Forum logs for 02 Aug 2015
Sunday, 24 November, Year 11 d.Tr. | Author: Mircea Popescu
* | Now talking on #bitcoin-assets | [11:04] |
* | Topic for #bitcoin-assets is: http://bitcoin-assets.com || http://log.bitcoin-assets.com || http://bash.bitcoin-assets.com || http://blogs.bitcoin-assets.com | [11:04] |
* | Topic for #bitcoin-assets set by kakobrekla!~kako@unaffiliated/kakobrekla at Wed Mar 5 16:58:12 2014 | [11:04] |
* | [freenode-info] if you're at a conference and other people are having trouble connecting, please mention it to staff: http://freenode.net/faq.shtml#gettinghelp | [11:04] |
-assbot- | Welcome to #bitcoin-assets. To get voice (ie, to be able to speak), send me "!up" in a private message to get an OTP. You must have a sufficient WoT rating. If you do not have a WoT account or sufficient rating, try politely asking one of the voiced people for a temporary voice. | [11:04] |
mircea_popescu | gernika wd. | [11:05] |
* | #bitcoin-assets :Cannot send to channel | [11:05] |
* | assbot gives voice to mircea_popescu | [11:06] |
mircea_popescu | gernika wd. | [11:06] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1221808 << ok, but the broad point is still "technology makes it easier". sure. to what ? to whatever. sure. | [11:13] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 01:30:55; asciilifeform: (which was, that www makes things very easy for the censor, much easier at any rate than rounding up 10,000 books to burn) | [11:13] |
mircea_popescu | is it easier for censor to censor documents if documents are deliberately created in easy to censor ways ? sure. | [11:14] |
* | WolfGoethe (~textual@cpe-74-66-238-187.nyc.res.rr.com) has joined #bitcoin-assets | [11:14] |
mircea_popescu | is it easier for anti-censor to create documents in formats not easy to censor ? sure. | [11:14] |
mircea_popescu | etc. | [11:14] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1221813 << how is a 32 bit machine going to build for another platform if one doesn't deliberately put the "build for other platforms" code in there! | [11:15] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 01:32:00; asciilifeform: multilib not relevant! | [11:15] |
mircea_popescu | obviously c will compile for anything. but not by itself! | [11:15] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1221837 << on and off. | [11:17] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 01:47:14; asciilifeform: mircea_popescu: you still getting ^this on your nodes ? | [11:17] |
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ben_vulpes | phf: http://paste.lisp.org/display/152826 << nifty! | [11:23] |
assbot | ... ( http://bit.ly/1IxKwpO ) | [11:23] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1221842 << exactly. the behaviour itself can not be reproduced over lans. | [11:24] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 02:11:18; asciilifeform: it also ~never~ happens between directly-connected nodes on my lan, for example. | [11:24] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1221858 << how the fuck does this work, 1k per sqft omfg. | [11:25] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 04:02:50; decimation: http://www.trulia.com/real_estate/Aspen-Colorado/ "Average price per square foot for Aspen CO was $909, an increase of 23% compared to the same period last year." | [11:25] |
mircea_popescu | euro housing costs ~1-2 keuro per sqmp! that's a fucking degree of magnitude. | [11:26] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 40800 @ 0.00054026 = 22.0426 BTC [+] {3} | [11:27] |
ben_vulpes | http://www.trulia.com/real_estate/portland-oregon | [11:28] |
ben_vulpes | ehuhueeuhe | [11:28] |
ben_vulpes | gaze ye and weep | [11:28] |
mircea_popescu | i have no idea why anyone would do this. | [11:29] |
mircea_popescu | i point and laugh at the locals six digit price delusions for real estate in the dead centre of ba. | [11:30] |
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assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 20050 @ 0.00052554 = 10.5371 BTC [-] | [11:33] |
* | SuchWow|2 is now known as SuchWow | [11:33] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 24900 @ 0.00054773 = 13.6385 BTC [+] {3} | [11:34] |
mircea_popescu | kakobrekla i just looked at online.net. nowhere does it advertise hosting illegal content. i'm not giving them any money. | [11:45] |
kakobrekla | hosting illegal content? | [11:45] |
mircea_popescu | to qualify for any payments, a host must prominently advertise hosting illegal content. | [11:45] |
mircea_popescu | yep. | [11:45] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 10150 @ 0.00055022 = 5.5847 BTC [+] | [11:45] |
mircea_popescu | i will not give money to derps who follow usg. | [11:45] |
kakobrekla | where does phoenixnap do that pls show | [11:46] |
mircea_popescu | you understand how grandfathering works right ? | [11:46] |
mircea_popescu | in any case : i will not pay any isp that fails to advertise ignoring "law". | [11:47] |
kakobrekla | you are worried about dmca? | [11:47] |
kakobrekla | i dont see phoenixnap doing it, so whatevs. | [11:47] |
mircea_popescu | i am worried about living in a world which contains isps that follow "law" | [11:47] |
mircea_popescu | and yes, it's a difficult principle to apply uniformly, and yes i don't universally managing atm. nevertheless, i'm not taking stuff back to the dumbass world. and yes i think it'd be just grand if everyone follows it wherever possible. | [11:49] |
kakobrekla | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com//?date=08-05-2015#1125737 < funny. | [11:49] |
assbot | Logged on 08-05-2015 21:46:38; asciilifeform: i guess my red-hot doug lenat k001 w4r3z stays on kako's box, l0l | [11:49] |
mircea_popescu | it's purely a pr thing. got to get people used to the idea that they MUST say they despise the usg. | [11:50] |
mircea_popescu | to get paid. | [11:50] |
mircea_popescu | none of this "people agree, rule of law, bla bla" nonsense any more. | [11:51] |
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kakobrekla | this is all based on nothing. | [11:51] |
mircea_popescu | people happen to agree alright, it's just the other way. | [11:51] |
kakobrekla | dont worry, you can say its just too much css. | [11:51] |
mircea_popescu | kakobrekla you're a nihilist. everything's ultimately based on nothing as fatr as you're concerned, if you're willing to take the time and look. | [11:51] |
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chetty | [11:58] | |
mircea_popescu | nah, generally speaking. | [11:58] |
mircea_popescu | gotta get back to the good old 80s "if you follow the law you're unfuckable, an idiot and get lost" | [11:58] |
mircea_popescu | it's after all how the soviets ended. | [11:58] |
mircea_popescu | lulz of today : if one googles for bulletproof hosting stuff in the last month, the first 5 results are this dumbass trendmicro "report", and the rest references to it. like : "A new report from TrendLabs -- the research arm of security company Trend Micro -- uncovers the existence of what it calls 'Bulletproof Hosting Services' (BPHSs) which provide" | [12:04] |
mircea_popescu | fancy that, trendmicro discovered the hole in the donut! | [12:04] |
asciilifeform | [12:15] | |
mircea_popescu | o i c | [12:16] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: fortunately there is wildlife that lives on usg-free net, whose turds one can follow to find the forest. i speak, of course, of crapware artists and sp4mz0rz | [12:19] |
mircea_popescu | of course. | [12:20] |
mircea_popescu | but forget the discreet bs. | [12:20] |
mircea_popescu | mainstream all the things. | [12:20] |
asciilifeform | 100% mainstream in ru | [12:20] |
mircea_popescu | myeah. | [12:20] |
mircea_popescu | 100% mainstream anywhere outside of "my mother had me with a retard" land. | [12:21] |
asciilifeform | in other nyooz, incitatus still synced (along with the other two) | [12:26] |
asciilifeform | from a closer look, it appears to have been running into swap earlier | [12:26] |
asciilifeform | what is really needed is moar s00p3rn0d3 l1f3styl3!!! nodez | [12:27] |
asciilifeform | like dulap | [12:27] |
asciilifeform | though, strangely enough, the best-performing (e.g., fewest 'black hole' issues) node in my fleet thus far has been 'zoolag', which is sitting under my desk, on residential fiber | [12:28] |
asciilifeform | 50 connections, presently (dulap - 40; incitatus - 32) | [12:29] |
mircea_popescu | how long it's been on is the largest factor for that metric. | [12:31] |
asciilifeform | not only | [12:31] |
asciilifeform | but the 'black hole' effect, also. | [12:31] |
asciilifeform | https://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/3fi92w/how_important_are_individual_full_nodes_and_how << check out the philippinos | [12:31] |
assbot | How important are individual full nodes, and how much does it benefit the network per individual? : Bitcoin ... ( http://bit.ly/1E2oyu2 ) | [12:31] |
asciilifeform | apparently - still in business | [12:32] |
mircea_popescu | doh. | [12:32] |
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asciilifeform | ben_vulpes, mod6, mircea_popescu, et al: http://btc.yt/lxr/satoshi/source/src/net.cpp#0526 << interestingly, these appear to be dead code. what were they meant for ? | [12:44] |
assbot | Satoshi 0.5.3.1/src/net.cpp ... ( http://bit.ly/1IDYpY1 ) | [12:44] |
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asciilifeform | trinque's gcov paint these a very deep red (0 runs) | [12:45] |
asciilifeform | and indeed, i see no graph path to them | [12:45] |
asciilifeform | speaking of which, anyone ever get solrodar's graph into a readable form ? | [12:45] |
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ben_vulpes | asciilifeform: mircea_popescu did iirc, via gimp | [12:49] |
ben_vulpes | but i never did. | [12:49] |
mircea_popescu | yea. | [12:49] |
asciilifeform | if it was what i saw, that wasn't readable ! | [12:50] |
asciilifeform | fucking ball of yarn | [12:50] |
mircea_popescu | ... | [12:50] |
mircea_popescu | how would i decide that if. | [12:50] |
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asciilifeform | well i just gave an example. can you tell from that picture whether it is theoretically possible for the 'subscription' routines to be called? | [12:51] |
ben_vulpes | readable, renderable... | [12:51] |
trinque | asciilifeform: that thing's a bit jacked | [12:51] |
trinque | split the results between the build dirs and the ourlibs dir | [12:51] |
* | asciilifeform used grep to answer the question, unambiguous 'no' | [12:51] |
trinque | I'm going to give that thing a few more shoves today and see if I can get it all in one tree | [12:51] |
asciilifeform | trinque: gcov is useful but doesn't prove code to be alive or dead, can only suggest | [12:52] |
asciilifeform | (wallet, for instance, would look entirely 'dead' on a gcov run where such was not used) | [12:52] |
ben_vulpes | i don't see any usage of anysubscribed at least, asciilifeform | [12:52] |
trinque | yep, makes sense | [12:52] |
asciilifeform | the place i'm trying to go with this is: dead code ought not be in The Book, except - in the one and only case where it pre-dates gavin et al, it could be shoved into an appendix | [12:53] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform let's keep it simple. have you loaded the svg in gimp and examined the picture painted. | [12:53] |
asciilifeform | link to latest version of this? | [12:54] |
mircea_popescu | i don't have one. lesee | [12:54] |
mircea_popescu | !s from:mircea gimp | [12:54] |
assbot | 8 results for 'from:mircea gimp' : http://s.b-a.link/?q=from%3Amircea+gimp | [12:54] |
asciilifeform | http://cascadianhacker.com/bitcoin/callgraph ? | [12:55] |
assbot | Index of /bitcoin/callgraph/ ... ( http://bit.ly/1IDZBuh ) | [12:55] |
mircea_popescu | http://cascadianhacker.com/bitcoin/callgraph/bitcoin-dot.svg | [12:55] |
assbot | Call graph ... ( http://bit.ly/1IDZFds ) | [12:55] |
asciilifeform | yeah that was what i saw | [12:56] |
asciilifeform | incidentally, it is worthless if flattened into a bitmap | [12:57] |
asciilifeform | gotta be viewed in a graphical www browser, so you can search | [12:57] |
trinque | http://getspringy.com/demo.html | [12:57] |
assbot | ... ( http://bit.ly/1IDZVZX ) | [12:58] |
asciilifeform | and, after you do this, aside from the nightmare of intersecting lines and bubbles light-years away from their ~only~ antecedent, etc, | [12:58] |
trinque | would be nice to grab a node and shake | [12:58] |
