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00:02
@earl If I do a force push and a rebase, doesn't that mean anyone who has done a pull will be up a creek?
(If they made local changes relative to my branch)
@HostileFork Yes. Tough luck.
They'll basically have to rebase their own changes as well.
I generally consider that fair game, for work-in-progress branches.
@earl Well I think one of the only people who pulled it was Kaj. I do not want to make him any madder than absolutely necessary. :-)
00:17
@HostileFork Hey, I did as well :)
@HostileFork Did he publish any changes?
@earl I don't know. Did you?
I don't remember.
We kind of veered off into indexing debates.
Seems I didn't.
Maybe ask Kaj if he made any changes he wants you to incorporate. But I doubt he did.
@earl I'm the most famous AltME boycotter :-) so perhaps you could ask. If he didn't, I'll close the pull request and rebase.
00:33
And Kaj's the most famous email boycotter :)
@GrahamChiu Since you brought it up, and I'd been thinking it was about time to merge up Red for R3 and break off the R3/Backward work... do you have any specific input or ideas? I did not, at the time of Doc's gist proposal, try the rewriting method or look at it too hard because it came on the heels of a bunch of work and I was kind of hoping some other people might follow it up...
Same for you @BrianH ... Doc thinks R3/Backward should address at least some issues using rewriting. I think first-back, second-back, pick-back etc. can bridge the indexing stuff and look fairly literate, so I'm on board with that.
I'd like to understand how the module system would affect redefinitions, like if you're using R3/Backward to redefine SHIFT how might that be localized to certain modules, and when is this good or bad
With the recent change to the module system, private module exports take precedence over public module exports. So, SHIFT from a private module would be used instead of the public SHIFT.
But R3/Backwards would need to be more than a module, it would need to be a little more integrated than that. For one thing, depending on how clever we are, it might need its own DO, even at the top level.
If we make syntax fixes in R3 it may end up needing its own loader too. And it might need to actually be compiled into R3, because it might need a couple datatypes, and we don't have user-defined datatypes yet.
It really depends on whether we need to support the list! type, since block! is a drop-in behavioral replacement for hash!, but list! is different.
01:05
@HostileFork when you think back to your Android programming, how do you feel about it all? Isn't it a bit of a mess, overall?
@graph Well I already hate Java to start with, it annoyed me when it came on the scene and I'm even more annoyed by it now. I could have told you all those ridiculous Java applets in web browsers were a dead end. Bear in mind, when I was at Microsoft, Corel or whoever decided Java was the future and rewrote their office suite in Java and it pretty much killed the company. Vector Capital bought them for pretty much the amount of cash they had on hand. We laughed.
I still hate Java, Android is a mess, but software often works in spite of the platform than because of it. That's nothing new.
I managed to get a basic hello world to run on my phone. It was a mess but ...that icon on my phone feels pretty amazing
so much half-explained stuff, that one random answer in a long forum thread with ideas how to fix something that happened to be right....
so many different versions of everything :-)
so plz don't fork Rebol too much, simplify kthx
@graph this is my hello world in rebol
I gather that Mono is better than Java for Android. Much cleaner, much we can learn. Only thing I like about Android is that it doesn't really have applications; reminds me of Oberon. However, they try to pretend that they do and badly, annoyingly so.
write sl4a://localhost [ makeToast "Hello, World" ]
01:15
@BrianH what do you mean, Android doesnt have applications?
@graph the architect has gone ... it's now an organic free for all
have you guys done any apps?
Not me. Looked too messy for me.
@graph I am fighting the fragmentation, and others are trying too. We'll see how well that works. Chaos and entropy are the default if we don't make a stand against it... but the first step is to think that it is worthwhile to make that stand and build consensus. I'm hoping to get all the main people on board with that idea, and marginalize the ability of those who aren't on board to gain traction. No guarantees, but worth a try.
@graph Android doesn't have applications. At all. If you install a command line then it has programs you can call, but otherwise it doesn't even have that. What they call apps are actually packages of system services. There are certain types of services that provide a user interface, but they aren't really apps as much as extensions to the operating system. The only application is Android itself.
01:20
@BrianH well and "Apps" that get info from the Interwebs and display them nicely (do you consider that "extension of the OS" too?)
and paintings are just rearrangement of pigments
@graph I have only written test programs and followed SO Android questions. Occasionally I answer the odd one here and there. @mmcghan wants to come up with a clever app and make residual income... I'm a bit of a realist when it comes to that, few people recoup their time to any reasonable $ value. But my tests use NDK and I can do a lot more snazzy stuff with C++ under the hood. Think Angry Birds is written in Java?
