43800+ entries in 0.615s

pete_dushenski: "The outstanding balance in undisputed, unpaid taxes was $29 billion
as of March 31, 2012"
pete_dushenski: too cheap to register the domain name for
as long
as the product isn't expired.
pete_dushenski: scenarios for this conspiracy, and conclude that the belief in the existence of our Universe is an illusion,
as previously assumed by ancient philosophers, 20th century science fiction authors and contemporary film makers."
trinque: "
As of this writing (3PM @ 7-13-2015) Wikileaks continues to provide a torrent file with an identical timestamp, filename and byte size
as the one I analyzed without any warning message notifying users of the danger of handling the files."
ascii_field: just same now
as in inquisition 500 yrs ago.
ascii_field: who could just
as easily be the one to have fallen into the honeypot 'fake btc exchange login'
assbot: Canadian embassy used
as safe haven during Ukraine uprising, investigation finds - Politics - CBC News ... (
http://bit.ly/1O1OYRX )
ascii_field: phf: meanwhile, actual-open disappeared
as a thing from the world
ascii_field: these are sold
as 'miracast wireless hdmi receiver'
trinque: both direct and
as seen by archive.is
trinque: yes because you
as a reddit user know what an operative looks like
phf: it might be worthwhile to replace all those printfs with syslog(3) calls, specifically introducing the priority
as the first argument, i.e. LOG_ALERT, LOG_WARNING, LOG_DEBUG. maybe have it conditional compilation, so that real bitcoin instance will log to syslog, where's debug instance will still write to file
mod6: looks like error(const std::string &&format, ...) does the same gyrations
as around _vsnprintf/vsnprintf
as my_snprintf. which is kinda strange. my_snprintf must have been added later.
mod6: return value (
as always)
as the number of characters that would have been written in case the output string has been large enough. SUSv3 and later align their specification of snprintf() with C99.
jurov: wanted to use snprintf in a win school project, had to call it
as _snprintf
mod6: i have no idea why (
as a lot of things in this code) this is done: btc.yt/lxr/satoshi/source/src/util.h#0080
mod6: might be better to use `diff -uNr a b` on your changes
as opposed to `git --diff` too.
punkman: it stripped the last newline from readme_s.txt
as well
jurov: better be safe and send clearsigned stuff
as first attachment
punkman: "One intriguing detail with the EU statement:
as part of market reforms designed to boost the economy, Greece will have to bring in Sunday trading hours."
punkman: you know, same deal
as the one people voted off
as "NO"
PeterL: She is shaped kinda like my wife, but not
as cute. What can I say, I like em curvy?
PeterL: re American Manufacturing thread earlier,
as one who works in a US manufacturing plant, I feel like I have to point out that not all US manufacturing is shit, and my job is to make sure of that
mod6: it wasn't quite
as bad back then. there was still a lot of people crossing the border in the area -- especially across the tohono o'odham resvervation boarder. there the tribe refuses to enforce the boarder because they claim that for thousands of years, there was no boarder.
ag3nt_zer0: " "Our budget isn't considered part of homeland defense, so it wasn't a priority," Thompson said,
as he drove past the 20-foot (6-meter) hole in the border fence that Eggle's killer drove through. "But how long will it be until someone figures out that you could easily drive a semi-truck with a nuclear device through here?"
mircea_popescu: this mental masturbation of inserting us into things
as if it matters. it doesn't.
pete_dushenski: "Block pruning works during initial sync in the same way
as during steady state, by deleting block files “
as you go” whenever disk space is allocated. Thus, if the user specifies 550MB, once that level is reached the program will begin deleting the oldest block and undo files, while continuing to download the blockchain."
mircea_popescu: yeah,
as in all dead empires. caragiale notes the case of the 1900s hungarian who declares that he'd rather eat soap wrapped in the hungarian flag than cheese in plain white paper.
mircea_popescu: chiefly on the grounds of not subscribing to various idiocies that there
as anywhere constitute the spirit of propriety.
mircea_popescu: which is an ancient pecenegian clan. about
as romanian
as it gets.
ascii_modem: well
as i understood, you contend that the ant death is 'promise, not protocol'. when i suggest that it can be protocol, answered 'they will take the ants' - no ?
mircea_popescu: they learned it the same way, too : by having it beaten into them
as children.
mircea_popescu: it may very well turn out that bitcoin is a case of wishful thinking, entirely being powered by the illusion that we've managed to "get free energy" for
as long
as this illusion that "miners can be centrally verifying in a decentralizewd manner" lasts.
mircea_popescu: there fundamentally can not be a way to organize mining that's not centralizing, BECAUSE mining is going to have to follow the same rules,
as that's what it does for bitcoin : checks them.
mircea_popescu: this is how the current "45% of network is dumb
as rocks" thing has appeared
mircea_popescu: and so, once it's open, people that aren't every bit
as good
as you no longer have any incentive to continue
mircea_popescu: the way this works is : if you're any good
as a miner, you're going to have your own infrastructure. you might keep the pool closed,
mircea_popescu: the broader problem is that the way mining works is very much discouraging middle, which is a serious problem,
as death of the middle class always precedes centralization.
mircea_popescu: this isn't a field where such a thing
as sop may be a defined symbol.
mircea_popescu: what the current outsider schmucks (on #bitcoin-dev and etc) hope to achieve with their time is, release enough code that nobody* uses to give the impression they know their shit, so they can one day maybe join the actual miners
as a junior analyst, and until then survive on conference rubber chicken.
