type of troll. Thus, a troll is someone who exists

Feeds overloaded :P
posted on March 06, 2015 by [email protected] (SE-Radio Team)

Nathan Marz is the creator of Apache Storm, a real-time streaming application. Storm does for stream processing what Hadoop does for batch processing. The project began when Nathan was working on aggregating Twitter data using a queue-and-worker system he had designed. Many companies use Storm, including Spotify, Yelp, WebMD, and many others. Jeff and Nathan […]

posted on March 18, 2015 by [email protected] (SE-Radio Team)

Josh Long talks to Activiti cofounder Joram Barrez about the wide world of (open source) workflow engines, the Activiti BPMN2 engine, and what workflow implies when you’re building process-driven applications and services. Joram was originally a contributor to the jBPM project with jBPM founder Tom Baeyens at Red Hat. He cofounded Activiti in 2010 at […]

posted on April 01, 2015 by [email protected] (SE-Radio Team)

In this episode, Sven Johann and Eberhard Wolff talk about technical debt and how to handle it. They begin by defining external and internal quality and then talk about technical debt as a metaphor for discussing quality with management. They then consider whether technical debt is bad and how to handle it by using Eric […]

posted on April 27, 2015 by [email protected] (SE-Radio Team)

Senior performance architect and author of *Systems Performance* Brendan Gregg talks with Robert Blumen about systems performance: how the hardware and OS layers affect application behavior. The discussion covers the scope of systems performance, systems performance in the software life cycle, the role of performance analysis in architecture, methodologies for solving performance problems, dyna

posted on May 13, 2015 by [email protected] (SE-Radio Team)

Eberhard Wolff talks with Eric Evans, the founder of domain-driven design (DDD), about its impact after 10 years. DDD consists of domain-modelling patterns; it has established itself as a sound approach for designing systems with complex requirements. The show covers an introduction to DDD, how the community’s understanding of DDD has changed in the last […]

http://www.paulgraham.com/95.html
Paul Graham: Essays
Let the Other 95% of Great Programmers In

-62135596800
http://www.paulgraham.com/corpdev.html
Paul Graham: Essays
Don't Talk to Corp Dev

-62135596800
http://www.paulgraham.com/work.html
Paul Graham: Essays
What Doesn't Seem Like Work?

-62135596800
http://www.paulgraham.com/ronco.html
Paul Graham: Essays
The Ronco Principle

-62135596800
http://www.paulgraham.com/altair.html
Paul Graham: Essays
What Microsoft Is this the Altair Basic of?

-62135596800
posted on October 22, 2008 by Alex Vazquez

Over the last few months, the Wufoo Team has been steadily refactoring their code base to work with a new more flexible and more powerful API we’ve developed on the backend. In that process, I’ve had the opportunity to rewrite some of Wufoo’s oldest code from the founder’s earlier, more hectic days. One thing that’s [...]

posted on October 30, 2008 by Kevin Hale

Introduction While I’ve highlighted best practices and resources on how to pitch your ideas in the past, I thought I’d take some time to share exactly how we prepare for our demos when we’ve been invited to showcase Wufoo at conferences, events and VC boardrooms. We’ve spent a lot of time refining and practicing our [...]

posted on February 19, 2009 by Chris Campbell

Three years ago, when we were just starting Wufoo, if you had asked me what skill I would’ve liked to have had instantly downloaded into my brain Matrix-style to help us succeed, I probably would have chosen something industry specific like advanced PHP, CSS, or database knowledge. Most of our early challenges were, for the [...]

posted on February 19, 2009 by Kevin Hale

Several months ago, Infinity Box, our company, and thus Wufoo were listed in a publication targeted at investors, angels and venture capital firms as a promising young startup. We have, unfortunately, not been able to track down the source of this recommendation (investors seem odd about keeping their sources mysterious), but what followed for us [...]

posted on April 23, 2009 by Ryan Campbell

Introduction In our company, code reviews play an integral part in the development process for making quality software. We opt for a mentor style approach with Wufoo, where a developer works on a segment for a period of time and then passes it up to a more experienced developer for review. We really like this [...]

posted on November 05, 2012 by Eric Lippert

Suppose you're an epidemiologist modeling the potential spread of a highly infectious disease. The straightforward way to model such a series of unfortunate events is to assume that the population can be divided into three sets: the definitely infected, the definitely healthy, and the possibly infected. If a member of the healthy population encounters a member of the definitely infected or po

posted on November 08, 2012 by Eric Lippert

Last time I discussed how "dynamic" tends to spread through a program like a virus: if an expression of dynamic type "touches" another expression then that other expression often also becomes of dynamic type. Today I want to describe one of the least well understood aspects of method type inference, which also uses a contagion model when "dynamic" gets involved. Long-time readers know that me

posted on November 09, 2012 by Eric Lippert

I am pleased to announce that Essential C# 5.0 by Mark Michaelis, and, new for this edition, yours truly, is available for pre-order now. It will be in stores in early December. As long-time readers of this blog know, I was one of the technical editors for Essential C# 4.0 and Essential C# 3.0. Mark was kind enough to ask me if I would like to take a larger role in the process of updating th

posted on November 13, 2012 by Eric Lippert

In C# it is illegal to declare a class D whose base class B is in any way less accessible than D. I'm occasionally asked why that is. There are a number of reasons; today I'll start with a very specific scenario and then talk about a general philosophy. Suppose you and your coworker Alice are developing the code for assembly Foo, which you intend to be fully trusted by its users. Alice write

posted on November 29, 2012 by Eric Lippert

Tomorrow, the 30th of November, 2012, is the first day of my fifth decade here on Earth, and my last day at Microsoft. (*) I've been working at Microsoft full-time since 1996 and had two years of internships before that. Microsoft is an awesome company. We do great work here: work that changes the way people interact with information in a fundamental way. And I in particular, have had the ple


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