2400+ entries in 0.826s
assbot: Logged on 29-07-2015 00:53:50; nubbins
`: as someone who knows far too much about the science of coffee, starbucks is actual shit
assbot: Logged on 29-07-2015 00:28:06; nubbins
`: nobody wanted windows, they wanted the experience of being dazzled by shiny things
assbot: Logged on 29-07-2015 00:23:54; asciilifeform: nubbins
`: the philosophical (if not in any detectable way historical) continuity of microshit and edison's thing
assbot: Logged on 29-07-2015 00:19:03; nubbins
`: and then literally reversed a bunch of the terms in the next version, so a site was now a web and a web was now a site
phf: nubbins
`: i always thought blends are like multigrain breads, a way to have a brand separate from the product, so you can easily substitute your sources
ben_vulpes: <nubbins
`> it's actual swill << every time that i'm up north i can't shake the feeling that's where they ship the tired american brands to finally croak
☟︎ BingoBoingo: <nubbins
`> nowadays, the animals are force-fed so you might as well feed the beans to a cow. << I have the feeling a ruminant's multiple stomachs could defeat even a bean.
phf: nubbins
`: oh, that was re asciilifeform's comments. there's plenty of good coffee in philadelphia
ben_vulpes: nubbins
`: shops, maybe. in some place, maybe. not here.
ben_vulpes: what i am going to do is type
`compile_boost' at the cli, and it is going to behave the way i want it to.
trinque: If you meant to cross compile, use
`--host'.
mod6: i hit a small environment snag in the buildroot build itself -- i didn't have
`cpio
` installed, now that it's installed continuing make..
assbot: Logged on 25-07-2015 00:47:17; nubbins
`: now it's just a thing people do. i have a friend who painted his house neon green
assbot: Logged on 25-07-2015 00:19:48; nubbins
`: any home owners in here wanna share their annual insurance premium, as a percentage of the value of their home?
cazalla: nubbins
`, copics actually any good? missus has truckloads for some reason
mod6: but on debian, which is similar in a way to ubuntu with
`apt-get
`, you need to first update apt-get (anyone correct me if I'm wrong):
`apt-get update
` and
`apt-get upgrade
` mod6: trinque: we're talking about the origina barf on 168
`001
assbot: Logged on 23-07-2015 01:16:30; mod6: it barfs on tx fb0a1d8d34fa5537e461ac384bac761125e1bfa7fec286fa72511240fa66864d in block 124
`276
assbot: Logged on 22-07-2015 22:16:20; mod6: so for the record, this is a "VerifySignature" failure, similar to that seen in February with 168
`001
mod6: you got wedged on the 168
`001 block? aka: you were stuck on block 168
`000 according to this.. although, i dont' as of yet see a Verify Signature failure in here...
mod6: for us we thought that the 168
`001 verify signature issue at first was due to the fact that 168
`000 is the last checkpoint. but totally unrelated. threw us off for a bit though.
mod6: it barfs on tx fb0a1d8d34fa5537e461ac384bac761125e1bfa7fec286fa72511240fa66864d in block 124
`276
☟︎ mod6: it didn't barf on 124
`275
mod6: <+mod6> ok so those happen a bit... then you hit block 124
`275 and then fail to verify a tx in block 124
`276 to no avail
mod6: we saw stuff like that before with the 168
`001 Verify Signature fail too. most of the time it failed for us... the three of us who were independantly testing it. But sometimes, it'd pass. Maybe 30% of the time. I was pulling my hair out.
☟︎ mod6: so for the record, this is a "VerifySignature" failure, similar to that seen in February with 168
`001
☟︎ mod6: ok so those happen a bit... then you hit block 124
`275 and then fail to verify a tx in block 124
`276 to no avail
mod6:
`gpg --verify stator.tar.gz.sig
` mod6: then
`mv stator_7447d6ad798179d04e9d277acb72799b3c7d0eae.tar.gz stator.tar.gz
` and
`mv stator_72424e6da0f81aea5ab09165c377fd8b7418983f.tar.gz.sig stator.tar.gz.sig
` mod6: run this to pull ascii's key:
`gpg --keyserver pool.sks-keyservers.net --recv-keys 0xB98228A001ABFFC7
` mod6: once pulled down do this
`sha1sum stator_7447d6ad798179d04e9d277acb72799b3c7d0eae.tar.gz stator_72424e6da0f81aea5ab09165c377fd8b7418983f.tar.gz.sig
` and ensure that the output hashes match what's embedded in the file name.
mod6: stick them in a directory like
`sandbox
` ascii_field: nubbins
`: reads, i must confess, quite like those 'eaten by friend's dog' reports
mod6: This one will do the same as the one before, except this will create the dirs, pull the 3rd party packages, and build "stator" directly though this script. Please read the script.