@graph on Android, yes. That is the way the operating system (above the kernel level) is structured. Not all operating systems are structured around programs. Some, like the Oberon System and Android, don't really have programs.
I feel that if I can wire my App up with my own Webservice, then I get something that feels free and individual!!11 or is that an illusion?
@graph you can do a lot of stuff with operating system extensions.
01:24
especially with my overall education theme - I feel that it would be easy to set up questionaire/multiple choise Apps, but in a clever way, and covering hot but underserved topics
So I'm looking at the cortex pipelines and stuff like that, thinking of inventive stuff. Ideas like Crazy Face
I haven't really cared much about money for a long time, but I'm about to start to have to, so I'm starting to think about it.
You can do a lot more if you get rid of the application illusion and really think in terms of adding system services. You can extend existing services with Intents, for instance.
with what? @BrianH do you have something specific in mind?
There's some potential for Rebol, although it's a longer road to profitability than easier choices. Likely more satisfying, though. As @Respectech and @Adrian and I like to say though, we don't have any hair left to tear out. So our tolerance may be higher. :-)
@HostileFork yea but for that stuff you need a team of people and a bit of a budget and willingness to do boring mainstream work
funny app though
01:30
@graph Well, for instance, many of the existing "apps" can be extended by registering intents. Sometimes you can manage to make a user start your own "app", which in Android is just a UI extension, but more often you are better off just adding your functionality into an "app" that they are running already. For instance, though the Facebook app has a UI, it should also extend the contacts UI with new account sources, extend the messages UI, extend the calling UI. You can really integrate.
Windows Phone is like this too. Though it does have something closer to being applications, you are really meant to extend the existing services like People.
yea I heard about Windows Phone integrating it all better
but WhatsApp knew all my contacts (scary but practical) and in my contacts I find all those company email contacts where I had unsuccessfully applied to in the past
@graph Android could do this too, but they just try so hard to pretend that they have apps because that is something that iOS has and people vaguely understand.
wellllll and of course an "App" is something that you can BUY and SELL
Yup. I miss the Oberon System, but recognize that it was never intended to be a commercial success.
a new concept, when on the normal PC/Internet the whole concept was fuzzy and the lines were blurred
01:35
Actually, the "normal" PC actually has applications. That is why phones pretend to have them.
right
but those seem to get called "Apps" more and more often now
and ...certain trends point to a mobiledeviceification of "PC"s as well right?
"App" is just a newly popular, but not at all new, name for application. The only new thing is the sandboxing.
people get used to marketplaces etc
@onetom I'm also pretty excited about Datomic. I really wish that this was OS or that there would be a similar open source technology.
yea and the attitude! People are getting angry now when some amazing service does not work 100% all the time
01:39
Another new thing is people accepting that all applications are required to be installed from one marketplace. That is the result of Apple marketing. Before that, people wouldn't put up with that kind of thing.
exactly
so... if that spreads to normal computers as well
and nice new stuff like Rebol does not get into that marketplace
So far, it hasn't, because people won't put up with it. I mean, people might put up with it by default, but they don't put up with it being a hard limit. If they did, Windows would fail.
no more "personal computing", just morons pushing buttons
To be fair, most "personal computing" has historically been morons pushing buttons. Or smart-in-other-ways people pushing buttons.
(you know I jsut bought my first modern smartphone last monday. Had some WinCE device in ~2006 and one of the original Palms but that's about it. I tried to resist the consumer attitude and the mental decay and the worshipping of shiny distractions etc as long as I could)
yea ... on a PC I might push buttons but I can start doing something productive/innovative any moment. I can type real sentences. I can open a link in a new tab and read.. put the numbers into a statistical program. Develop something NEW. Someone builds a Napster...that's history
01:47
I bought an Android phone, with a touchscreen only, to learn the interaction model so I would be better at writing stuff for them. Unfortunately it was a Samsung, so I rather quickly came to hate Android and all grid-of-icon app-illusion platforms. I've never bought an app. CyanogenMod is better, but it is hard to get over my dislike for the whole UI paradigm. I really want to try more app-less platform models. My fiance's Windows Phone is really interesting.
not 100% sure why it's the (more theoretical?) distinction between app/reall application that bothers you, rather than the overall big picture
so um @HostileFork with regards to cortex pipelines, crazy faces and residual income - I'm looking forward to what you can come up with and fully expect great things coming from you!