asciilifeform | you will see things like: 'CNode :: PushVersion' is connected! to whom?? to 'CNode :: CNode'. | [12:59] |
trinque | http://marvl.infotech.monash.edu/webcola/ << also looks neat | [12:59] |
assbot | cola.js: Constraint-based Layout in the Browser ... ( http://bit.ly/1IE0141 ) | [12:59] |
asciilifeform | this conveys ~zero~ useful information. in particular, the fact that 'CNode :: PushVersion' is a deadcode island is no longer visually apparent. | [12:59] |
trinque | http://marvl.infotech.monash.edu/webcola/examples/browsemovies.html << in particular | [12:59] |
assbot | Incremental exploration of a large graph ... ( http://bit.ly/1IE03c9 ) | [12:59] |
asciilifeform | the above observation is not a criticism of solrodar's work, but of the catastrophically inadequate existing tooling | [13:00] |
mircea_popescu | mkay. well.... | [13:02] |
trinque | so... what about those JS things | [13:02] |
asciilifeform | trinque: the 'springy' thing is quite like the molecular strain sims i've used | [13:02] |
asciilifeform | except there is no reason to make it a clicking and dragging game | [13:03] |
trinque | yeah, best to just have some layout algo make it readable | [13:03] |
asciilifeform | can give the 'atoms' electrostatic-style charge, so they repel, and the bonds - 'strain', so they contract | [13:03] |
trinque | clicking collapsed nodes to expand might be helpful | [13:03] |
asciilifeform | then simulated-anneal. | [13:03] |
trinque | yeah | [13:03] |
asciilifeform | at any rate, i originally wanted this as a wall poster | [13:04] |
asciilifeform | so it would have to be very clean to justify losing search | [13:04] |
trinque | http://marvl.infotech.monash.edu/webcola/examples/dotpowergraph.html | [13:04] |
assbot | Grid Layout ... ( http://bit.ly/1HiecpW ) | [13:04] |
trinque | that helps my eyes a bit | [13:04] |
ben_vulpes | ;;later tell phf http://paste.lisp.org/display/152828#1 << do forgive my ignorance, but what am i missing about converting the "command" into a string? (Adlai, asciilifeform, your eyes'd be appreciated too) | [13:04] |
gribble | The operation succeeded. | [13:04] |
assbot | ... ( http://bit.ly/1HieixP ) | [13:04] |
trinque | would need a legend or bigger boxes | [13:04] |
asciilifeform | ew | [13:04] |
asciilifeform | 'help the mouse find the cheese' | [13:05] |
asciilifeform | no thx | [13:05] |
trinque | lol | [13:05] |
asciilifeform | the most critical thing re: the graph is probably to make it reflect ~only function calls~ rather than class membership | [13:06] |
asciilifeform | the latter is ~entirely irrelevant~ to a call graph! | [13:06] |
punkman | http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/3fggjj/someone_has_broadcast_a_transaction_with_20000/ | [13:07] |
assbot | Someone has broadcast a transaction with 20,000 inputs! : Bitcoin ... ( http://bit.ly/1IE0PG5 ) | [13:07] |
asciilifeform | why the fuck are 0-valued outputs spendable !? | [13:10] |
asciilifeform | (or even valid in a block) | [13:11] |
asciilifeform | https://www.f2pool.com/pushtx << interesting | [13:12] |
punkman | plenty of pages like that | [13:13] |
punkman | https://bitbucket.org/pankkake/pushtx | [13:14] |
assbot | pankkake / pushtx — Bitbucket ... ( http://bit.ly/1Hig6XM ) | [13:14] |
asciilifeform | punkman: the linked page is connected to a live pool. and demands password (presumably subscriptions are sold?) | [13:14] |
asciilifeform | reminiscent of what mircea_popescu suggested, but with moar duct tape and chicken wire | [13:14] |
asciilifeform | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1222073 << this is seriously, deeply 'un-lispy' code. it explicitly reads fields!!! what you oughta do is define the 'message' structure in the most minimal way you can think of, and then write a routine that snarfs any structure defined that way, whatever it may be. | [13:16] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 16:01:52; ben_vulpes: ;;later tell phf http://paste.lisp.org/display/152828#1 << do forgive my ignorance, but what am i missing about converting the "command" into a string? (Adlai, asciilifeform, your eyes'd be appreciated too) | [13:16] |
ben_vulpes | well how'd i know without putting myself up for the cane | [13:17] |
asciilifeform | then you will have a jewel in your toolbox that you can use 20 years from now | [13:17] |
asciilifeform | as it is, you have... perl. | [13:17] |
asciilifeform | http://www.cliki.net/binary-types << most famous example | [13:18] |
assbot | CLiki: Binary-types ... ( http://bit.ly/1IE26g9 ) | [13:18] |
ben_vulpes | this has come up before, and i had forgotten. | [13:18] |
asciilifeform | https://github.com/frodef/binary-types << mirror | [13:18] |
assbot | frodef/binary-types · GitHub ... ( http://bit.ly/1IE28om ) | [13:18] |
asciilifeform | and yes, it seems like 50x more work, at first glance | [13:18] |
asciilifeform | because... it is. | [13:19] |
asciilifeform | but the whole point of a computer is that you do the 50, so you don't have to do the 50,000 over next 20 years. | [13:19] |
asciilifeform | re: binary-types, see esp. the mirror link, for example | [13:20] |
asciilifeform | it has definition of 'elf' (unix executable) format parser | [13:20] |
ben_vulpes | am reading, yes | [13:20] |
trinque | hm yeah, that's much cooler; it's a lot like you'd describe a grammar for a parser generator | [13:22] |
trinque | well fuck, it is that | [13:22] |
trinque | lol | [13:22] |
* | trinque finds coffee | [13:22] |
ben_vulpes | (but ascii - i /can/ mutate in place, therefore i /must/!) | [13:24] |
asciilifeform | wai wat | [13:24] |
ben_vulpes | just a joke | [13:25] |
ben_vulpes | "we can, therefore we must" | [13:25] |
asciilifeform | http://www.xach.com/naggum/articles/3236870273259433@naggum.net.html << obligatory | [13:25] |
assbot | Re: two questions about strings - Naggum cll archive ... ( http://bit.ly/1IE2ZW8 ) | [13:25] |
asciilifeform | (mainly last paragraph) | [13:26] |
asciilifeform | ;;isup trilema.com | [13:26] |
gribble | trilema.com is down | [13:26] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu ^ | [13:27] |
mircea_popescu | aha. | [13:27] |
mircea_popescu | shoulda read it yesterday, what is this. | [13:27] |
mircea_popescu | you read when you feel like ?!?!?! | [13:27] |
asciilifeform | prolly more of the usual | [13:28] |
punkman | every ;;isup trilema.com feeds the troll | [13:28] |
asciilifeform | the troll lives on sunshine | [13:29] |
asciilifeform | and big fat duffels of benjie from usg | [13:29] |
mircea_popescu | lol | [13:29] |
mircea_popescu | srsly, there;s nothing new there as opposed to yest. | [13:29] |
trinque | "Common Lisp is a big-city language. Spit out the hayseed, pronounce "shit" with one syllable and "shotgun" with two." << wahahaha | [13:29] |
asciilifeform | except that i linked to mircea_popescu's pgp key in a post | [13:30] |
asciilifeform | and clicked (by mistake) just now, noticed that no one can see it. | [13:30] |
trinque | people who don't like "mean" people have no appreciation for comedy | [13:30] |
mircea_popescu | aha. | [13:30] |
mircea_popescu | well, it exists as a signed thing in the hands of the conference participants. | [13:30] |
asciilifeform | aha. | [13:30] |
punkman | how do you pronounce shotgun with more/less syllables than two? | [13:31] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: i wrote a short post last night, linking to an archive.today of the phuctored list, and exhorting the folks whose names appear therein to write | [13:31] |
asciilifeform | (doubt it will have any effect. perhaps ought to consider spamming them?) | [13:31] |
mircea_popescu | fuck em, why would you care/bother ? | [13:31] |
scoopbot_revived | Doing "God's Work" http://www.contravex.com/2015/08/02/doing-gods-work/ | [13:31] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: would like to find what they have in common ? | [13:32] |
mircea_popescu | you're coming from tyhis weird place where we're all possessed of functioning brains here on this great internet and stuff. wtf. | [13:32] |
asciilifeform | what, ~nobody on the list~ has brain ? | [13:32] |
asciilifeform | not one ? | [13:32] |
mircea_popescu | they have in common being either dumb per se or else i nthe crosshairs of the manacling-with-dumb cannon. | [13:32] |
mircea_popescu | neither class wants to talk to you about it, for different reasons. | [13:33] |
asciilifeform | i suppose now that their names have been 'googleable' for months, and still no reaction - this conclusion is nearly inescapable | [13:33] |
mircea_popescu | something like that. | [13:33] |
punkman | asciilifeform: did you email all of the already? I remember some mention of emails | [13:33] |
mircea_popescu | you got one schmuck exercising his right to be idiotic is the sumall. | [13:33] |
asciilifeform | punkman: nope. and it would almost certainly vanish in their spam filter, also. | [13:33] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: yeah i recall. was it anvin? iirc | [13:34] |
mircea_popescu | some anon. | [13:34] |
asciilifeform | ah that one | [13:34] |
mircea_popescu | because hey, that's the way to do things. | [13:34] |
asciilifeform | that one didn't even sign his name! | [13:34] |
mircea_popescu | i'll take it a notch further : none of them had anything to sign. ever. | [13:34] |
mircea_popescu | this includes the pgp mailing list. | [13:34] |
asciilifeform | 'go to the place - where? no one knows, and bring me back that - which? no one knows' (tm) | [13:35] |
mircea_popescu | crazy as it may sound. | [13:35] |
asciilifeform | wai wut | [13:35] |
asciilifeform | as in, nothing ever changed from their signature being on it or not ? | [13:35] |
mircea_popescu | not.a.single.entry.on.your.list.ever.hand.any.legitimate.use.for.encryption. | [13:35] |
asciilifeform | well no shit. | [13:35] |
mircea_popescu | the impersonated ones, i mean. | [13:36] |
mircea_popescu | they just have no business here. | [13:36] |
asciilifeform | idk, the 'update signing key' people | [13:36] |
asciilifeform | had at least in their own planet, a use | [13:36] |
mircea_popescu | it's a case of, 12 yo girly playing a game she doesn't understand with toys that aren't really toys. except online and with boys. | [13:36] |
asciilifeform | and some of the maths students may have had something or other to say to someone or other | [13:36] |
mircea_popescu | heh. | [13:36] |
asciilifeform | and the folks releasing code (anvin? a few others?) did sign it | [13:37] |
mircea_popescu | i bet you, dollars to donuts, that they signed it for "wouldn';t it be cool if" reasons. an d the thing doesn't actually work / is not full lengthj /.trivially defeated on some op sec hole or other. | [13:37] |
asciilifeform | what i mean to say is, the folks selected for this special delicacy treat, were selected presumably for reasons ? | [13:37] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: iirc linus checks sigs | [13:38] |
asciilifeform | (of anvin et all) | [13:38] |
* | mircea_popescu suddenly realised, sometimes last night, that the deep reason nothing works is simply that - all of it was made on a lark. | [13:38] |
mircea_popescu | not for serious. | [13:38] |
asciilifeform | but how often? between him and the gods. i wouldn't know | [13:38] |
mircea_popescu | orly ? i thought he just dumps code someone emailed him intop the kernel. | [13:38] |
asciilifeform | l0l | [13:39] |
mircea_popescu | for srs. | [13:39] |
asciilifeform | (if he did, by all rights 2015 ought to have happened in 2005, or 1995... ?) | [13:39] |
mircea_popescu | i vaguely recall some incident where precisely this happened. | [13:40] |
mircea_popescu | i suppose i should stfu if i can't link it. | [13:40] |
* | asciilifeform also recalls | [13:40] |
asciilifeform | but it may have involved freebsd | [13:40] |
mircea_popescu | anyway : there's this entire pretend culture, and it goes very deep. dunno how to properly illustrate it in its meta splendor. | [13:40] |
mircea_popescu | but i'm nothing oif not persistent, so lemme try. | [13:40] |
asciilifeform | http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/12/15/openbsd_backdoor_claim << rumour | [13:40] |
assbot | FBI 'planted backdoor' in OpenBSD • The Register ... ( http://bit.ly/1HilwSq ) | [13:40] |
asciilifeform | and the 'pretend culture' at least in as far as it concerns public key crypto, was a very deliberate plank of the 'cypherpunk' folks - 'let's use crypto for every piece of shit, to defeat traffic analysis' | [13:41] |
mircea_popescu | case A : kid sees girl in bar. waits for moment when no-one's looking around 3am, kloinks her in the head with bottle, drags her dark alley outside, shreds her clothes and her virginity. | [13:41] |