`realpath
`,
`gnupg
` and
`curl
` are required.
mod6: If you run that script in a directory say ~/sandbox then you can
`cd bitcoin-v0_5_3_1
` `mkdir -p ourlibs distfiles
` - then pull down the boost/bdb/openssl and drop them in distfiles. then finally drop in stator.sh into the ~/sandbox/bitcoin-v0_5_3_1-RELEASE dir and kick it off. that should do the trick.
mod6: sure, use
`script
` to start a logging facility just type 'exit' when done and it'll dump out a 'typscript' file in the local dir.
assbot: [MPEX] [S.MPOE] [PAID] 29.26357267 BTC to 500
`000
`000 shares, 5 satoshi per share
mod6: maybe the best option is to add a one line shell script that just does:
`find . -name ".gitignore" -exec rm '{}' \;
` mod6: yah, and when applied
`patch
` ends up removing the dirs along with the .gitignore files because it renderes those directories empty.
mod6: check out
`man 1 patch
` -E
mod6: so yeah this is annoying with
`patch
`. if you do
`patch -p1 --posix < rm_gitignore.patch
` it doesn't remove the dirs /or/ the files, just leaves 'em truncated. which is dumb too.
mod6:
`man 1 patch
`: -E When patch removes a file, it also attempts to remove any empty ancestor directories. << i can't get it to leave the empty dirs.
mod6: and then do a
`diff -uNr
` mod6: here it's called
`weed wacker' or 'weed whip'
mod6:
`whipper snipper' that's fantasic. im gonna call it that from now on.
mod6: so dumping the first four blocks with
`dumpblock' into each their own .bin files, then using xxd and shovling them all into one file, here's the result:
http://dpaste.com/1B1H1PC.txt mod6: so I dumped a few blocks 0, 1, 2, 199
`999, etc.
ascii_field: nubbins
`: yours? they look like cheapo surplus 9mm luger
mircea_popescu: nubbins
` this is possibly the oldest rule in the book.
mod6: are you stuck on block 365
`521?
assbot: Logged on 15-07-2015 18:12:50; ascii_field: nubbins
`: this is when you ought to envy folks like me, who have nothing
assbot: Logged on 15-07-2015 18:14:46; *: nubbins
` generally lives life as if 1btc == $0.00
assbot: Logged on 15-07-2015 18:15:35; nubbins
`: danielpbarron, it seems likely that kludges and bugs will be baked into Bitcoin for eternity
assbot: Logged on 15-07-2015 15:01:17; nubbins
`: implying that most cocaine users do it for the fun.
assbot: Logged on 15-07-2015 18:12:50; ascii_field: nubbins
`: this is when you ought to envy folks like me, who have nothing
danielpbarron: nubbins
`> ascii_field, posts like that make me feel like liquidating << haha i had similar thought
ascii_field: nubbins
`: this is when you ought to envy folks like me, who have nothing
☟︎☟︎ mircea_popescu: see, if you didn't do enough drugs in your youth ? nubbins
` got you licked.
assbot: Logged on 15-07-2015 14:29:58; assbot: Logged on 15-07-2015 12:57:37; nubbins
`: "The substances purchased have been various Schedule I and II drugs, including ecstasy, cocaine, heroin, LSD, and others. As of April 2013, at least 56 samples of these purchases have been laboratory-tested, and, of these, 54 have shown high purity levels of the drug the item was advertised to be on Silk Road. "
assbot: Logged on 15-07-2015 12:57:37; nubbins
`: "The substances purchased have been various Schedule I and II drugs, including ecstasy, cocaine, heroin, LSD, and others. As of April 2013, at least 56 samples of these purchases have been laboratory-tested, and, of these, 54 have shown high purity levels of the drug the item was advertised to be on Silk Road. "
☟︎ mod6: well, at least
`objdump -T bitcoind
` shows: objdump: bitcoind-woNoShared: not a dynamic object \ DYNAMIC SYMBOL TABLE: \ no symbols
ascii_field: nubbins
`: 'How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. but at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever they wanted to. You have to live - did live, from habit that became instinct - in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard...'