@graph Well... I have to filter my projects. I have something rather awesome in the desktop applications space, actually, and one problem is that I haven't decided what to do with it because I don't want to sell it or give ownership of it to anyone who would not open source it. But I don't know if I can get a kickstarter to pay me either. :-/
Been working on it for 10 years on and off.
There is no distinction between "app" and "application", they are the same thing. However, once you have a component model, monolithic applications are kind of stupid, unless they are basically video games or something that you aren't really doing anything useful with. I get annoyed with Android because it has a component model, so thoroughly that it doesn't really have monolithic applications, and it still pretends to act like a 20 year old PC and lies to people.
iOS follows the same external model, so I don't like it either, but there are much worse things to get annoyed about on that platform.
@HostileFork what is it? :)
@graph I don't know if cell phone gimmicks interest me that much. An acquaintance of mine founded Matterport and there are lots of "cool" things one can do if one knows how to program in this day and age. I just have my interests.
02:04
Matterport looks awesome
@graph It is an application framework for building highly multithreaded projectional editors, now in C++11 built on Qt. I have several sample apps that demonstrate why it is an awesome methodology. Unfortunately I tend to work on it in spurts and then get distracted... the Rebol open sourcing distracted me.
The methodology used to write Rebol is... not the same league.
what does a projectional editor do?
Rebol is the design, not the implementation.
@BrianH It bothers me too that app are made so compartmentalized by way of the platform UI they have to fit into. As a software vendor, though, how would you sell something including features like, "this little extra in your gallery tab, some extra features for your map view, a speed enhancement for your social network stream view, etc., etc."?
Maybe with really micro-payments (way lower than even the typically low market prices), you could create a workable solution. Then each of these features could sell for a fractional cent.
@graph Well, look at this critique of Microsoft Paint. Then watch this video about Solidworks. Comprehend the difference and then imagine a C++11-based framework that lets you write SolidWorks-style applications easily with no defects, in any domain (music, video editing, coding IDE, graphic design) that can take advantage of as many CPU cores as you have.
From a financial standpoint, however, I do not believe I could achieve a favorable investment and keep it open source. I have entertained the idea of releasing demo apps closed source that are useful, and then a kickstarter to open-source it to repay me for my time (at a very modest rate) and possibly fund further development by myself and others.
The desktop app space is somewhat limited and against powerful competitors (Adobe, MS, SolidWorks which is actually good but ridiculous expensive, etc). Being good is not necessarily as profitable as being mature in that space. It is tough to be one person and compete.
02:12
@Adrian that is the only reason that they pretend to have apps, to give them something to sell. But if I were to sell something on the platform (given that I don't make or use video games), I would sell access to a service. Maybe give them a main UI extension, but I'd also extend the system with services that other apps could use. For that matter, if there were any applicable standard services, I would provide them in that style so other apps could use them automatically.
It's definitely not the path to any easy money unless I just sell it. Might as well just sell hostilefork.com at that point and wander off.
Didn't live my life up to this point to be a pushover!
I'll put together a demo here at some point, but there are lots of competing interests... Rebol is maybe more important because in some sense, I feel like what I've written is being done somewhere, it's just not open sourced yet. Someone's going to do it. Rebol is one of those things that might not happen if we don't do it. That's become a bit of a benchmark for how I spend my time--to do something that wouldn't just be done by someone else anyway.
@HostileFork If you look back, software tools have never been overly profitable except for the odd case. I think the writing is on the wall for the typical desktop app. The way forward is not something built on a model from 37 years ago. It's gonna be an augmented reality more and more.
Fighting complexity is not the status quo.
@Adrian Yeah, well like I said, there's a reason why I don't pursue it too rabidly even if my ideas and methodology are pretty tight. It has taught me a lot of C++11 and that's been intellectually stimulating and I've enjoyed getting into that with my group. But I am leaning now toward just open-sourcing it... some of the same thoughts as Carl's reluctance, though.
if you can "sell" such a new and innovative thing I don't see how you'd be a pushover
@graph Well I'd have to give over the code capital to some engineering-type firm who'd use it to build a custom tool for some random client... ExxonMobil or DOD... and they'd want it for making a little killer app to some tiny uninteresting domain. No open source. I don't need money that badly.