mircea_popescu | case B : kid sees girl in bar, works up his courage until 3am, eventually approaches her and explains that he's into kinky stuff. which works out, because she always dreamed about being raped, so they meet in dark alley and have some great sex. | [13:42] |
mircea_popescu | and i posit that the entire fucking thing, "from the ground up", is B. all of it. | [13:42] |
mircea_popescu | "hey, woiuldn't it be cool if you could like... encrypt shit ?" "why ?" "so you cxould be like... a secre agent!" | [13:43] |
mircea_popescu | then they went about roleplaying their super-secret-agent kink for a while | [13:43] |
mircea_popescu | and then forgot about it. | [13:43] |
mircea_popescu | guitar hero for a different generation. | [13:44] |
trinque | sounds like the problem with letting most people define themselves on their own | [13:44] |
mircea_popescu | possibly the last time anyone did anything for serious with computers was in tyhe 80s. | [13:45] |
trinque | you're going to get fake representations out of most, if it cuts it with the people looking at them | [13:45] |
mircea_popescu | since then, everyone's just been trying to salvage utility out of the kids' roleplaying | [13:45] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: industry exists | [13:45] |
trinque | I was fumbling for that idea the other day re: internal representations of identity | [13:45] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform does it. | [13:45] |
asciilifeform | i know, this sound like 'martians live among us' | [13:45] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: recall that pdp emulator fella ? | [13:45] |
asciilifeform | somebody's buying that. | [13:45] |
asciilifeform | folks with beards as long as my arm. | [13:46] |
mircea_popescu | aha. exactly. | [13:46] |
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mircea_popescu | those are hobbists not industrialists. | [13:46] |
asciilifeform | on whom the remnants of 'the west' stand, like on elephants on turtles. | [13:46] |
asciilifeform | not hobbyists. those use 'open source' emu | [13:46] |
asciilifeform | this one is intended for industrial plant | [13:46] |
asciilifeform | which still runs, yes, on pdp | [13:46] |
mircea_popescu | as someone's hobby. | [13:47] |
asciilifeform | (as do a great many american .mil systems, of the kind which still work) | [13:47] |
mircea_popescu | the "industry", such as it is, is fucking google, holding hackathons | [13:47] |
asciilifeform | no. | [13:47] |
mircea_popescu | trying to feed themselves out of used condoms left behind in dark alleys | [13:47] |
asciilifeform | the industry, in actuality, is grey beards maintaining code written in 1973, which keeps the water mains pressurized and the lights on. | [13:47] |
asciilifeform | and the condom injection molds going | [13:48] |
asciilifeform | etc | [13:48] |
mircea_popescu | aha. what's your definition of "industry" ? | [13:48] |
asciilifeform | easy: the ox | [13:48] |
asciilifeform | not the flies on his horns. | [13:48] |
mircea_popescu | because i suspect you go by ops whereas i go by financials./ | [13:48] |
mircea_popescu | yea. okay. | [13:48] |
asciilifeform | if you go by financials, then the 'industry' is the u.s. fed. | [13:48] |
mircea_popescu | pretty much. | [13:48] |
asciilifeform | which prints the payola | [13:48] |
* | assbot gives voice to shinohai | [13:48] |
asciilifeform | and then gives it out to demented bums | [13:49] |
mircea_popescu | alrighty then. that was my sad storyt for today. | [13:49] |
shinohai | http://www.bbspot.com/News/2006/08/paris-hilton-tinkerbell-linux.html | [13:49] |
assbot | BBspot - Paris Hilton Releases Tinkerbell Linux ... ( http://bit.ly/1Hinhz7 ) | [13:49] |
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mircea_popescu | do not expect a girl with a collar is actually a slave - she probably thought it looks good for her facebook ; do not expect someone with a pgp key is a lord - they probably were just trying to impress someone. | [13:49] |
asciilifeform | Slutware Linux << win | [13:49] |
* | devthedev has quit (Remote host closed the connection) | [13:50] |
asciilifeform | iirc the 'cypherpunk' folks thought of themselves as anonymous soldiers trying to pave the way for 'lords' to use key without insta-flagging | [13:50] |
shinohai | LOL @ slutware | [13:51] |
shinohai | I should push a slackware release | [13:51] |
trinque | is that poor guy still maintaining it? | [13:51] |
kakobrekla | heh, re pdp, apparently http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/06/19/nuke_plants_to_keep_pdp11_until_2050/ | [13:53] |
assbot | Nuke plants to rely on PDP-11 code UNTIL 2050! • The Register ... ( http://bit.ly/1Hiobf3 ) | [13:53] |
kakobrekla | i guess end of world is 2051 | [13:54] |
trinque | jurov: how hard is it to dump maildir mail files from mailman? | [13:54] |
trinque | I wrote a python script last night that turds together maildir mail from the txt dumps, but it's a hack at best | [13:55] |
trinque | at least there are sigs; I don't really care about having identical mail headers to the originals | [13:55] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 6580 @ 0.00055022 = 3.6204 BTC [+] | [14:01] |
asciilifeform | i will add, btw, that yes, i know that 'code from 1973' is not 'maintained' in the modern idiot bottomless-barrel-of-bug sense | [14:02] |
asciilifeform | instead, it is, e.g., transplanted to a 486 using the emulator mentioned earlier, handwritten by a fella with prolly a metre-long beard | [14:03] |
asciilifeform | because if it were not - the water stops coming out of the tap | [14:03] |
asciilifeform | kakobrekla: it was officially proclaimed, at one point, that the sole remaining american land-based nuke delivery vehicle, 'minuteman', is 100% vax-powered | [14:04] |
asciilifeform | (in the rocket, a miniaturized variant; on land - the real thing) | [14:05] |
asciilifeform | 'PDP-11 assembler coders are hard to find' << what a pile of shit | [14:06] |
* | asciilifeform raises hand | [14:06] |
asciilifeform | but no, the unspoken qualification is the two-metre-long beard | [14:06] |
asciilifeform | and yes, i can understand why. | [14:06] |
asciilifeform | the thing that ~must~ be understood is that the ancient iron is maintained entirely, wholly, as a shield against microshitification | [14:07] |
asciilifeform | when a pc runs reactor - yes, that is the end. | [14:08] |
asciilifeform | yes, let's have winblowz, poettering, drepper, chinese capacitors, in reactor room. | [14:08] |
asciilifeform | it'll be grand. | [14:08] |
jurov | yes they do | [14:09] |
asciilifeform | just let me know the day before, so i can catch the last plane out. | [14:09] |
kakobrekla | out to where ?! | [14:09] |
jurov | in these parts most reactors reportedly run on win2k | [14:09] |
asciilifeform | 'away from here' | [14:09] |
kakobrekla | no such place. | [14:09] |
asciilifeform | http://www.kafka.org/index.php?aid=172 << obligatory | [14:09] |
assbot | The Kafka Project | English | My Destination (transl. Alex Flores) ... ( http://bit.ly/1HiriDN ) | [14:09] |
kakobrekla | everywhere i go, im here. | [14:10] |
jurov | trinque it's easy, if you're subscribed you can publish it yourself | [14:12] |
jurov | i will, too. eventually. | [14:12] |
trinque | jurov: I missed a bunch of messages due to that tls thing, so I'm trying to grab all those | [14:18] |
jurov | http://therealbitcoin.org/ml/btc-dev/btc-dev.mbox.xz this one is from july 3 | [14:24] |
assbot | ... ( http://bit.ly/1HiuFKK ) | [14:24] |
trinque | cool! thanks! | [14:25] |
trinque | that actually covers everything I needed, I think | [14:25] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform i guess that's a point yea. | [14:29] |
mircea_popescu | [14:38] | |
* | trixbutt is now known as trixisowned | [14:42] |
jurov | me is not properly certified | [14:42] |
jurov | can't even imagine what noise would austrians do if a reactor nearby would be allowed to run on something homebrew | [14:44] |
jurov | everything had to be modernized by siemens & co.. | [14:45] |
kakobrekla | >I cooked up a multi-user general ledger system based on this hardware in '79. My client was a rural Iowa accountant who (what a prophet!) was afraid of hacks, so he insisted it NOT be compatible with anything else on the planet. So, though NorthStar DOS was way ahead of it's time, I had to ditch it. I burned my own boot EPROMs, wrote the whole thing using Ashley's assembler. You just can't do that anymore. | [14:45] |
kakobrekla | hehe | [14:46] |
kakobrekla | same problem in 79 | [14:46] |
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assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 5960 @ 0.00052554 = 3.1322 BTC [-] {2} | [14:57] |
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mircea_popescu | in other news, https://i.imgur.com/TCjVzuQ.jpg | [15:22] |
assbot | ... ( http://bit.ly/1MFXj0g ) | [15:22] |
shinohai | LOL | [15:26] |
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shinohai | LOL BingoBoingo haz to update his article: http://www.cnn.com/2015/08/02/world/cecil-the-lion-brother-jericho-alive/ | [15:53] |
assbot | Cecil the lion's brother Jericho is alive - CNN.com ... ( http://bit.ly/1HiMDgk ) | [15:53] |
punkman | "Reportedly, Koko enjoys seeing human nipples and will request her female caregivers to show them to her on occasion. This has resulted in sexual harassment lawsuits by caregivers who have felt pressured by Patterson to show their nipples to Koko against their will. Attorney Jody Weiner, who previously represented KoKo in licensing agreements, writes that he should have recognized warning signs of a sex scandal. " | [15:56] |
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BingoBoingo | shinohai: Nope. Jericho it turns out is not actually Cecil's brother. CNN is just listening to any crank who calls in. | [15:59] |
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shinohai | I had hoped you could churn out another story based on that xD | [15:59] |
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assbot | [HAVELOCK] [BTR] 2949 @ 0.001135 = 3.3471 BTC [+] | [16:15] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 11565 @ 0.00052268 = 6.0448 BTC [-] | [16:18] |
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mod6 | [16:26] | |
shinohai | I m syncing the dark side's wallet, keeps crashing with CDB: Error -30974, can't open database | [16:28] |
mircea_popescu | !up eric | [16:58] |
-assbot- | You voiced eric for 30 minutes. | [16:59] |
* | assbot gives voice to eric | [16:59] |
mircea_popescu | !up livegnik | [16:59] |
-assbot- | You voiced livegnik for 30 minutes. | [16:59] |
* | assbot gives voice to livegnik | [16:59] |
mircea_popescu | !up roasbeef | [16:59] |
-assbot- | You voiced roasbeef for 30 minutes. | [16:59] |
* | assbot gives voice to roasbeef | [16:59] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform> can give the 'atoms' electrostatic-style charge, so they repel, and the bonds - 'strain', so they contract << this is actually a pretty great idea. and then run iterations over the thing until stable. | [17:01] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform> so it would have to be very clean to justify losing search << technically speaking, needing "search" is a symptom that you've not yet learned it. | [17:02] |
mircea_popescu | ie, fit it in head. | [17:02] |
decimation | 17:42 <+jurov> everything had to be modernized by siemens & co.. < jurov, but why does 'modernize' mean 'run on winblows 2k?' | [17:03] |
decimation | where's the german alternative to microsoft? | [17:03] |
jurov | ask siemens | [17:04] |
mircea_popescu | siemens is "german" in the sense tsipras is "greek" and so on. absolutely nothing to do. | [17:05] |
decimation | agilent - runs spectrum analyzers on winblows. rohde & schwarz - same | [17:05] |
decimation | it's not like they sell enough of them for 'people to come to expect' | [17:06] |
asciilifeform | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1222307 << no shit. and if i'd learned it, wouldn't need the diagram. | [17:07] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 19:59:28; mircea_popescu: asciilifeform> so it would have to be very clean to justify losing search << technically speaking, needing "search" is a symptom that you've not yet learned it. | [17:07] |
mircea_popescu | anyway, re punkman's reddit link - the tards miss the fruit and focus on the pit of that thing, as usual. | [17:07] |
mircea_popescu | [17:09] | |
asciilifeform | well sure | [17:09] |
