log☇︎
115200+ entries in 0.853s
mod6: i guess that makes sense you wanted to see it that way - i thought the first way just because that way there ~is~ a diff to look at. but maybe this is better.
phf: fwiw deleting a patch doesn't "remove it" as such, but ensures that all descendants are unpressable
polarbeard: I completely see unique names are a must, but if you don't replace you'll keep mistakes in the tree?
ascii_butugychag: ~patch submitter~ has the responsibility of coming up with a unique name.
ascii_butugychag: demanding that world move and rearrange itself because somebody wants to reuse a name, is lunacy. ☟︎
ascii_butugychag: this is not a hurdle.
ascii_butugychag: jurov: how about we have the simple and sane solution - a name can be used once.
ascii_butugychag: cardano for instance will NOT have a clock
polarbeard: I mean a timestamp in the filename author_patch_thing_$(date +%s).vpatch
ascii_butugychag: and i have no intention of asking people to use a patched pgptron simply so they can use v
ascii_butugychag: existing pgptrons do not, afaik, allow you to specify a custom timestamp ☟︎
polarbeard: it's just a version string
ascii_butugychag: i wanted to see a diff of my tree (pvs, and my pvs fix, and shiva, and the shiva fix) vs yours (where the patches and their bugfixes were agglomerated)
jurov: just a cosmetic difference
ascii_butugychag: i wanted a diff of a) the result of applying my original patches b) the result of applying yours
ascii_butugychag: jurov: the latter is a no-go because sigs !
mod6: ascii_butugychag: is this kinda what you were asking for yesterday? A vdiff of a pressed original patches (minus PVS fix) + shiva with pressed mod6's integrated patch + malleus regrind + shiva ?
ascii_butugychag: and show a coherent tree
assbot: 23 results for 'gcov' : http://s.b-a.link/?q=gcov
ascii_butugychag: i strongly suspect that we will uncover a deadlock.
assbot: 11 results for 'massif' : http://s.b-a.link/?q=massif
ascii_butugychag: how to determine, without major surgery, what a wedged node is doing
PeterL: ascii_butugychag> http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-02-2016#1395141 << when americans stuff ballot box, they like to set it up as 'dark horse candidate' << I wouldn't call Cruz a dark horse, there are just so many candidates he must have been overlooked, we didn't get bets for huckabee, santorum, fiorina, christie, etc, either ☝︎
phf: can probably add something like lxr, but i need a better idea of how they do c++ parsing/indexing
ascii_butugychag: incidentally, i found that a blackholed node won't respond to rpc
thestringpuller: ascii_butugychag says "LISP is you friend" so I'll give it a try.
ascii_butugychag: you're in for a surprise.
ascii_butugychag: thestringpuller: it doesn't tell you worth shit re: a stuck node.
ascii_butugychag: and then you people wonder why your tx is stuck on mars without a return ticket
ascii_butugychag: these things spend a good chunk of their time not node-in !1111 ☟︎
ascii_butugychag: is so that we can get to a place where there is NEVER a situation of 'i wonder wtf the node is doing'
punkman: there have been a lot of DoS bugs since 0.5.3
mircea_popescu: i dunno what it is, i've never seen it before trb myself, nor a really good one since.
ascii_butugychag: i can say at this point that it is not a network issue as such
mircea_popescu: gotta make a bot, that'll say "hey dummy... you only put the sig in!"
ascii_butugychag: anyway, a thing that gives vtronic lxr that also would eat patches and let you walk the vtree, would be ~the~ answer.
mircea_popescu: yaya. but lxr is still pretty good, and a good basis for vtronic same-thing
assbot: Logged on 03-02-2016 16:25:23; mircea_popescu: review the letters, the reason calculus was invented as well as documented has everything to do with newton being part of the b-a of his time, going under the name "lion's claw" and ~0 to do with the happenstance that some derp battling hygiene wore a hunk of metal now and again for a hat.