02:17
it's commercial but satisfying for you and making the world a better place (if you make somehting that actually gets used by many people)
And it wouldn't be that much money anyway.
My former roommate invested a couple years of his life in something and now has an offer from Hearst Publishing or whatever to buy it for $150K. But he has an equal partner so that's only $75K. He outsourced the development to people in other countries he paid like $8-$10/hr. After taxes, this is not a good deal. But he may take it just to cut losses.
Hour for hour, my deal would be worse if I sold it.
you can do a lot better than that, you have enough experience and skill, the only quesiton is, how "commercial" you want to be :)
@HostileFork Hmm, 75K for two years work?
So I think open sourcing, as with Carl's decision, is the right answer. I just have to get it ready. I've open sourced parts of it: Thinker-Qt, Hoist but they're little bits of it, pieces of the whole puzzle.
I mean it's OK to expect way less than that if you're doing a start-up, and have expectations of some bigger return down the road. Was that the intent when he started?
02:22
@Adrian Not counting money paid to the developers. Yeah, it's a disaster, but if he doesn't sell he runs the risk of it just being $0. At some point you cut losses.
yup
he's an expert in his field, and he has an outsourced programming team that he could manage for clients
Some people are not good at phasing entrepreneurship and using evolutionary techniques... if they played Roulette they are the kind to bet everything on Black. (We know you should bet everything on Red) :-P
there are many skills learned that you don't learn when you stay at a job in a big company
@BrianH When you see the size of the app developer market it's hard to imagine that a majority could switch to writing services.
02:25
@graph Well his field is Flash, and that was lucrative at one point when ESPN and everyone and their dog wanted to know how to put video on their site. But that's a commodity now and is very niche... you can still get good money doing it if you find the right place. But I've never liked it. Did you see my OpenZoom tinker? I...hate...ActionScript.
As it is, though, based on what I read, and from having quite a few friends working in mobile development, there's not a lot of money coming in for most apps.
@Adrian when you see the size of the successful app developer market, you will find that they pretty much are all writing services and video games.
@BrianH True, but relatively speaking they constitute a very small minority.
I'll check out OpenZoom tomorrow, it's 4:30 and the Cello is so much fun right now
What's to happen to all the others?
02:27
@BrianH what do you mean with "services"?
what are examples for successful apps (besides games)?
I mean with all the developers who will sooner-or-later realize that the big returns they expected from that cool new app idea just won't materialize.
@graph My favorite cello video is from Electric Dreams...old movie about computers I watched over and over. The tone of the apartment the architect had has influenced my living, perhaps. Permise is he buys a computer that he programs to help him with earthquake-proof brick designs, and it becomes artificially intelligent when he hooks it up to a mainframe and pours champagne on it. :-) It starts making music...
@Adrian people who are getting sufficient return on investment to write apps are indeed a vary small minority. Only the store owners and a tiny number of devs make enough to recoup their costs. The only ones that make it are just selling the app as a UI for their external service. Or in a lucky few cases, make video games.
A friend, who was in charge of development at Brisk Mobile, was telling me how many clients came to them with visions of getting rich, investing $50K-75K, and making a fraction of that back.
Yup.
02:30
They usually blamed Brisk for not having done something right, instead of admitting that maybe the idea just wasn't so great after all.
I believe I've already told the story of going to a web-startup-party here and deciding not to tell them what I did, but that I was from "coupeduppp.com". Our premise was that sure--there are sites that tell you about the coupon codes on the internet and how often they work with a percentage rate. But how do you know they are accurate?
As a service company you take what work comes your way, though. They wouldn't tell the customer up front about the risks.
We rate the coupon rating sites with metrics of how accurate their ratings are.
We wanted "coupedup.com" but that was taken, and so was "coupedupp". But we think three is the magic number.
I...hate...these...people.
One occasionally successful model: a feature as a service, especially if the feature has an external backing service like a social network. See Instagram, Dropbox, etc. Half the time the successful ones get that success by being bought, the other half of the time they have some kind of upsell.
It is not easy being an actual engineer, who likes seeing problems solved, to meet people who use your tools to create nonexistent problems.
02:34
Avira AntiVirus complains about Brisk Mobile @Adrian
I think a coming market, but not for the typical game app developers, will be in writing software for the "Internet of Things". Red will lead the way and provide the tooling. Looking forward to the kind of mashups we will see then.