jurov | decimation: perhaps you missed how my info how gigawatts of steam turbines are simulated and projected ... in excel | [17:10] |
jurov | (i mean, when they are installed, hopefully not when they are built. but not sure on that, either) | [17:11] |
mircea_popescu | or my info as to how the entire fucking house of cards came down chiefly bewcause some idiots were doing copula calculations | [17:11] |
mircea_popescu | also in excel | [17:11] |
mircea_popescu | (gauss copula, look into that sometime. if you want "pseudoscience that burned the world", global warming's nothing, witch hunts are nothing, this thing ruioned trillions) | [17:11] |
asciilifeform | jurov: the thing is, nothing is built from the ground up (except for the circus mentioned earlier just now by mircea_popescu) with 'excel'. the infrastructure is running on fumes | [17:11] |
asciilifeform | and i'd bet good money that there is, somewhere deep inside that win2k reactor, a real computer | [17:12] |
asciilifeform | largely autonomous from the shitputer | [17:12] |
asciilifeform | (which in turn is mostly a display of gui dials and gauges) | [17:12] |
jurov | like in iran? | [17:12] |
asciilifeform | jurov is almost certainly thinking of the refinery | [17:13] |
asciilifeform | where yes, winblowz | [17:13] |
asciilifeform | this is because the poor saps were stuck buying new | [17:13] |
asciilifeform | can't get the pdp new. | [17:13] |
asciilifeform | buy new, get 'siemens', run moar winblowz. | [17:13] |
jurov | um..er.. how is half of europe gonna get a whiff of pdp? | [17:14] |
asciilifeform | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1222312 << aha, international komy000nity!!! | [17:14] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 20:02:14; mircea_popescu: siemens is "german" in the sense tsipras is "greek" and so on. absolutely nothing to do. | [17:14] |
asciilifeform | jurov: ask the folks with the intact sov reactors | [17:14] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform your idea of nuke plants is more akin to a UP's big boy control hatch. this is not how they work, whole shit's run in java these days. for that matter - remember the recent airbus which had all 4 engines stop because counter smash issues ? | [17:14] |
scoopbot_revived | Line betting on BitBet, July 2015 http://thewhet.net/2015/line-betting-on-bitbet-july-2015/ | [17:14] |
jurov | ^ | [17:15] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: 1) nothing realtime-reactive runs in java 2) the counter overflows after what was it, 8 months of continuous engine time ???? | [17:15] |
mircea_popescu | i tell you. there are no professionals left. all children posing for the mirror. | [17:15] |
mircea_popescu | a world of play-pretend like they're adults and doing things | [17:15] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform if i recall, maxint / 100 it was. | [17:15] |
jurov | and i strongly suspect the computers of yore aren't what alf imagines, either. have them eat a text with arbitrary linelengths and see | [17:15] |
mircea_popescu | ;;calc 8 *30 * 24 * 3600 * 100 | [17:16] |
gribble | 2073600000 | [17:16] |
mircea_popescu | seems about right | [17:16] |
decimation | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-05-2015#1118863 http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-05-2015#1118867 | [17:16] |
assbot | Logged on 03-05-2015 03:39:28; decimation: asciilifeform: I have a friend who is an old graybeard EE, been working on actual circuitry since the 80's | [17:16] |
assbot | Logged on 03-05-2015 03:40:09; decimation: he said recently a sea change has come with kids coming out of school; they want to specify massive cpu, memory for very simple micro-controllers so they can run java | [17:16] |
asciilifeform | jurov: go feed it the text | [17:16] |
deedbot- | accepted: 1 | [17:16] |
mircea_popescu | jurov or with locales :D | [17:16] |
asciilifeform | but jurov isn't wrong, per se, there probably ~is~ a reactor somewhere handled by four java boxes trying to cover for each other's garbagecollector pauses | [17:16] |
mircea_popescu | a nuclear reactor is a kind of flywheel | [17:17] |
mircea_popescu | you got plenty of time. | [17:17] |
asciilifeform | and you can tell from a distance when a sector of civilization has been consumed by the cancer | [17:17] |
chetty | feed the computer anything, with front panel switches | [17:17] |
asciilifeform | !s flashlight crash | [17:17] |
assbot | 4 results for 'flashlight crash' : http://s.b-a.link/?q=flashlight+crash | [17:17] |
jurov | all out email and else woes are due to text originally defined as "interspersed by cr in shorter intervals than any buffer wherever gets() is used" | [17:17] |
jurov | all else is binary by definition | [17:17] |
asciilifeform | jurov: don't confuse the retardation of unix&descendants for 'the real computer' | [17:18] |
mircea_popescu | i suspect this is actually the correct definition of "text" for computing. | [17:18] |
decimation | you guys realise we are gonna have to respecify email too right? | [17:18] |
asciilifeform | 'the real computer' was and is programmed in asm ab initio - yes, from entirely empty space; for every task. | [17:18] |
mircea_popescu | decimation how about respecifying email as null. | [17:18] |
jurov | asciilifeform: and your pdp example is? | [17:18] |
asciilifeform | ab initio. | [17:18] |
decimation | mircea_popescu: sounds good to me. file transfer a .txt | [17:18] |
asciilifeform | respecifying email as null << win | [17:19] |
mircea_popescu | imagine if every so often i had to click here to see if there's new lines | [17:19] |
mircea_popescu | then click on the lines indioviduallky | [17:19] |
mircea_popescu | FUCKING HELL WHO DID THIS | [17:19] |
decimation | actually you could argue that 'email' as a concept is 'let's pretend we are working at the post office' | [17:19] |
mircea_popescu | ^ | [17:19] |
decimation | not 'let's build a system for reliably transmitting information' | [17:19] |
mircea_popescu | it makes as much sense as drawing horses on a car. | [17:19] |
mircea_popescu | it had its importance selling technology to the retards. | [17:20] |
mircea_popescu | but other than that, it's as useful as "wysiwyg" or "point and click" or "just works!" | [17:20] |
mircea_popescu | nonsensical gimmicks of the ilk of "stop fucking your sister or else santa won't bringf you presents" and "eat your veggies so you can overpower your sister and stick it in her" | [17:20] |
asciilifeform | l0l | [17:21] |
decimation | much of it stems from "need to hustle to make money, use what's on the shelf and make it fit" | [17:21] |
decimation | I was watching a 'banking' show on the BBC the other day. it featured a young afghan who managed to make it from goat-fuck-stan to the uk welfare state | [17:22] |
decimation | he complained that in afghanistan, everything is free - but people are poor and live in mud huts. they envy the english for their warm houses &etc. but now he works 12 hour days to try to make rent, pay bills - and never has time to enjoy his warm house | [17:23] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: see also the idiocy of 'skeumorphism' | [17:23] |
decimation | because nothing is free | [17:24] |
asciilifeform | decimation: this and precisely this, is why i laugh at people who discuss compensation in terms of money | [17:24] |
decimation | yeah, it would be interesting for someone to interview people exactly like this: grew up orc, came to 'first world' | [17:24] |
asciilifeform | ~i don't give a fuck~ what you're paid, how much of it do you get to ~keep~, and how much time do you get to sit in the warm house and drink tea and not think of work | [17:25] |
decimation | later in the episode he managed to somehow get an offer from the uk govt - he could buy his flat for 20k pounds | [17:25] |
asciilifeform | very few orcs have the brains to even consider this formula | [17:25] |
decimation | but the minimum loan from the bank is 25k | [17:25] |
decimation | he was like 'what am I gonna do with an extra 9k and I have to pay interest!" | [17:26] |
decimation | the rest of the show featured idiots with 25k credit card balances trying 'refinance' | [17:27] |
asciilifeform | l0l | [17:27] |
asciilifeform | must have been filmed a while ago, these figures would probably have an extra trailing zero today | [17:27] |
asciilifeform | at least where i live. | [17:27] |
decimation | http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b061xf9j/the-bank-a-matter-of-life-and-debt-3-lending < can watch here if you manage to obtain uk ip | [17:27] |
assbot | BBC iPlayer - The Bank: A Matter of Life and Debt - 3. Lending ... ( http://bit.ly/1M5qb2h ) | [17:27] |
asciilifeform | back to the earlier observation, the attachment orcs have to the myth of 'the west' is a truly religious affair | [17:28] |
decimation | yeah you could tell the guy was disappointed with his situation | [17:28] |
asciilifeform | not even being planted nose-first into the genuine pile of shit, has any curative effect | [17:28] |
asciilifeform | he will probably try to make his way 'moar west' | [17:29] |
decimation | http://www.breitbart.com/london/2014/07/09/illegal-immigrants-exploit-channel-tunnel-closure/ < for example here | [17:29] |
assbot | Illegal Immigrants Exploit Channel Tunnel Closure - Breitbart ... ( http://bit.ly/1M5qfz5 ) | [17:29] |
asciilifeform | to, say, canada, or usa. | [17:29] |
* | assbot removes voice from eric | [17:29] |
* | assbot removes voice from livegnik | [17:29] |
* | assbot removes voice from roasbeef | [17:29] |
asciilifeform | where he can work 14 hour days for a flat with six of his kind | [17:29] |
asciilifeform | (or get into the jail, where, approximately, same) | [17:29] |
decimation | somehow people from Eritrea are convinced that if they only make it to the uk they can supports their entire families! | [17:30] |
decimation | not realizing the complete chumpatron they are entering | [17:30] |
asciilifeform | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com//?date=28-07-2015#1214974 << see also | [17:30] |
assbot | Logged on 28-07-2015 04:36:46; asciilifeform: 'hot', in this case, being the world of the coolie, and 'cold' being the world he aspires to enter (or at least send his children to, oxbridge and harvaprinceyaleton) | [17:30] |
decimation | usa was kinda like this in the 1800's | [17:31] |
jurov | yet no one goes back to afganistan | [17:31] |
decimation | east coast cities swelled with immigrants trying to get some monies | [17:31] |
decimation | but at least at that time they could buy a cheap farm in kansas | [17:32] |
decimation | jurov: good point | [17:32] |
asciilifeform | jurov: warm house is addictive. or whole 'west' circus would voluntarily rebuild afganistan at home | [17:32] |
mircea_popescu | decimation> yeah, it would be interesting for someone to interview people exactly like this: grew up orc, came to 'first world' << ie, half of romania under 50yo. | [17:32] |
asciilifeform | (they are anyway, but slowly) | [17:32] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 16425 @ 0.00052268 = 8.585 BTC [-] | [17:32] |
mircea_popescu | prolly 1/4 of russia or so, cause they're orc-er. | [17:32] |
mircea_popescu | and re the myth of the west, there was that trilema article linked from a recent one, "florida and other places". | [17:33] |
mircea_popescu | tis a sad thing. | [17:33] |
asciilifeform | jurov: it is the very meaning of the word 'addiction' as commonly used. (no one speaks of being 'addicted' to air, sunlight, etc) | [17:33] |
mircea_popescu | jurov actually plenty of people do go back to afghanistan. | [17:34] |
asciilifeform | if you want things that are ultimately doing you in in double time, and aren't even particularly fun - that is it | [17:34] |
mircea_popescu | heck, 50% of the 1st generation immigrants return home with the loot, marry and live there. | [17:34] |
mircea_popescu | the retards - stay. | [17:34] |
mircea_popescu | the rest just loot and leave. | [17:34] |
asciilifeform | when there is what to loot.. | [17:34] |
mircea_popescu | which is ~why~ the libertard open border stuff doesn't work. | [17:34] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform for as long as china takes the coupons... | [17:34] |
asciilifeform | (in more recent times, the 'loot' is in the form of bait, handed out monthly at welfare office) | [17:34] |
decimation | it stands a prayer of working if someone gets nothing for 'just showing up' | [17:35] |
mircea_popescu | no, it does not. | [17:35] |
decimation | but that implies nobody gets paid just to exist | [17:35] |