ascii_butugychag: http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-02-2016#1395177 << science ~does~ 'have a country~ in the sense that newton was not and could not have been from zimbabwe. ☝︎
assbot: 151 results for 'lxr' : http://s.b-a.link/?q=lxr
mircea_popescu: review the letters, the reason calculus was invented as well as documented has everything to do with newton being part of the b-a of his time, going under the name "lion's claw" and ~0 to do with the happenstance that some derp battling hygiene wore a hunk of metal now and again for a hat. ☟︎
mircea_popescu: up to 1-200k a day it can keep going. that's finally a relevant metric worth considering.
mircea_popescu: and as a side wonder, i wonder how many people even knew iowa was a state.
mircea_popescu: i wonder if rand will spend the next 50 years with a tiny rabid fanbase and a few %s each election.
mircea_popescu: the way it wouldn't be for obama. he was, throughout, a loser. losing doesn't affect losers as it affects winners.
mircea_popescu: for which reason, not-winning is a kiss of death for him.
mircea_popescu: copypaste i think the perception (at least my perception at any rate) is that he's a momentum player. all he has on his side is the image of winning, no further substance.
PeterL: so maybe he wins new hampshire next week, then we will see a bunch of yes bets?
asciilifeform: in other news, zoolag was blackholed for a record-breaking 8 hours. ☟︎
gribble: Error: "tmsr" is not a valid command.
assbot: Black Book on Trilema - A blog by Mircea Popescu. ... ( http://bit.ly/20oO0da )
BingoBoingo: Crushing my dreams with you having come from a country with history.
danielpbarron: a good percent of the 20k are probably dead by now
mircea_popescu: it's just enough for half a concentration camp, really.
BingoBoingo: 20,000 people is enough for three rifle brigades and a support component
danielpbarron: thing started a decade ago at least, so it's been a long time coming
danielpbarron: I chatted him up too; he was a bit too socialist for my liking
pete_dushenski: http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=02-02-2016#1394302 << waitwut. that's a tidy sum. ☝︎
mircea_popescu: it is a bitcoin expert / gavin economist / miner leader and otherwise important reddit person.
mircea_popescu: trinque this sounds like a bug in either the signing process or the btcd.
pete_dushenski: ^a test. you might see me logging in as 'pete_d_out' in the next week or so. if you do, please to +v!
mircea_popescu: <funkenstein_> a backport patch of privkey import/export should you be so inclined to look: http://frass.woodcoin.org/dev/funken_prikey_tools.vpatch << hey check that out! nice.
assbot: Logged on 03-02-2016 03:05:02; funkenstein_: http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-02-2016#1394898 <-- a backport patch of privkey import/export should you be so inclined to look: http://frass.woodcoin.org/dev/funken_prikey_tools.vpatch
funkenstein_: mod6 yeah, a few months ago.
assbot: Logged on 03-02-2016 02:13:21; trinque: shinohai: I don't see anything in pybitcointools to shove a privkey into a wallet.dat
funkenstein_: http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=03-02-2016#1394898 <-- a backport patch of privkey import/export should you be so inclined to look: http://frass.woodcoin.org/dev/funken_prikey_tools.vpatch ☝︎☟︎
asciilifeform: the discovery since he contributed to it (as he said), this is my second big mistake. Of course he accepted to co-write the article, who wouldn't ?! David H. Bailey (and Ferguson) are the authors of the PSLQ program. That program is the <american> version of the Pari-Gp program. I used it a little it is true, but what made the discovery was pari-Gp and Maple interface program I had. So actually, that person has nothing to do w
asciilifeform: more talent in politics (more money too). He is good but has a tendency to site himself a lot. He thinks that if he had the idea of the sum of 2 numbers at one point in his life then all formulas in mathematics are his own discovery. About David H. Bailey. He came after the discovery of the formula and my small basic program , I had also a fortran version. This is where Peter Borwein suggested to add him as a collaborator to
asciilifeform: 'Peter Borwein wanted very much that I do a Ph. D. on the ISC but he wanted also to publish (with his name of course) an article before I deposit the thesis. Again the same story was going on, these 2 guys are so greedy I can't believe it. The behavior they had with me was not exclusive, especially Peter Borwein he was the same with most of his students, especially the good ones, sucking the maximum. Jon is the same but he has
mircea_popescu: guy really gave numeric appoaches a serious push.