@graph Those guys seem to trigger on everything.
@BrianH Well, on a positive note, I do think that there is a way of looking at things where you can sort of see-in an evolutionary way-that post-Internet companies are almost like the planet has started to develop a central nervous system. While information availability is still a bit of a war, hindered by censorship and spam, there is a fundamental holism to the reactions of companies like Google that is different. They're not reachable or accountable in some ways, but in other ways they are.
4:40 am, time for bed
good night, and thanks for the inspirational conversation
@graph, ping me tomorrow about app dev - I have some suggestions for you.
I mean platform-wise.
I will! @Adrian
02:39
@HostileFork did you see my posts post meeting?
Granted that most apps don't make any $$, I'm still interested in application development to help me manage disease states
@RebolBot
what-graham-just-said: "did you see my posts post meeting?"
parse what-graham-just-said ["comprehensible?"]
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> what-graham-just-said: "did you see my posts post meeting?" parse what-graham-just-said ["comprehensible?"]
== false
@GrahamChiu Noble causes have intrinsic motivation.
The error message for that should be better.
I was at a medical conference = meeting. I came back and wrote some posts in response to questions from Adrian. So, this was post meeting.
So, I wrote some posts post meeting.
Not as bad as work work.
02:48
@GrahamChiu Better to refer by subject than by time. Or with links. I've read back to yesterday... anything particular?
That solidworks demo is pretty amazing ...
@HostileFork Medical tools suck, or are extremely expensive
@GrahamChiu Well what bugs me--repeatedly--is the idea that kids are given garbage (like MS paint) and discouraged, blaming themselves. I was one of those kids, and a talented one at that. Took me years to realize I'd been had. See Stopping Exploitation from Being Profitable.
@GrahamChiu There are even better approaches to solid modeling than the sketch based one SolidWorks uses, if you can believe it.
@Adrian like using a manipulator instead of a mouse?
02:52
@GrahamChiu I did medical tourism in Mexico while I was there, went to Chopo Labs. These guys have coupons. They were great. You can just go in and get labwork done, look at it, take it to who you want...send it to whoever. I have a DVD of my endoscopy, was going to score it to industrial music. :-)
Really nice lab, too.
@GrahamChiu No, I was referring to the SolidWorks way of starting a 3D component using a 2D sketch.
With all of my odd "brain issues", it's a travesty that I haven't had an MRI or something. Regardless of whether it could prove contact with other dimensions, what if I have a tumor? How much do these things cost anyway? Who designs the world in such a way where we're taking in our cars for check-ups more often than our bodies...
@Adrian well, I was just complaining that we don't have similarily amazing tools in my profession to work with.
And having to use a history based workflow where if you need to modify something at the top of the tree, you can unintentionally influence the correctness of parts lower down.
Actually radiologists do .. we don't though.
02:55
Let's come up with a new way to do things.
Or are you guys just too conservative, in general?
@Adrian Dangers with new things too. But what the heck... Full Steam Ahead! - "Now you saw it coming, and I saw it coming, we all saw it coming, but we still bought it..." :-) Circuit-bent and patronized...
@Adrian New ways if they work are good
@GrahamChiu In the future, we can fix anything. At a cost...
MRI: ~$250 over here, w/o insurance
@earl here $1000
I'm not talking about replacing MRI .. just getting better tools to analyse the images we get
03:03
I'm all for it
but at least for MRI, labs over here now generally provide/share dicom images, for free.
@earl Yes, there's no charge for the images once you've paid for the scan
Can't walk in off the street and ask for one, someone has to sign off on it.
And... lessee: "Where I work, in California, a MRI of the brain, with no contrast, is about $1500. A MRI, without and then with contrast, is about $2400. A MRI, without and then with contrast, and thin slices through the IACs or pituitary is around $3500." link
I was thinking that another way to popularize RebolBot would be to have the possibility to configure it to act as a personal bot rather than to serve the group. The question is: what use could you make of him? Bot, fetch me my slippers!
@Adrian Google and Wolfram Alpha serve as pretty decent bots for most people. I'd angle on the IRC bridge, but as it's stackoverflow related I'd actually continue to build that out to usefulness on other chat rooms as per plan.
If there was some utility, we'd have quite a few more potential 'buyers'.
03:17
My task dialect would need a bot, for instance to do reminders, I need to finish that up
Sure, that's the most obvious first plan, but it doesn't hurt to think broadly.