mircea_popescu | because the people you want don't want you, and the people you want you nobody wants. | [17:35] |
decimation | yeah, there's some raw human truth there | [17:35] |
mircea_popescu | myeah. | [17:35] |
decimation | http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/07/28/us-finland-immigration-idUSKCN0Q22JJ20150728 < finland is going through this now | [17:36] |
assbot | Thousands rally in Finland against lawmaker's anti-immigration remark | [17:36] |
mircea_popescu | there hasn't yet in the history of mankind been a wealth marriage that was happy. and "free immigraton" is notexceptional just because large. | [17:36] |
asciilifeform | decimation: they envy sweden its great mosques | [17:36] |
decimation | some politicians suggesting that maybe it's not good to import africa wholesale in one generation isn't such a great idea | [17:36] |
trinque | against racism lol | [17:36] |
decimation | of course they are hateful racists for suggesting it | [17:36] |
mircea_popescu | finnish chicks want the cock, what. | [17:37] |
mircea_popescu | i can see it. | [17:37] |
mircea_popescu | what';d you have them to, wait on rpietilla ? | [17:37] |
asciilifeform | l0l! | [17:37] |
jurov | is there any successful example of resisting immigration? | [17:37] |
asciilifeform | Ze Supernoud Lifestyle | [17:37] |
asciilifeform | jurov: japan. | [17:37] |
asciilifeform | resists, to the bitter end. | [17:38] |
asciilifeform | like real men. | [17:38] |
decimation | ^ true | [17:38] |
decimation | except they are not reproducing | [17:38] |
asciilifeform | wake me up when they reach 1900 level and still drop | [17:38] |
mircea_popescu | there's no resisting immigration. vienna fell. byzantium fell. | [17:38] |
trinque | that's the economic side's fault | [17:38] |
asciilifeform | what do we need the extra people post-1900 for anyway | [17:38] |
decimation | where's that rammstein 'amerika' song | [17:38] |
asciilifeform | ^ | [17:38] |
asciilifeform | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=29-07-2015#1215885 | [17:39] |
assbot | Logged on 29-07-2015 02:37:56; shinohai: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BxroiTRg7Tg | [17:39] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: 'there is no resisting ants and flies, giraffe fell, elephant fell' | [17:39] |
mircea_popescu | quite so. | [17:39] |
asciilifeform | but not from flies. | [17:39] |
mircea_popescu | of course not. | [17:40] |
mircea_popescu | the idea that immigration is the problem is braindamage of the level of thinking the maggots made the corpse. | [17:40] |
mircea_popescu | somehow the immigrants weren't the problem back when azns were washing gold miner's shirts for a penny | [17:40] |
mircea_popescu | and the irish fought the blacks for who's gonna polish knob tonight | [17:40] |
asciilifeform | the only shred of logic in there is that the maggots sometimes do feast on living flesh | [17:40] |
mircea_popescu | never. | [17:40] |
mircea_popescu | in fact, fly maggots used to clean wounds. | [17:41] |
mircea_popescu | they like live flesh about as much as you like birdshit. | [17:41] |
asciilifeform | yes. and removed when they start to eat the living flesh | [17:41] |
mircea_popescu | "the humans sometimes feast on the bird shit". i guess ? | [17:41] |
asciilifeform | (they will, from lack of what else, eventually) | [17:41] |
decimation | http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/02/19/dirt-poor-haitians-eat-mu_n_168339.html | [17:41] |
assbot | Dirt Poor Haitians Eat Mud Cookies To Survive ... ( http://bit.ly/1M5qGJx ) | [17:41] |
asciilifeform | decimation: i suppose they haven't any accordions to boil | [17:42] |
mircea_popescu | is this more jenkem journalism from the jenkem journals ? | [17:42] |
decimation | lol yeah where's jenkem | [17:42] |
mircea_popescu | huffpo huffed it. | [17:42] |
mircea_popescu | hence huffpopo. | [17:42] |
decimation | no look it's in real media too http://www.boston.com/news/world/articles/2008/01/31/haitians_trick_empty_bellies_with_dirt_cookies/ | [17:42] |
assbot | Haitians trick empty bellies with dirt cookies - The Boston Globe ... ( http://bit.ly/1M5qKZK ) | [17:42] |
asciilifeform | actually, iirc washpost huffed it | [17:42] |
asciilifeform | in the '90s | [17:42] |
asciilifeform | 'dirt cookie' was a favourite in chinese cultural revolution | [17:42] |
asciilifeform | (there is ~some~ nutritious matter in the earth) | [17:43] |
mircea_popescu | and vitamins! | [17:43] |
mircea_popescu | thing is - there's more nutritious matter in shit. | [17:44] |
mircea_popescu | especially if a rich dude shat it. | [17:44] |
mircea_popescu | (for the obvious reason - what do you think earth is after all. microorganism digested shit) | [17:44] |
decimation | re:immigrants -> it seems to me that there is a difference between "we have empty land that someone could show up and till" and "one more derp could survive on the scraps here" | [17:44] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: usually in china they put it through a pig first. but yes. | [17:44] |
mircea_popescu | decimation the difference is whether you run pinkerton or welfare. | [17:45] |
decimation | https://suite.io/vic-sanborn/3des2zr | [17:45] |
assbot | Night-Soil Men, the Human Waste Collectors of Georgian London ... ( http://bit.ly/1M5qXvX ) | [17:45] |
asciilifeform | ^ was big business esp. in the brief time when piss was boiled for nitrate | [17:45] |
mircea_popescu | most of classical london consisted of a majority of "recyclers". | [17:45] |
mircea_popescu | and a minority of tradesmen, moving goods on an abstract mercator map | [17:46] |
asciilifeform | world's biggest unsurprise. of what is there most in a city? shit | [17:46] |
mircea_popescu | well, these days it's "shitheads" | [17:46] |
decimation | now we are too rich to care, apparently, just dig up more fossilized shit | [17:46] |
asciilifeform | obligatory >> http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=09-03-2014#552444 | [17:46] |
assbot | Logged on 09-03-2014 01:03:00; asciilifeform: 'Industry is the only true source of wealth, and there was no industry in Rome. By day the Ostia road was crowded with carts and muleteers, carrying to the great city the silks and spices of the East, the marble of Asia Minor, the timber of the Atlas, the grain of Africa and Egypt; and the carts brought nothing out but loads of dung. That was their return cargo. London turns dirt into | [17:46] |
mircea_popescu | BingoBoingo "as was the case with this one." << link missing ? | [17:50] |
mircea_popescu | "the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia authorized a search warrant" << for the record, this is not how it works. a judge authorises it, and im nary too enchanted by this tendency of individuals to hide behind imaginary shields. | [17:51] |
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* | danielpbarron has quit (Ping timeout: 255 seconds) | [17:53] |
* | DreadKnight has quit (Quit: #AncientBeast - Master Your Beasts ( www.AncientBeast.com )) | [17:54] |
decimation | asciilifeform: was thinking about that 'pcb card' problem. what if you terminated each trace into its own tank circuit, and then 'probed' the circuit with a vna? | [17:55] |
decimation | each tank would resonate at a particular frequency, or not, if trace is not blown. could terminate into bnc | [17:56] |
* | danielpbarron (~dpb@ool-18b94803.dyn.optonline.net) has joined #bitcoin-assets | [17:56] |
mircea_popescu | if you're going to do this why not measure inductance/harmonics/etc. | [17:56] |
mircea_popescu | end up with a weird sort of ADC | [17:57] |
decimation | yeah that's what I'm suggesting (complex impedance - part of which is inductance) | [17:57] |
decimation | if one is clever, one could make the tank circuit out of pure pcb trace, making it cheaper. 'crosstalk' could be a problem though | [17:58] |
jurov | inb4 "multilevel ROM" by placing resistors | [17:59] |
mircea_popescu | ya lol | [17:59] |
decimation | yeah but placing/removing components is a pain and expensive | [18:00] |
mircea_popescu | what would be really great would be if your thing could somehow be made out of glass | [18:00] |
* | rdymac has quit (Quit: Connection closed for inactivity) | [18:00] |
mircea_popescu | you buy 6x6 inch panbes of glass and crash them | [18:00] |
mircea_popescu | thatr's your secret key | [18:00] |
decimation | heh | [18:00] |
decimation | the breakage geometry you mean? | [18:01] |
mircea_popescu | you plug the thing in whatever. | [18:01] |
mircea_popescu | and measure its remaining connections | [18:01] |
decimation | ah I see what you mean. | [18:01] |
mircea_popescu | much better than a pcb, if can be had. | [18:01] |
asciilifeform | decimation: crosstalk and rf | [18:02] |
mircea_popescu | so you know... some people generate their keys at the firing range. some people have a designated bat. some people make a new key after each domestic argument/divorce | [18:02] |
decimation | asciilifeform: sure, but those could be managed | [18:02] |
* | danielpbarron is now known as dpb_temp | [18:02] |
asciilifeform | decimation: look into why analogue computer went away. | [18:02] |
decimation | I get it, but I just wanna store some values, not compute derivatives | [18:03] |
asciilifeform | the 'crushed glass secret key' was picked up by academitards as 'physically unclonable function' | [18:03] |
asciilifeform | but it doesn't do any good unless there are 2 of'em (at minimum) | [18:03] |
asciilifeform | (goes without saying that it is only good for symmetric crypto) | [18:03] |
asciilifeform | break a glass rod. | [18:04] |
mircea_popescu | asciilifeform just an exotic way to rng, is in the end what he was trying to build | [18:04] |
mircea_popescu | "take a pcb and scratch it" | [18:04] |
asciilifeform | then sure | [18:04] |
mircea_popescu | necessarily goes to "crush glass pane" | [18:04] |
asciilifeform | just don't be surprised when it stops working when it is wet/cold/hot in the room | [18:04] |
asciilifeform | or if different room | [18:04] |
mircea_popescu | yawell. | [18:04] |
asciilifeform | (see mircea_popescu's old 'dragonfly' article based on my conf-II chat) | [18:04] |
asciilifeform | very often, folks forget just how much analogue strange there is in the world, that is kept (mostly) out of their digital computer | [18:05] |
decimation | actually that gives me another idea: http://www.capturedlightning.com/frames/lichtenbergs.html | [18:05] |
assbot | What are Lichtenberg Figures, and how are they Made? ... ( http://bit.ly/1OJ4XVi ) | [18:05] |
decimation | could make a lichtenberg figure key and use a camera to distill down into bits | [18:06] |
asciilifeform | decimation: what is the point of it | [18:07] |
asciilifeform | once 'distilled to bits', that'd be your key | [18:07] |
decimation | asciilifeform: yeah I was thinking about generating key in a seperate machine and then 'hand-carving' the pcb to store key | [18:07] |
asciilifeform | the reason why 'physical function' is that it ought to be precisely a ~function~ | [18:07] |
asciilifeform | that can be used as a one-time pad | [18:07] |
asciilifeform | so can 'ask' the glass a 64-bit integer, and get another | [18:07] |
decimation | I'm thinking about ways to manage key material that involve physical devices that can be inspected | [18:08] |
asciilifeform | and your partner behind enemy lines asks same, and gets same answer. | [18:08] |
asciilifeform | decimation: if that's all you want, get a 'sinclair' | [18:08] |
BingoBoingo | [18:08] | |
decimation | asciilifeform: well, also I want to be reliable | [18:09] |
decimation | sinclair uses floppies? | [18:09] |
asciilifeform | can use sd card, with a little soldering | [18:09] |
asciilifeform | incidentally, | [18:09] |
* | asciilifeform has been greatly enjoying http://www.zxdesign.info/book | [18:09] |
assbot | The ZX Spectrum ULA: How to design a microcomputer ... ( http://bit.ly/1OJ5wyk ) | [18:09] |
asciilifeform | it is a priceless tour of 1980s chip design, among other things | [18:09] |
decimation | oh I thought they used 6502 like everyone else | [18:10] |
asciilifeform | z80 | [18:10] |
decimation | ah | [18:10] |
asciilifeform | the other giant of the '80s | [18:10] |
asciilifeform | anyway, the book is about the i/o chip | [18:10] |
asciilifeform | not the cpu | [18:10] |
asciilifeform | man does not live by cpu alone ! | [18:11] |
decimation | yeah the 'secret sauce' of the commadore was the video chip | [18:11] |
asciilifeform | it was not an era of elusive 'sauces' | [18:11] |
asciilifeform | but overall good design | [18:11] |