assbot: Logged on 12-07-2015 03:26:53; mircea_popescu: "At the time of posting this LTC is at $4.25, where
as when I went to bed last night it was at $8.80. " << wasn't some twerp going on about how ltc has more volume than btc or some shit ?
ascii_modem:
as in, yes, theoretically, could touch you...
ascii_modem: and wage labour being in same mental category
as ebola
mircea_popescu: by the time "systemd" is a word, usg-
as-nsa is no longer.
mircea_popescu: by the time we have "politically correct"
as a concept, us liberalism is dead.
mircea_popescu: i guess
as the flesh sears under the hot tongs, "high ranking" usg employees will scream how people "willingly paid taxes"
decimation: still, countereconomic
as it might be, there's an opportunity here
mircea_popescu: "Now, the average employee stays at Amazon for LESS than two years, so when you do the math to compare offers from various companies go ahead and factor that in. The entire system is designed to bring you in, burn you out, and send you on your way with
as little equity lost
as possible."
assbot: Logged on 12-07-2015 03:26:53; mircea_popescu: "At the time of posting this LTC is at $4.25, where
as when I went to bed last night it was at $8.80. " << wasn't some twerp going on about how ltc has more volume than btc or some shit ?
phf: ascii_modem: cut
as in unix utility
ascii_modem: i wanted to explain that i don't evaluate softs in comparison with microshit. just
as i don't evaluate meal by comparing with a tall glass of liquishit.
mircea_popescu: at the time,
as a game maker, it was "directx or go home"
trinque: cazalla: yeah, specifically to the chick; she's in this garb that evokes a certain narrative, suddenly perked
as though immediately at home in that context
mircea_popescu: (yes, i confess, mp doesn't generally use natural language "
as it is", but "
as it should be", like any serious autist. it's wonder anything i say's comprehensible to any degree)
mircea_popescu: "At the time of posting this LTC is at $4.25, where
as when I went to bed last night it was at $8.80. " << wasn't some twerp going on about how ltc has more volume than btc or some shit ?
☟︎☟︎ assbot: Logged on 11-07-2015 06:06:44; Naphex: 04:14 <+hanbot> people are going to be sucked into convenience > quality (sanity) so long
as they can't appreciate what quality is. i had a visitor in romania who had never seen good egg yolks, thought they were "suspicious <- Happens pretty often
trinque: I'm not personally out to revolutionize computing by focusing all my time on that
as such
gabriel_laddel: I mean that someone should have paid for you to write CL, preferable packaging it up
as an unchanging distro supporting only a subset of hardware.
trinque: and that was super powerful
as well, and I don't know how to get that on the CL side
trinque: model ebnf
as tables -> describe some particular grammar in those tables -> derive schema for statements in that grammar -> derive parser for farting ASTs into tables -> so on so on
trinque: our merry band of madmen got things such
as these done once upon a time by representing the ASTs of SQL queries
as table structures in postresql
assbot: Logged on 23-05-2015 07:11:21; mircea_popescu: seems the sort of meta-prograsmming task for which lisp was invented anyway. keep your code
as a s-expr of the code you deliver.
gabriel_laddel: phf: no one has done so much
as even drafting a document specifying what is to be removed.
trinque: emacs is the closest thing I
as a derp coming into the industry in 2006 would ever find which somewhat resembled the experience that was possible *before I was goddamn born*
trinque: I use pragmatic
as a dirty word
phf: lispworks clim is a life support for legacy systems, and
as such their technical decisions have merit
gabriel_laddel: I ended up binding it to f8,
as was tired of pulling it up all the time.
danielpbarron:
http://www.atruechurch.info/polygamy.html >>
As for a king who breached Deuteronomy 17:17, Solomon is the classic example. He had 700 wives and 300 concubines (1 Kings 11:3). Yet, even though Solomon obviously multiplied wives to himself, the Lord condemns Solomon, in particular, for his marriage of foreign women (1 Kings 11:1-2; Deuteronomy 7:1-4) and the resultant idolatry (1 Kings 11:4).
assbot: Logged on 10-07-2015 19:37:48; mircea_popescu: and especially nonsensical given that there's an exactly just
as silly, but opposite direction social convention : people going around with a prosthetic leg are apparently GREAT!11
mircea_popescu: it's sitll going
as it is, just the experience filling bar of skills is fucked up
mircea_popescu: and in other news : eulora is currently being practically re-written, because fucking idiots and their fucktarded assumptions. "oh, nobody could POSSIBLY ever want an int other than ~16!!!!~ bit".
as a result, the skill display in game behaves eratically.
as a result, all places that use ints and were apparently not upgraded to 32 bit because too much fucking work are now getting redefined
as 64 bits.
gernika: mircea_popescu no he seemed to make eye-contact, connect, etc. Aaron Schwartz, who I met at a similar such party (possibly even the same one) struck me
as being much more of an autist.
jurov: and when used
as ingredients, it colors the dough or whatever, too
Naphex: 04:14 <+hanbot> people are going to be sucked into convenience > quality (sanity) so long
as they can't appreciate what quality is. i had a visitor in romania who had never seen good egg yolks, thought they were "suspicious <- Happens pretty often
☟︎ hanbot: people are going to be sucked into convenience > quality (sanity) so long
as they can't appreciate what quality is. i had a visitor in romania who had never seen good egg yolks, thought they were "suspicious"
mircea_popescu: "
As Wal-Mart gets the lions share of food stamp transfers [EBT cash and food] than this operation amounts to a 19th century Appalachian coal mine with its own company store, with over half of the employees spending mostor even more thantheir salary at the Wal-Mart register, literally a captive market and labor force in one."