Told Reichart I would
Wrt getting the bot to serve other groups, you realize that in order to actively 'sell' the bot there we need to register on these sites and get past the point threshold.
Just realized that with the English site, yesterday.
Really dumb when your intent is to enhance the SO experience and you're forced to jump through hoops.
@HostileFork Some imaging is priced to what the insurers will pay, and not for the cost of providing the service. Which is why sometimes it's cheaper to fly to India, get your scan done, and fly back ending up with spare change.
@Adrian Which site requires hoops?
@GrahamChiu They all have their 20 points.
Our first go will be the English Language site, I think.
03:38
@user2278815 Welcome to the Rebol and Red room. See our FAQ
@AnujKaithwas Welcome to the Rebol and Red room. See our FAQ
hey did anyone use google drive to host images that can be viewed in the browser and not in google drive? like a cdn?
@AnujKaithwas nope ... not even sure we have google drive integration with Rebol
However, I did write some apis to googledocs, and the phone/sms thing some years ago
@Max Welcome to the Rebol and Red room. See our FAQ
 
1 hour later…
04:50
@rebolbot save "r3/backward" "Docs' rewrite of R2 source" gist.github.com/dockimbel/5083375
@GrahamChiu added key: r3/backward
@RebolBot find source
What a tireless bot we have!
Hello @MikeThvedt, what bring you here? I see you are into Clojure, if I can judge by your SO activity.
Great language, btw. I like it too.
Have you heard of Rebol before?
@rgchris, are you here?
 
6 hours later…
10:43
Hello again, @GeorgesBordais
 
1 hour later…
12:11
Okay, I hate NFS and this article is incomplete, but in my push to get all the drafts out of my queue here's another: sharing-nfs-into-virtualbox. @earl, you may know something about this sort of thing and have a comment?
12:52
@HostileFork Which version of VBox are/were you using?
@earl 4.2.10 r84104
In brief: you have to re-enable symlink support in recent VBox.
VBoxManage setextradata VM_NAME VBoxInternal2/SharedFoldersEnableSymlinksCreate/SHARE_NAME 1
@earl Hrm. Okay, time to test it.
(And that's actually the comment I wanted to point to: virtualbox.org/ticket/10085#comment:14)
Second remark, but much less helpful, is that NFSv4 actually added a strong security model, based on Kerberos. No idea how to set that up on OSX, though.
13:08
@earl Due to using this setup, I'm not experienced with VirtualBox shared folders anymore. How do I mount them non-read-only? I picked a random host directory and mounting it read write still makes it read only.
sudo mount -t vboxsf foo /home/whatever/foo -w isn't working, nor is sudo mount -t vboxsf -o rw foo /home/whatever/foo
It's configured for Access:Full. I can see the files.
13:24
@earl Okay, it wants the uid for some reason. so sudo mount -t vboxsf -o uid=MY_ID,rw foo /home/whatever/foo works. That makes it writable for basic operations. But I get an error with symbolic links about it being read-only: ln: failed to create symbolic link `foo': Read-only file system
Oh. Wait. Hold on. I now see SHARE_NAME is something I have to fill in. I thought it was a global setting and just pasted it. Let me try this again. :-)
That should have been a COMPOSE statement. rejoin compose ["VBoxManage setextradata" space (VM_NAME) space "VBoxInternal2/SharedFoldersEnableSymlinksCreate/" (SHARE_NAME) space "1"] :)
Well I'll be damned. It works. @earl, remind me in the future not to work around things like this without asking you first!!!
(Of course, this article was from 2011...)
@HostileFork Glad it helped :)
Why on earth don't they just have a checkbox for this?
It's open source. Can we submit that check box to the UI?
And what form of crack are they smoking to not enable this by default?
13:39
@Adrian I am now...
@HostileFork The ticket linked to above mentions that a lot in their symlinks support is simply broken, so they disabled it until they get the bugs fixed.
@earl Oh. Back to summary point, as you apparently know...what's broken?
@HostileFork No idea, I just briefly skimmed the ticket.
14:04
@earl Well, updated, thanks. That ticket was opened after this article was initially started and researched. But given the new info, I may be a risk taker from now on, although I do have NFS working so it's not really worth it for me to switch over for the sake of switching.
Another good reason to keep getting these out of the drafts folder. @rgchris I'm still working on that (!) but hopefully not too much longer...
14:53
Okay, another entry out from long ago. future-of-web-software. Random rant, I'll edit it later.