decimation | yes. | [18:11] |
asciilifeform | that doesn't reduce to 'xxxx chip' | [18:11] |
decimation | based on that 'bil herd' interview, it sounds like the board designers and chip designers worked in same building, with fab! | [18:12] |
asciilifeform | and consider also that, of all the toy computers, the one with the singularly worst design in every conceivable way, won. | [18:12] |
decimation | because cheap. | [18:12] |
asciilifeform | no, WAS NOT CHEAP | [18:12] |
asciilifeform | either. | [18:12] |
asciilifeform | but bezzle-annointed, yes | [18:13] |
decimation | cheaper than s/360 | [18:13] |
asciilifeform | so it did not matter that it was a stinking pile of shit | [18:13] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 52911 @ 0.0005037 = 26.6513 BTC [-] {3} | [18:13] |
asciilifeform | wasn't competing with s/360 | [18:13] |
asciilifeform | but with typewriter. | [18:13] |
asciilifeform | and secretary (who did the job 10x better, but...) | [18:13] |
decimation | true. people who wanted 'adult' computers in the 80's, had | [18:14] |
decimation | or at least could get access to one | [18:14] |
asciilifeform | http://www.oldcomputers.net/ibm5150.html << prices | [18:14] |
assbot | IBM 5150 Personal Computer ... ( http://bit.ly/1hdODl5 ) | [18:14] |
asciilifeform | add a zero or so for modern usd. | [18:14] |
decimation | yeah my dad paid about $1500 in 1989 dollars for x86 pc... 'epson apex' | [18:15] |
asciilifeform | the thing was, in every respect, a 'soviet' production in the stereotypical western sense of the word | [18:15] |
asciilifeform | it was made by folks who did not have any reason whatsoever to give a fuck re: quality or cost. | [18:15] |
asciilifeform | who ~knew~ that they were winners as soon as they popped out of the womb | [18:15] |
asciilifeform | and 'winners', naturally, win | [18:15] |
asciilifeform | the ibm pc, recall, was that abomination where they didn't even bother to use dram chips that passed qa | [18:16] |
asciilifeform | instead, 'deadbugging' several duds over one another | [18:16] |
asciilifeform | to get a close approximation of one working unit | [18:16] |
decimation | and yet still cost $3k 1981 dollars! | [18:17] |
decimation | about $8k 2015 dollars | [18:17] |
mod6 | All: I've put some steps together for installing ubuntu 10.04 & debian 6.0.10 | [18:20] |
mod6 | I've tested installing the iso's indicated on a VM and went through my own steps 2x (once for each OS) | [18:20] |
mod6 | if someone with some spare time can validate my findings that would be great -- these are just the first two of a number of these that need to be discovered/defined | [18:21] |
mod6 | http://dpaste.com/1TMGCVA.txt | [18:21] |
assbot | ... ( http://bit.ly/1hdPty7 ) | [18:21] |
decimation | https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2b/IBM_System_36091.sj.jpg < ascii, entire machine state visible for inspection | [18:21] |
assbot | ... ( http://bit.ly/1hdPtyj ) | [18:21] |
asciilifeform | as on 'univac' | [18:22] |
asciilifeform | and no, not whole state | [18:22] |
asciilifeform | just the regs | [18:22] |
decimation | well, yeah no storage | [18:22] |
shinohai | mod6: I'll do a confirm this week. | [18:23] |
mod6 | shinohai: thanks!! | [18:23] |
mod6 | much appreciated | [18:23] |
shinohai | nw | [18:23] |
shinohai | I haven't got to build that latest yet though, still fails on boost every time. | [18:24] |
asciilifeform | mod6: have you had a chance to build 'rotor' ? | [18:26] |
mod6 | no, not since i couldn't get it to build before. i'll try it again this coming week for sure. | [18:26] |
asciilifeform | mod6: note that the toolchain and deps build only ever needs to be done once, per machine | [18:27] |
asciilifeform | after that, it is precisely the same as working with 'stator' | [18:27] |
decimation | http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/07/26/the_identity_crisis_of_the_modern_zoo/ < amusing: "“If you asked somebody in our profession 10 years ago, ‘Is the gorilla happy?’, they would get really upset and say, ‘Why would you ask such an anthropomorphic question?’ ” said Kagan, 57. “But these sort of things now are legitimately a part of scientific study and assessment.”" | [18:28] |
assbot | The identity crisis of the modern zoo - The Boston Globe ... ( http://bit.ly/1OJ7sXQ ) | [18:28] |
mod6 | asciilifeform: ok, thanks. so noted. | [18:28] |
mod6 | i.e. I dont have to rebuild the buildroot & "universe" every time I want to add a patch, just rebuild 'stator'. | [18:29] |
decimation | you only really need to rebuild bitcoind if that's what you patched | [18:29] |
asciilifeform | aha | [18:29] |
decimation | just make sure you are using the correct paths | [18:29] |
mod6 | yeah, i was trying to say this: <+decimation> you only really need to rebuild bitcoind if that's what you patched | [18:29] |
decimation | one nice thing about 'rotor' system: only one choice of build environment | [18:30] |
mod6 | right. | [18:30] |
mod6 | i like the allure of this. | [18:30] |
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asciilifeform | the main allure, for me, was 1) drepper goes to the furnace where he belongs; no glibc 2) can switch cpu arch by turning a knob | [18:31] |
mod6 | gotcha. | [18:31] |
shinohai | https://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/3fg0jw/could_a_cartel_of_pool_operators_collude_to/ctoh97g | [18:33] |
assbot | luke-jr comments on Could a cartel of pool operators collude to 51%-attack the blockchain and/or change the protocol? ... ( http://bit.ly/1OJ7QFR ) | [18:33] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 9800 @ 0.00052762 = 5.1707 BTC [+] | [18:42] |
asciilifeform | 'It is mid-boggling that a protocol that "handles assets worth billions of dollars" is defined only by a bloated C++ implementation -- maintaned by one company, that of course will not be responsible for any losses...' | [18:54] |
asciilifeform | lulzy | [18:54] |
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* | assbot gives voice to williamdunne | [18:58] |
williamdunne | jurov: What would you like on the Eurola website? Starting out with clisp so I'll see if I can get that done as my hello world project | [18:59] |
* | assbot gives voice to danielpbarron | [18:59] |
jurov | marketplace with orders managed from irc | [19:00] |
williamdunne | Wanna do a brief or summin? | [19:02] |
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asciilifeform | trinque, ben_vulpes, anyone else with 'clang' -- here's an idea, use the graph-walker solrodar used to determine the subset of openssl (see old thread re: same) | [19:02] |
trinque | asciilifeform: maybe discernable with better lcov output too? | [19:03] |
asciilifeform | trinque: see earlier thread today re: coverage | [19:04] |
trinque | the lcov stuff would probably be more helpful with a battery of tests run upon it such as mod6 has discussed | [19:04] |
asciilifeform | just because a line did not execute in ten billion hours does not mean that it could not | [19:04] |
asciilifeform | have to prove that it is unreachable. | [19:04] |
asciilifeform | before it can be cut. | [19:04] |
trinque | yeah, true, this would call for static analysis to know it can be cut | [19:04] |
asciilifeform | which is what i was talking about. | [19:04] |
jurov | doesn't openssl use function pointers? | [19:06] |
asciilifeform | does it ? | [19:07] |
trinque | odeary me | [19:07] |
* | trinque bbl | [19:07] |
jurov | just asking, i wouldn't put it past them | [19:07] |
williamdunne | jurov: I'm not sure how long I'll be around for, but if you drop me a doc outlining what you want I'll have a look at it tomorrow | [19:10] |
asciilifeform | jurov: this kind of thing is at the root of a very old disagreement i have with mircea_popescu | [19:10] |
asciilifeform | jurov: his position, if you recall, is that we are more or less stuck with the turds forever. | [19:10] |
asciilifeform | because no one will ever fully nail down the function of the existing orchestra | [19:11] |
asciilifeform | in such a way as to guarantee 100% compatibility | [19:11] |
jurov | i remember | [19:11] |
asciilifeform | my position is that this is reasonable, but what is unreasonable is to ever have more respect for a program than its author did. | [19:11] |
jurov | williamdunne: eventually. | [19:12] |
asciilifeform | and that if you are using a pile of shit which fits in no one's head, don't be surprised when the inevitable happens | [19:13] |
asciilifeform | and that there is not a magical elixir that absolves you of the need to 'fit in head' | [19:13] |
asciilifeform | all works of man are either 'fits in head' or 'pile of shit', no exceptions | [19:13] |
asciilifeform | (note that i did not specify ~which~ head) | [19:14] |
asciilifeform | but there has to be... ~a~ head. | [19:14] |
asciilifeform | related... | [19:24] |
asciilifeform | 'Overriding and updating old information is something I have to work really hard at. The end result of the way I think and the way the standard is defined is that I immediately saw these massively complex ways to do things that "nobody" understood. Take HyTime and what it calls "architectual forms" -- I vividly remember a long walk around a quiet Tallahassee one summer night with the creator of this concept, when I questione | [19:24] |
asciilifeform | d some of the designs and how it would be implemented, and he was quiet for the longest time before he said that I was probably the first person to have understood what he was _really_ trying to accomplish. That would have been _such_ a great thing if it had been, say, rocket science, but it was not. It was a man-made complexity so great that it had required _months_ of brain-wracking to really get my intuition working. Tha | [19:24] |
asciilifeform | t was the first time I had really serious doubts about the wisdom of SGML's structuring process, because the massive complexity of it all is _completely_ pointless and a result of spreading the semantics so thin that you had to keep mental track of an enormous number of relationships to end up with an idea of what something should do or mean. It does not have to be that way. It was _profoundly_ disappointing to discover that | [19:24] |
asciilifeform | at the end of this long process of grasping something that looked intellectually challenging lie only a complexity that resulted from _rejecting_ simplicity of design at a few crucial points. Hell, it still took me years to figure out what alternatives they _should_ have picked up, and by then it was too late.' | [19:25] |
asciilifeform | ( http://www.xach.com/naggum/articles/3207878053204561@naggum.net.html ) | [19:25] |
assbot | Re: XML and lisp - Naggum cll archive ... ( http://bit.ly/1MEOrah ) | [19:25] |
asciilifeform | '...But it is the same problem we find in C++. The question to be asked of massive complexity like that is not "what wonderful things did you find out that made this necessary", but "whatever did you _miss_ that made this so horribly complex"? You can sometimes see people who are really, really dumb go about some simple tasks in a way that tells you that they have arrived at their ways of performing it through an incredibly | [19:27] |
asciilifeform | painful process that they are loathe to reopen or examine at all no matter how hard it is to get it right for them.' | [19:27] |
punkman | asciilifeform: all works of man are either 'fits in head' or 'pile of shit', no exceptions << don't some things require more than a single head? | [19:33] |
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asciilifeform | no | [19:33] |
asciilifeform | if something ~requires~ >1 head, it consists of separable things. | [19:34] |
asciilifeform | i happen to believe that we have not yet devised the means for truly separating - conceptually - computer programs | [19:35] |
asciilifeform | this is why, to return to earlier thread, pdp11 programmed by a single mind who writes every single instruction that the machine will ever execute, can be a jewel that is maintained for generations, | [19:35] |
asciilifeform | while pdp11 with unix - loses linefeeds | [19:35] |
asciilifeform | and evolves into what we have now | [19:35] |
asciilifeform | and is a bottomless pit of 'nobody could have foreseen's | [19:36] |
asciilifeform | observe the 'CRITICAL_SECTION' turds in bitcoind | [19:37] |
asciilifeform | are those the work of a fella who truly, deeply understood what the machine is doing? | [19:38] |
asciilifeform | who had a machine for which this claim could be made, even in principle ? | [19:38] |
asciilifeform | or are they something else. | [19:38] |