danielpbarron: it's some account that's fairly popular in the twatter circles of people who use terms like opsec and infosec, pointing out that the proponents of larger blocks sound like the guy who's running for president as a socialist
danielpbarron: https://twitter.com/swiftonsecurity/status/694686642318118913 >> "We're going to increase the block size and make more of them. Everyone should be able to mine a block." (picture of Bernie Sanders at some rally)
asciilifeform: cars all looking entirely alike are a better example
mircea_popescu: speaking of which, i was walking with a woman i walked with all over the fucking world, and she spontaneoushly said
asciilifeform: which led to a pile of corpses and a reaction.
asciilifeform: age of cheap transistor had a faux-renaissance where folks used the cheap transistors for elaborate self-delusion - 'this is sooo complicated, nobody!1111 could crack'
mircea_popescu: also, this is NOT a block cipher
asciilifeform: (~a~ genesis, i should say)
mircea_popescu: idence of a polynomial method to estimate a transcendent" is really good enough. and it exhibits all those important properties : such as, you can ~actually~ use infinite message, and you can also use any arbitrary padding you like, up to infinity - the hash function won't complain. and you can want it to shit out any block size you want it to shit out - also won't complain, but give EQUALLY MEANINGFUL results. whether
mircea_popescu: asciilifeform> i will prolly care. on the train, some time soon. << the reason i give it is mostly didactic. it plainly shows what i mean re proper use of math and treating your computer like a tool to do a job rather than treating your job as something to be adjusted to fit the computer without having to delve into complexities and subtleties of number theory etc. something as commonplace as "use the intervals of conf
asciilifeform: anything that can sit down into a vtron, is pressable.
trinque: anyone? given a privkey in hand, how the hell do I get trb to send some coin? I do not want to change addresses and nothing I find can chew on this wallet
asciilifeform: and was laughing until i saw that it starts spinning when i turn the box a bit !
asciilifeform: and laughed when i uncrated it and saw that it ships in a gaudy display case, with clear window, and velcro (!) lid
trinque: shinohai: I don't see anything in pybitcointools to shove a privkey into a wallet.dat ☟︎
mircea_popescu: sure. anyway bignum operations is a solved problem
mircea_popescu: you took a second to answer after my 2nd line, minutes after the first produced nothing! timing attack on your brain!
mircea_popescu: it is apparently a lot easier to follow math in words than in symbols, EVEN FOR YOU
mircea_popescu: asciilifeform if you feel like entertaining some crackpottery, suppose a hash function defined as follows : a) calculate PM ; pM ; P!M ; p!M where P and p are the perimeters of polygons of K sides circumscribing and inscribed respectively in the same circle and !M is the bitwise negation of M ; b) calculate V1 = 2pMPM/(PM+pM) ; V2 = sqrt(pMPM) ; V3 = 2p!MP!M/(P!M+p!M) ; V4 = sqrt(p!MP!M) ; c) calculate H = (V1 - V2) *
asciilifeform: some of the variants i've envisioned include.... a certain kind of battery, where ion gradients vary when a molten electrolyte cools, and it then cut into 2+ strips, and 'burned' like a candle
asciilifeform: each of these 5 pieces contains a number of sub-boojums
asciilifeform: 3) come out one at a time
asciilifeform: 1) the random bits are born all at once, rather than written in one (or machine word) at a time from some specially-built electronic widget
mircea_popescu: so as not to say "should have been a shoemaker"
mircea_popescu: anyway - it's not that i don't like paper otp, or otp generally. it's that if that's the best you can do, you should have been a clockmaker
mircea_popescu: but this was a 1700s item im pretty sure
mircea_popescu: anyway : best ux ever in a mechanical cryptological machine. you could use as many slabs per message as you felt like.
mircea_popescu: basically it had a place you placed the clay fragment in, and a rod which traveled the cracked surface.
mircea_popescu: it wasn't a pot, it was a slab.
asciilifeform: would be interesting to see, considering that i can't get repeatable reading of anything out of a clay pot ~today~