 
3 hours later…
17:56
@Ladislav, would you know if there is a library similar to Jan Skibinski's hof.r that is R3 compatible? I was thinking that you, in particular, might be aware of one, if it exists.
Well, his implementation looks easily adjustable for R3, as far as I can tell
@Adrian we were talking about App programming....
@graph Note mostly here our focus is going to be on Rebol app programming. There are other places to discuss it in the large and in general.
@Ladislav you're right - I might give it a go
sry he asked me to ping him about it so I followed it up, otherwise I would not bring it up any more
18:05
@graph let's do it on Skype - I'm thinline
@Adrian ok
18:41
@SomeKittens Hey, what's new...
I finally saw Pulp Fiction and Fight Club
@SomeKittens Heh, there's a delay. I saw them right around when I saw "Being John Malkovich", "Truman Show", and "Sixth Sense". It was a good year for movies. Not so many good movie years since. :-/
In code news, I'm just kinda coasting. Since I'll be taking on a new job (tons of stuff to learn) this weekend, I don't want to start anything big this week.
@SomeKittens Rebol projects can be small... :-)
For you maybe. Last Rebol project I tackled took a week longer than I thought and it's still not done
You guys still have a long way to go to make it accessible to normal people like me...
18:49
@SomeKittens Well we can't help if there's no GitHub or similar...
I posted the code here, everyone kinda went "yeah, that should work" and ignored it.
It was fairly simple, POSTing data to a Node.JS server, lemme see if I can find it.....
19:00
Ah, found it
Helps if one roots around in the correct Dropbox folder
REBOL [
  Title: "post"
  Date: 2-Feb-2013
  File: %post.r
  Author: "SomeKittens"
  Version: 0.0.1
]

header: [
  Content-Type: "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
]

write localhost:1337 [POST (header) "hello=world^/"]
@HostileFork ^^^
@SomeKittens What do you expect that to do?
Send a POST message to localhost containing world mapped to hello
cURL works, this doesn't
I mean, header is defined I take it? I don't know enough about the http scheme but maybe it supports that word. Back when I was messing with it, you had to tweak something global before doing it to switch the request type...
I have no idea. This is almost entirely cargo-cult.
@SomeKittens I'm the wrong person to ask, only just learned network schemes. Sent you a document we're working with over e-mail. In progress, not for sharing...
19:05
You already sent me that, remember?
@GrahamChiu Do you have enough experience with http post in R3 to get the right way to do that write?
@SomeKittens Nope, I don't remember who I've sent what. :-)
I have a lot of things to do and a lot of things to remember, unfortunately. Or fortunately. I guess it depends.
@SomeKittens Beyond whether the HTTP scheme knows how to interpret the first word being POST or not (I don't know), or header second (I don't know) what is header defined as?
I can go dig up my code that did HTTP post a long time ago. Let me see.
Missing compose/into
@SomeKittens R2 or R3?
write localhost:1337 compose/into [POST (header) "hello=world^/"]
No /into, Graham.
19:17
@earl R3
(Note: In my case I apparently just hacked around and used system/schemes/http/spec/method: 'post to get it to post, and system/schemes/http/spec/headers to set the headers, then I myself wrote something to set system/schemes/http/spec/content... and actually used READ oddly enough. I didn't realize that POST was done with write. If there's a smarter network scheme, it would be great to use it.)
the block after the http verb contains custom header, and not even required here as this is default
write localhost:1337 [POST "hello=world^/"]
@SomeKittens write http://localhost:1337 [post "hello=world"]
And if you want to set custom headers from a pre-populated block:
@SomeKittens just to reiterate, parentheses are a "tinkertoy" (as I call them) in Rebol...while they are used for precedence in the DO dialect, they are just linguistic elements that you can use for other purposes. So...
write localhost:1337 compose/only [post (header) "hello=word"]
19:21
@RebolBot
compose [1 + 2 + (3 + 4)]
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> compose [1 + 2 + (3 + 4)]
== [1 + 2 + 7]
COMPOSE looks for parens within a block, evaluates the code inside the paren, and returns a block with the parems replaced with the evaluation results.