punkman | clearly not understood considering the number of results in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/search?q=deadlock&type=Issues | [19:42] |
assbot | Search Results · GitHub ... ( http://bit.ly/1MEREH5 ) | [19:42] |
asciilifeform | it is a result of the kind of cargocultism driven by justified and maniacal fear that leads, e.g., c programmers to pepper their code with redundant parenthesis | [19:43] |
asciilifeform | (leading to a lifelong phobia of that key on the keyboard) | [19:44] |
asciilifeform | my point, incidentally, was not that satoshi was a tard (though it may be) | [19:49] |
asciilifeform | but that winblowz makes the kind of certainty needed to avoid the 'grasping for the handrails' described earlier, impossible | [19:49] |
asciilifeform | and unix - marginally less so | [19:49] |
punkman | Ada on bare metal then? | [19:50] |
asciilifeform | for example. | [19:50] |
asciilifeform | but also must be very particular, ~which~ metal | [19:52] |
asciilifeform | read the src to linux's bootloader some time | [19:52] |
asciilifeform | can you tell me which lines are actually necessary ? | [19:52] |
asciilifeform | betcha you can't | [19:52] |
asciilifeform | even if you took 'operating systems' at uni | [19:52] |
asciilifeform | for instance, the 'a20 gate' is almost certainly not actually implemented in your chipset | [19:53] |
asciilifeform | yet it is in EVERY MOTHERFUCKING BOOTLOADER on the planet | [19:53] |
asciilifeform | even microshit's | [19:53] |
asciilifeform | because wat if you have a 386, aha. | [19:53] |
asciilifeform | much of this crud is quite like satoshi's 'critical sections' | [19:53] |
asciilifeform | included because author has no fucking idea what is going on | [19:53] |
asciilifeform | and cut&paste, because 'people have come to expect' | [19:54] |
asciilifeform | or 'nobody was ever fired for making bootloader six bytes larger' | [19:54] |
asciilifeform | and this shit adds up | [19:55] |
asciilifeform | the notion that it doesn't, that it doesn't matter whether bootloader is six bytes of liquid shit heavier, | [19:55] |
asciilifeform | is the fundamental lie. | [19:55] |
asciilifeform | all of it - matters. | [19:55] |
asciilifeform | the fact that x86 cpu has idiot ibm-mandated instructions for doing binary-coded-decimal - MATTERS | [19:55] |
asciilifeform | the fact that there is no standardized chipset, and that x86 is really a loose collection of mostly-incompatible shitboxes that somehow pretend to run the same soft - matters. | [19:56] |
asciilifeform | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-04-2015#1086967 << see also. | [19:57] |
assbot | Logged on 03-04-2015 19:07:33; mircea_popescu: look. whatever whatever may be built as or not, i have two basic expectations. one is, for fucking machinery to behave the same way from night to next evening. the other, albeit weaker, is that if i get a "minimal work" thing i actually have to do minimal work. | [19:57] |
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* | assbot gives voice to kakobrekla | [20:03] |
kakobrekla | The BIOS in many personal computers stores the date and time in BCD because the MC6818 real-time clock chip used in the original IBM PC AT motherboard provided the time encoded in BCD. < heh | [20:04] |
kakobrekla | compatible with the pyramids or what was it | [20:05] |
mircea_popescu | contemptible with the pyramids. | [20:07] |
mircea_popescu | http://trilema.com/2014/the-complexity-of-life-a-triad/ < dragonfly article. | [20:15] |
assbot | The complexity of life, a triad on Trilema - A blog by Mircea Popescu. ... ( http://bit.ly/1LZbV9r ) | [20:15] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1222602 << fucking monitor was like 1200, cca 1985-86 | [20:17] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 21:15:16; decimation: yeah my dad paid about $1500 in 1989 dollars for x86 pc... 'epson apex' | [20:17] |
mircea_popescu | or 120k of the romanian lei of the time. 50 or so salaries. | [20:17] |
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mircea_popescu | heh Luke-Jr fighting a loser's battle with his "bitcoin core" matters twu faith. | [20:21] |
mircea_popescu | hey midnightmagic ask me things about things will you. | [20:23] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1222651 << total win. | [20:23] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 22:00:29; jurov: marketplace with orders managed from irc | [20:23] |
mircea_popescu | if jurov finally gets a proper chat system built in, and we have a chat bot that does auction lists etc... | [20:24] |
mircea_popescu | eulora is suddenly more advanced than the state of new york. | [20:24] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1222669 << the problem is this : you have to verify old blocks. all of them, al lthe way to genesis. if you do not, for whatever reason, you are on an alt. and if you're going to make an alt, better make it properly and deliberately rather than the idiot woman "i had too much too drink so things happened" approach. | [20:26] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 22:11:06; asciilifeform: jurov: his position, if you recall, is that we are more or less stuck with the turds forever. | [20:26] |
mircea_popescu | but that aside, naggum's via alf point re complexity being usually and generally as a safe bet the result of someone missing the thinkboat certainly stands resplendent on its own feet. | [20:29] |
mircea_popescu | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-08-2015#1222718 << no, not "because what if you have a 386" but because a) does it work as is ? and b) do we know anyone who could cut it out and not introduce a bug ? | [20:31] |
assbot | Logged on 02-08-2015 22:53:44; asciilifeform: because wat if you have a 386, aha. | [20:31] |
mircea_popescu | same reason you have an appendix. | [20:31] |
mircea_popescu | "hurts nothing and too hard to take out" | [20:31] |
scoopbot_revived | The very very jealous with envy thing, part deux. http://trilema.com/2015/the-very-very-jealous-with-envy-thing-part-deux/ | [20:32] |
asciilifeform | yes, yes appendix. | [20:34] |
asciilifeform | problem is, we're drowning in appendices | [20:34] |
asciilifeform | and they all have appendicitis. | [20:34] |
mircea_popescu | so it is. | [20:35] |
mircea_popescu | every generation has this, an overpowering, indomitable reason why the previous one fails to matter. | [20:35] |
mircea_popescu | for kids born in the 80s when talking to their parents it's "shut the fuck up, you fucked women in a single hole your entire life" | [20:36] |
asciilifeform | as for the deliberate alt, it is somewhat like the ancient discussion about whether one would rather be 'scanned in' and shot and ~then~ replaced by the robot running the sim, or to have a neuron at a time replaced with electric one | [20:36] |
mircea_popescu | and it stands. no man can look you in the face past that, for he's a sort of a toy. | [20:36] |
asciilifeform | same result, but many more takers for the latter than the former. | [20:36] |
mircea_popescu | but it goes all the way to the fucking celts, you knoiw, "you never had iron tools. everything you say, and everything you think you mean or stand for is therefore invalid" | [20:37] |
mircea_popescu | perhaps this is the next one. | [20:37] |
asciilifeform | ^ well no shit | [20:37] |
mircea_popescu | "you can't code. fuck you." | [20:37] |
asciilifeform | these words are uttered, yes, today. by childrenz who 'code' php... | [20:37] |
mircea_popescu | it's not fucking magic, yo. utterance is not the glue that makes it stick. | [20:37] |
asciilifeform | i see no glue, thus far. only the utterance. | [20:38] |
mircea_popescu | we're discussing the future. | [20:38] |
mircea_popescu | the reason you can not see the substance of the future should be apparent. | [20:38] |
asciilifeform | 'what did the future ever do for me' (tm) (r) | [20:38] |
mircea_popescu | >D | [20:38] |
mircea_popescu | off to eat bbl | [20:38] |
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kakobrekla | It seems that evolution had not merely selected the best code for the task, it had also advocated those programs which took advantage of the electromagnetic quirks of that specific microchip environment. The five separate logic cells were clearly crucial to the chip’s operation, but they were interacting with the main circuitry through some unorthodox method < heh | [20:48] |
kakobrekla | 'Furthermore, the final program did not work reliably when it was loaded onto other FPGAs of the same type.' < fun | [20:49] |
BingoBoingo | https://archive.is/iFfGs | [20:50] |
assbot | losermcfail comments on A single political entity effectively has 57% control over Bitcoin's hashpower. What do we do about it? ... ( http://bit.ly/1N2UHGW ) | [20:50] |
hanbot | sounds like what asciilifeform was talking about. | [20:50] |
punkman | https://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/3fk3p9/a_single_political_entity_effectively_has_57/ctpcsko lol | [21:06] |
assbot | ergofobe comments on A single political entity effectively has 57% control over Bitcoin's hashpower. What do we do about it? ... ( http://bit.ly/1N2WsUx ) | [21:06] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 42196 @ 0.00054474 = 22.9858 BTC [+] {2} | [21:08] |
* | CheckDavid has quit (Quit: Connection closed for inactivity) | [21:29] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 31300 @ 0.00054499 = 17.0582 BTC [+] {3} | [21:32] |
asciilifeform | https://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/3fk3p9/a_single_political_entity_effectively_has_57 << philippino up the thread, naturally | [21:38] |
assbot | A single political entity effectively has 57% control over Bitcoin's hashpower. What do we do about it? : Bitcoin ... ( http://bit.ly/1IF68Fd ) | [21:38] |
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mircea_popescu | kinda sad roi really. | [21:41] |
mircea_popescu | but what do i know. | [21:41] |
asciilifeform | which i | [21:42] |
mircea_popescu | < | [21:42] |
asciilifeform | ah | [21:42] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: re: earlier and recurrent mempool thread: consider this: http://btc.yt/lxr/satoshi/source/src/main.cpp#2776 | [21:45] |
assbot | Satoshi 0.5.3.1/src/main.cpp ... ( http://bit.ly/1E3RUbz ) | [21:45] |
asciilifeform | classical apparatus has a data structure, 'mapPriority', http://btc.yt/lxr/satoshi/ident?_i=mapPriority | [21:45] |
assbot | Satoshi 0.5.3.1 identifier search: mapPriority ... ( http://bit.ly/1E3RTnX ) | [21:45] |
mircea_popescu | dPriority /= ::GetSerializeSize(tx, SER_NETWORK); | [21:45] |
asciilifeform | sum(valuein * age) / txsize | [21:45] |
mircea_popescu | right | [21:45] |
mircea_popescu | course this is mining priority neh ? | [21:46] |
asciilifeform | which is odd, does not correspond to the formula given | [21:46] |
asciilifeform | or hm, divided, yes | [21:46] |
asciilifeform | but anyway, it is used when conjuring up a block, aha | [21:46] |
mircea_popescu | dPriority += (double)nValueIn * nConf; << seems it does | [21:46] |
mircea_popescu | aha. | [21:46] |
asciilifeform | can just as easily use when 1) evicting 2) sharing inventory | [21:46] |
mircea_popescu | we don't give a shit about agwe | [21:47] |
asciilifeform | yes! | [21:47] |
mircea_popescu | i specifically chose to ignore this. | [21:47] |
asciilifeform | whole point of this conversation is that i wanted to say this | [21:47] |
mircea_popescu | a ok | [21:47] |
mircea_popescu | looky : there are parts where we may... ever so slightly... deviate. | [21:47] |
mircea_popescu | take what you can. | [21:47] |
asciilifeform | well, and one other thing - what does payware node feed non-payers ? | [21:47] |
asciilifeform | anything? | [21:47] |
asciilifeform | random ordering? | [21:47] |
mircea_popescu | i have been thinking about it. | [21:48] |
asciilifeform | same | [21:48] |
mircea_popescu | it's not a trivial question | [21:48] |
asciilifeform | was in a hammock for some hours earlier, thinking about only this. | [21:48] |
mircea_popescu | nothing may be it. | [21:48] |
mircea_popescu | has some historical support anyway | [21:49] |
asciilifeform | if nothing, how to ramp up? | [21:49] |
mircea_popescu | myeah. | [21:49] |
asciilifeform | (right now this would have the effect of essentially unplugging my node) | [21:49] |
mircea_popescu | of course it could fed the discarded txn | [21:49] |
asciilifeform | whereas if you feed the hobos when paying folks aren't bidding, you get essentially same situation as fees | [21:50] |
