I fixed the Haiku build this morning, there was a bug. Testing our cross compilation and such. While the build system is kind of annoying, I do think the direction of it is pretty reasonable overall. The default is way too "chatty" though; you can't read what's important.
We can put the "make prep" step that builds a bootstrap makefile on the web sooner rather than later. I think that might be a good prelude to my suggestion of delivering a full executable.
You fill out a form, push a button, wait and then you get a zipfile. You put the zipfile on your machine that has some compiler on it (but no Rebol) and say "make" or whatever. Then you have a Rebol.
@GrahamChiu No, that's just getting it to build from this morning. I sent a message to LkpPo with the conference videos and that we are still building on that, so FreeBSD should still likely work.
If anyone uses Windows and wants to read something frightening, load up a program in ProcessMonitor and see all the file, registry, cookie etc. accesses programs do: docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/downloads/procmon
Was looking at why an old Windows XP program that had been running on a desktop wouldn't run after being transferred into a virtual machine; wondering about what the diff was in the API monitoring log, and it's doing tons of Trojan/Virus things...mucking with boot settings, looking up if there's remote desktop ability, etc. etc.
@Atomica Any system which has your data in it or things you use should be able to be virtualized as it was indefinitely.
I was talking yesterday about a plan I tried to convince my friends of a long time ago, where we'd just all agree to take a year off of seeing movies in the theater. And then, we'd use our one year lag to collectively only see things that were out on video. But we'd see them at the same time so we'd feel "current" when talking to each other.
Similarly, I feel that the computing world should have used some year's development advancements to virtualize. Agree not to raise expectations that year, just do everything in VMs
On cloud servers it is. On clients, the powers-that-be don't want you to have that much power to modularize their monoliths. Microsoft tries to charge you a Windows license for each VM running Windows...and it's so bloat-tastic that each fresh instance is ginormous.
Setting up a new laptop and found they've disabled the "uninstall" from ever more things. The "Xbox" app now no longer lets you uninstall.
@Atomica One advantage of having a well-reasoned C API is that the binding is pretty good. Taking small parts of the logic of DOOM that is written as twisty C code and replacing it with pieces of Rebol could be an interesting experiment.
Oldes should get whacked in the head with a board. He still hasn't claimed the GitLab all-the-issues export I made for him.
If he insists he wants to tag and control everything, doesn't want to collaborate with anyone (and especially not me), doesn't care what I think and would rather have no database vs. one in which I have a say in its control...it's the perfect solution. But I'm not obligated to leave it up indefinitely.
It's not even clear GitLab will let me import it again (and I may want to move to GitLab anyway).
Because on the import page it now says that's where it was imported to, and the import option is gone.
All right, well Oldes decided to bot clone the Issues on GitHub, so that's fine. More work, but he does like doing things the hard way. Now he has what he wants. But I'm not talking to him again. No questions answered, no issues remarked on, nothing.
@GrahamChiu He's forgot, but I think with that forgetting it probably is time to realize that as the only other active user of the issue DB, it's a pointless tax to try and maintain the agnostic database. He has his own copy now (on which if he considers issues to be closed, he closes them). We should do the same.
We tried for a goodly period. Stakeholders did not emerge back to care about it...just him. And he has been satisfied with a solution that fits his workflow.
I'd mentioned that I was thinking perhaps that with PARSE, one interpretation of parse binary [copy t: text!] could be "convert as much of the binary sequence to text as you can, and store it in T, then return the position after it, or null if it was all valid utf-8".
We do not at present have any particularly good "tell me how far you can get in UTF-8 decoding, then the next location where it was bad" feature.
I'm not sure how concerned I am about this, as working with corrupt UTF-8 may be specialized enough that you use specialized (usermode) code for it. But, we can think about if there's an easy way to expose what we know in the system in order to exploit what's already there...so long as it's not too costly.
@GrahamChiu Well, you can make a poor-man's UTF-8 error detector by just knowing the byte pattern for leading bytes and searching for those, and ask it to decode COPY/PART portions.
@GrahamChiu I like ELSE and THEN and ALSO. (Remember: ALSO is like THEN but it does not change the result... you supply code that runs, but it still evaluates to whatever came in from the ALSO on the left...)
>> switch 1 + 2 [3 ["three!"] 4 ["four!"]] also [print "One of those matched..."]
One of those matched...
== "three!"
>> switch 10 + 20 [3 ["three!"] 4 ["four!"]] also [print "One of those matched..."]
; null
@GrahamChiu if you are getting into THEN, please weigh in here: forum.rebol.info/t/…
@Atomica This is not accurate.Businesses are not required by law to maximize shareholder value. This is a myth that emerged as common wisdom in the 1980’s. Companies maximize stock price because stock options and grants are how senior executives are compensated.
@GrahamChiu Can the scrape SO chat project continue while I work on httpd stability? I'm going to revert your no-data read change and resolve that correctly next.