oh yeah I get /into and only mixed up
@RebolBot
foo: [2 3 4]
compose [1 (foo) 5]
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> foo: [2 3 4] compose [1 (foo) 5]
== [1 2 3 4 5]
19:23
@RebolBot
foo: [2 3 4]
compose/only [1 (foo) 5]
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> foo: [2 3 4] compose/only [1 (foo) 5]
== [1 [2 3 4] 5]
To send a custom header along with a POST:
write localhost:1337 [post [Foo: "Bar"] "hello=world"]
So if you want to extract the custom headers into a block:
write localhost:1337 compose/deep [POST [(header)] "hello=world^/"]
headers: [Foo: "Bar"]
write localhost:1337 compose/only [post (headers) "hello=world"]
The block after the URL is a dialect
write localhost:1337 "hello=world^/" might work too?
since write on http assumes post
Examples on REBOL.net which is down at present
19:37
@GrahamChiu Yes, that indeed works as well.
write localhost:1337 "hello=world"
20:09
I found the previous exchange with @SomeKittens here chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/8011621#8011621 and the same advice was given then.
@SomeKittens so this comment is somewhat misleading!
@RebolBot
print to string! write http://www.compkarori.com/cgi-local/cgitest.r "foo=bar"
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> print to string! write compkarori.com/cgi-local/cgitest.r "foo=bar"
<html><body>
<h2>Hello world from REBOL</h2>
<pre>

make object! [
    server-software: {Apache/1.3.41 (Unix) Sun-ONE-ASP/4.0.0 mod_fastcgi/2.2.12 mod_perl/1.30 PHP/4.4.9 FrontPage/5.0.2.2623 mod_ssl/2.8.31 OpenSSL/0.9.7c}
    server-name: "compkarori.com"
    gateway-interface: "CGI/1.1"
    server-protocol: "HTTP/1.0"
    server-port: "80"
    request-method: "POST"
@RebolBot
print to string! write http://www.compkarori.com/cgi-local/cgitest.r [ POST "foo=bar"]
; Brought to you by: tryrebol.esperconsultancy.nl
>> print to string! write compkarori.com/cgi-local/cgitest.r [POST "foo=bar"]
<html><body>
<h2>Hello world from REBOL</h2>
<pre>

make object! [
    server-software: {Apache/1.3.41 (Unix) Sun-ONE-ASP/4.0.0 mod_fastcgi/2.2.12 mod_perl/1.30 PHP/4.4.9 FrontPage/5.0.2.2623 mod_ssl/2.8.31 OpenSSL/0.9.7c}
    server-name: "compkarori.com"
    gateway-interface: "CGI/1.1"
    server-protocol: "HTTP/1.0"
    server-port: "80"
    request-method: "POST"
20:25
Cyphre "Here is the R3GUI running on Android(no text so far): http://cyphre.mysteria.cz/tests/r3-gui-droid.jpg
This is just a proof things *work* but it still runs on "slow" AGG(at least on my device without HW float support) graphics backend. We might try to do some optimizations or write 'native' gfx backend support. Stay tuned...;-)"
20:48
I spy—is that my radio-button image? :)
@rgchris GPL button ? :)
I guess perhaps not (mine on the right)...
@RebolBot do read rebol.net
@rebolbot version
@GrahamChiu 0.0.33 11-Apr-2013
phew!
@RebolBot read raw rebol.net
Perhaps if Carl can't keep rebol.net running, he should ask someone else?
21:04
@GrahamChiu HTTP timeout
@WesleyBaugh Welcome to the Rebol and Red room. See our FAQ
 
1 hour later…
22:14
cyphre again "If you want to participate on the performance testing:

1. run the R3/Droid
2. in console type: do http://cyphre.mysteria.cz/tests/dt-01.r
3. test will be downloaded and executed
4. once testing is done, you will be asked to enter device name (you can put your name/tag after that as well)
5. after you enter the info, results are sent to the server
6. you can view the results on this URL: http://rebol.atwebpages.com/cgi-bin/droid-results.cgi"
http://cyphre.mysteria.cz/tests/dt-01.r
http://rebol.atwebpages.com/cgi-bin/droid-results.cgi
 
1 hour later…
23:37
AltXML for Rebol 3 now with path notation.
@RebolBot
do http://reb4.me/r3/altxml
feed: load-xml/dom http://www.rebol.com/article/carl-rss.xml
foreach title feed/path [<rss> <channel> <item> <title> ?][print title]
sorry RebolBot, may have been too ambitious :(
@RebolBot Hello?
@GrahamChiu Sorry, broke the Bot!!
Or not—code seems to work on the Try Rebol page...

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