asciilifeform | where hobos 'come to expect' | [21:50] |
asciilifeform | and the overall friction of their presence is a permanent irritant | [21:50] |
asciilifeform | if we feed the hobos the pigshit end of the priority queue, they simply have an incentive to run away to any other node | [21:50] |
mircea_popescu | to make sure : your notion of "paying" includes "peers that relay txn that are worthy of going in our pool", correct ? | [21:50] |
asciilifeform | which feeds unsorted | [21:50] |
mircea_popescu | so what's wrong with this incentive ? | [21:51] |
asciilifeform | leaving this conundrum aside | [21:51] |
asciilifeform | because it remains unspecified how to implement any notion of 'peers that bring good tx' | [21:51] |
asciilifeform | because peers have no identity | [21:51] |
mircea_popescu | ip. | [21:51] |
asciilifeform | ip is ephemeral | [21:51] |
asciilifeform | and comms are unauthenticated. | [21:51] |
mircea_popescu | ip! | [21:51] |
mircea_popescu | the "signed" option can be in v2.0 | [21:52] |
asciilifeform | the buggerz already have infrastructure set up for diddling bitcoin net, all they gotta do now is drop in shit tx | [21:52] |
mircea_popescu | have a special, encrypted protocol. fix the "magic hole" issue too | [21:52] |
asciilifeform | that's sorta what i was doing in the hammock | [21:52] |
mircea_popescu | too soon, srsly. | [21:52] |
asciilifeform | in my head! | [21:52] |
mircea_popescu | alright. | [21:52] |
asciilifeform | the problem i ~would~ like to solve near-term is 'node demands infinite ram' | [21:53] |
asciilifeform | this has to die. | [21:53] |
asciilifeform | how - is secondary | [21:53] |
mircea_popescu | the most important point of military strategy is that a weak position which the enemy doesn't invest is not really weak in any sense. this is the meaning of napoleon's "never interrupt" | [21:53] |
asciilifeform | converse of this is that weak position enemy ~does~ invest in, means death. | [21:53] |
mircea_popescu | nah. | [21:54] |
mircea_popescu | you doin't actually want to kill. | [21:54] |
asciilifeform | 'what you don't know about will not only hurt you, but eat you for lunch and ask for seconds' (tm) (r) | [21:54] |
mircea_popescu | ever read any balzac incidentally ? | [21:54] |
asciilifeform | nope | [21:54] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 28150 @ 0.000545 = 15.3418 BTC [+] {2} | [21:54] |
asciilifeform | though iirc there is one in my queue | [21:54] |
mircea_popescu | he's worth a read, man had a knack for comprehendingsocial science. | [21:55] |
asciilifeform | on account of some earlier mircea_popescuism | [21:55] |
mircea_popescu | anyway, he has a story about doesn't matter what, in which the setting is that two groups have licenses to print newspapers in some small town | [21:55] |
mircea_popescu | one of them dominates, but takes care the other one (some widow, buncha incompetent losers) doesn't outright go out of business | [21:55] |
mircea_popescu | for the obvious reason. | [21:55] |
asciilifeform | microshit&apple, 1990s | [21:55] |
asciilifeform | aha | [21:55] |
mircea_popescu | the casual, obvious manner in which he treats this otherwise subtle point really stuck with me. 1800s! man got it. | [21:56] |
mircea_popescu | he also has an excellent depiction of the exact mechanics of inheritance in eugenie grandet | [21:57] |
mircea_popescu | it's quite simple : if you're old but somehow "owner", you will get so fucking raped you'll deplore the protections of that "ownership". | [21:57] |
asciilifeform | the gas/car dichotomy, aha | [21:57] |
mircea_popescu | pretty much every amateur thinker / world saver captive in english as his sole language would benefit immensely from reading balzac. whereas the clueful might really enjoy the elegant display he makes of things. | [21:58] |
asciilifeform | momentarily back to http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-08-2015#1222828 : at this point i very much regard the notion of 'so-and-so is an ip, and at this moment he is Worthy, and now let's try to calculate when he isn't...' as deeply mistaken. | [22:01] |
assbot | Logged on 03-08-2015 00:51:09; mircea_popescu: to make sure : your notion of "paying" includes "peers that relay txn that are worthy of going in our pool", correct ? | [22:01] |
* | NewLiberty has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds) | [22:01] |
asciilifeform | it has to run like normal wot. | [22:01] |
mircea_popescu | "has" . why has. | [22:01] |
asciilifeform | because crypto | [22:01] |
punkman | can just vpn? | [22:01] |
asciilifeform | because the comms have to be private and authenticated. and these concepts have no meaning when dealing with unknowns. | [22:02] |
scoopbot_revived | The 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9 Sunday event http://trilema.com/2015/the-1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-sunday-event/ | [22:02] |
mircea_popescu | can we carry this discussion in practical terms ? | [22:03] |
mircea_popescu | someone is going to steal my ip ? | [22:03] |
asciilifeform | not sure how to make it more intensely practical | [22:03] |
asciilifeform | mircea_popescu: no, someone will mitm the link | [22:03] |
asciilifeform | just as is happening to your box now, and mine | [22:03] |
asciilifeform | just that now they are contenting themselves with nulling the payloads. | [22:03] |
asciilifeform | do i have to describe here how mitm works? draw a picture ? | [22:04] |
asciilifeform | unlike the rest of bitcoin, mempool ~is~ sensitive to mitm and other real-time issues | [22:05] |
shinohai | with crayons perhaps? | [22:05] |
asciilifeform | yes, satoshi was concerned only that blocks are agreed on and that the constituent tx are genuine, etc | [22:05] |
asciilifeform | but we are speaking of nodes trading mempool sorted by minability value | [22:05] |
asciilifeform | this is inherently time-sensitive and diddlable (if only in the pure withholding sense) | [22:05] |
mircea_popescu | hm | [22:06] |
asciilifeform | not to mention the fact that the payload itself has value! | [22:06] |
mircea_popescu | i find no counters to summon. | [22:06] |
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asciilifeform | as i understand now, we are converging on something quite like (what is known of) the chinese approach. | [22:07] |
mircea_popescu | indeed | [22:07] |
asciilifeform | where the peers actually drink beer (or what do they drink there?) together | [22:08] |
mircea_popescu | this is illusory, my well placed flies on the wall tell me. | [22:08] |
mircea_popescu | i nfact, they don't actually trust each other enough to share... ips | [22:08] |
asciilifeform | unsurprising. but they share tx? | [22:08] |
mircea_popescu | but yes, meta-chinese, whatever. | [22:08] |
mircea_popescu | they maybe do. | [22:08] |
mircea_popescu | oriental love. | [22:08] |
asciilifeform | i suppose meta-china is where they mine with actual nodes | [22:08] |
asciilifeform | instead of 'spv' or whatever thing named after herpes virus | [22:09] |
mircea_popescu | aptly named. | [22:09] |
mircea_popescu | fucking americans and their macdonalds. | [22:09] |
mircea_popescu | "oh you know what we could do to make this meal shittier ? shit in it!" | [22:09] |
mircea_popescu | no shit, sherlick. | [22:09] |
asciilifeform | china: 'we already discovered it 5,000 yrs ago. here, have some fried rat turd dumpling' | [22:09] |
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mircea_popescu | spv nodes. because sometime you will want to pretend you're wearing a greatcoat and only have a q-tip | [22:10] |
mircea_popescu | and that sometime is right now and that someone is most everyone and this somehow matters now. | [22:11] |
mircea_popescu | "because we haven't joined the sv circus to not deliver huge numbers devoid of any content or meaning!!1" as hearn aptly put it. | [22:11] |
asciilifeform | the sheer monumental stupidity of this floored me, and i am still half-convinced that it is disinfo somehow | [22:11] |
asciilifeform | what, no one in cn can score a sat dish ? | [22:12] |
mircea_popescu | it's not anymore disinfo than the "civil rights movement" | [22:12] |
asciilifeform | and a contract with, fuck, norway ? | [22:12] |
mircea_popescu | you know, us faking its own death. | [22:12] |
* | asciilifeform was - until recently - labouring under the notion that cn was quite alive | [22:13] |
mircea_popescu | thin live layer at the top, exactly like the froth of 90s moscow. | [22:13] |
mircea_popescu | peat underneath. | [22:14] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 19706 @ 0.000545 = 10.7398 BTC [+] | [22:14] |
* | alaricsp (~alaric@love.warhead.org.uk) has joined #bitcoin-assets | [22:14] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 22944 @ 0.00055531 = 12.741 BTC [+] {3} | [22:15] |
mircea_popescu | lol wikipedia thinks george sand was a "feminist" writer | [22:18] |
mircea_popescu | lawd have mercy. | [22:18] |
mircea_popescu | http://trilema.com/2015/the-1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-sunday-event/#selection-193.21-193.36 << got the sexpr ? hm ? HM ? | [22:33] |
assbot | The 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9 Sunday event on Trilema - A blog by Mircea Popescu. ... ( http://bit.ly/1HjLEwj ) | [22:33] |
punkman | !up alaricsp | [22:34] |
* | assbot gives voice to alaricsp | [22:34] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 6350 @ 0.00055744 = 3.5397 BTC [+] {3} | [22:40] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 14163 @ 0.00055771 = 7.8988 BTC [+] | [22:58] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 6306 @ 0.00054474 = 3.4351 BTC [-] | [23:03] |
asciilifeform | ben_vulpes, mod6, trinque: http://www.skynet.ie/~caolan/Packages/callcatcher.html | [23:04] |
assbot | callcatcher: collect functions/methods defined and subtract called/referenced ... ( http://bit.ly/1K0b0Bi ) | [23:04] |
* | assbot removes voice from alaricsp | [23:05] |
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asciilifeform | http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-08-2015#1222917 << wasn't aware that it was anything but the weevils eating carcass of dead dragon, top to bottom | [23:07] |
assbot | Logged on 03-08-2015 01:14:02; mircea_popescu: thin live layer at the top, exactly like the froth of 90s moscow. | [23:07] |
asciilifeform | what layer. | [23:07] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 20100 @ 0.00053881 = 10.8301 BTC [-] {3} | [23:10] |
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assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 20350 @ 0.00053792 = 10.9467 BTC [-] {3} | [23:16] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 28050 @ 0.00053682 = 15.0578 BTC [-] {3} | [23:19] |
decimation | 01:12 <+asciilifeform> the sheer monumental stupidity of this floored me, and i am still half-convinced that it is disinfo somehow < at some point we are gonna run our own mining corp too :( | [23:25] |
asciilifeform | decimation: http://log.bitcoin-assets.com//?date=01-08-2015#1220100 << see also | [23:29] |
assbot | Logged on 01-08-2015 00:37:07; mircea_popescu: suppose we're in the park. "throw the crumbs over there" "but the birds won't see them" "doesn't matter, we're the only things that matter here" "but we don't cluck" | [23:29] |
decimation | heh | [23:31] |
* | shovel_boss_ (~shovel_bo@unaffiliated/shovel-boss/x-4881665) has joined #bitcoin-assets | [23:31] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 34735 @ 0.00052119 = 18.1035 BTC [-] | [23:32] |
decimation | asciilifeform: related: http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=25-06-2015#1175695 http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=25-06-2015#1175696 http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=25-06-2015#1175697 | [23:41] |
assbot | Logged on 25-06-2015 04:45:12; decimation: asciilifeform: why would ulbricht keep detailed records of his incriminating evidence on his laptop? | [23:41] |
assbot | Logged on 25-06-2015 04:45:22; asciilifeform: decimation: because retardation? | [23:41] |
assbot | Logged on 25-06-2015 04:45:26; decimation: exactly. | [23:41] |
assbot | [MPEX] [S.MPOE] 25300 @ 0.00050914 = 12.8812 BTC [-] {5} | [23:49] |
decimation | the longer I live, the more dubious I am of the initial assumption that 'enemy plays hand to his maximum advantage' | [23:51] |
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decimation | granted, sometimes you gotta think that way for strategic reasons, but it often misleads | [23:52] |
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Category: Logs