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06:37.56 | *** topic/#sporewiki is SporeWiki! http://spore.wikia.com || Logs: http://ibot.rikers.org/%23sporewiki/ || Collaborative Universes: Sci-Fi http://tinyurl.com/3ddvp7q Fantasy http://tinyurl.com/p9qau7l || Roleplay subchannels: #sporewiki-rp1 and #sporewiki-rp2 || Titanpad: https://titanpad.com/ || |
06:37.56 | *** mode/#sporewiki [+v infobot] by ChanServ |
06:44.28 | krow | TekDroid: I found "long t = (long)(f-25510953600000.0);" in DI |
06:44.37 | krow | what's the factor after f for? |
07:45.45 | *** join/#sporewiki Liquid_Ink (79d016b9@gateway/web/freenode/ip.121.208.22.185) |
08:35.58 | krow | TekDroid: I successfully replicated your implementation of the DI calendar, the only difference though is the day. Mine counts one day less than yours. |
08:51.06 | *** join/#sporewiki ImpyDroid (~imperios@95.140.92.80) |
08:58.41 | *** join/#sporewiki Jepardi (b24b970e@gateway/web/freenode/ip.178.75.151.14) |
08:58.43 | Jepardi | Hi |
09:10.32 | krow | Hey |
09:34.37 | *** join/#sporewiki Imperios (~Imperios@95.140.92.80) |
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10:02.37 | Imperios | Hello |
10:05.47 | krow | Hey |
10:30.38 | krow | I just don't under how Bunsen's calendar works |
10:30.42 | krow | understand* |
10:45.53 | *** join/#sporewiki ImpyDroid (~imperios@host-119-156-66-217.spbmts.ru) |
10:51.38 | *** join/#sporewiki Tek0516 (~TekDroid@24.114.52.236) |
10:59.56 | *** join/#sporewiki Monet (50bdbce6@gateway/web/freenode/ip.80.189.188.230) |
11:00.20 | Monet | Hello |
11:00.48 | AdmiralPanda | hi |
11:01.48 | krow | Tek0516: Your goddamned Farengeto required me to make over 30 lines of shouting code. |
11:02.42 | krow | Tek0516: Look at all dem lines http://i.imgur.com/ldw0XnA.png |
11:03.11 | Tek0516 | :P |
11:04.40 | krow | Compare that to the rambian calendar: http://i.imgur.com/gVEMFaf.png |
11:05.50 | krow | Secondly, I don't understand your implementation of the Bunsen calendar |
11:06.18 | krow | rants even more |
11:07.00 | krow | Alright, time to do the code handling the Farengeto date calculation |
11:08.42 | *** join/#sporewiki Wormy_ (4e90a5d4@gateway/web/freenode/ip.78.144.165.212) |
11:08.51 | Wormy_ | hi |
11:09.07 | krow | Hey |
11:10.04 | Wormy_ | hi |
11:11.13 | krow | Tek0516: Can I question about the origins of the 134217728.0? |
11:11.44 | krow | Nevermind, figured it out |
11:42.45 | Tek0516 | krow: I think Bunsen was just Earth sith the leap day removed |
11:43.12 | Tek0516 | *with |
11:43.24 | Tek0516 | Removed, as in spread throughout the year |
11:43.39 | Monet | It has shorter years I think |
11:44.19 | Tek0516 | No, IIRC Bunsen is some everything overall year length just no leap day |
11:51.57 | krow | Tek0516: The ultimatium when ours aren't the same. http://i.imgur.com/it9Ltcq.png |
11:53.12 | Tek0516 | well for one the real time has a year difference... |
11:54.24 | krow | Tek0516: Mine run on 1y/263 ratio starting from year 1 A.D. while your's run on 1y/52 ratio starting from epoch (1970) |
11:56.32 | Tek0516 | The wikitime moves at a simple 7x though. |
11:58.19 | krow | Tek0516: Here's our clocks synced. http://i.imgur.com/Z1E1LZX.png |
11:58.53 | Tek0516 | Yeah, that's a bit off |
11:59.57 | *** join/#sporewiki ImpyDroid (~imperios@host-119-156-66-217.spbmts.ru) |
12:00.09 | Tek0516 | Wondered why Farengeto's was so far off, in my clock it's corrected to base 8. |
12:04.55 | krow | it is because I'm returning the string as base 10 |
12:05.49 | Wormy_ | http://imgur.com/gallery/WFhzd7D cat fax http://imgur.com/gallery/XDQm9 truth about baby carrots http://imgur.com/gallery/pHNKe http://imgur.com/gallery/I9wNwVJ http://imgur.com/gallery/oGwCZpy tiny lemon http://imgur.com/gallery/HYZXbVL http://imgur.com/gallery/dBKItdE http://imgur.com/gallery/YPojgFh |
12:05.54 | Wormy_ | krow: http://i.imgur.com/QZdgwTD.png?1 |
12:06.20 | krow | Wormy_: rekt |
12:07.51 | Wormy_ | traffic light fight http://imgur.com/gallery/169UKQV |
12:08.33 | krow | Tek0516: The year now match, but the month and day are off with 1 day. |
12:08.42 | krow | Just one unit |
12:08.44 | krow | damnit |
12:11.11 | krow | Tek0516: Secondly, I've noticed that you've implemented a 1 unit offset for both day and month in your clock. |
12:11.49 | Tek0516 | For the moving around, I believe. |
12:12.06 | krow | :V |
12:13.45 | Wormy_ | http://imgur.com/gallery/Xkd3pI8 http://imgur.com/gallery/XH9gu |
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12:19.08 | Tek0516 | krom: Or do you mean the actual visible times have an offset? |
12:20.03 | krow | Yes |
12:20.22 | krow | e.g. this "int FUCd = (int)Math.abs(FUC%(64))+1;" |
12:20.38 | krow | You are telling it to calculate, then add 1 unit to it |
12:21.05 | krow | While my approach is: this.day = (ms/MILLISECONDS_PER_DAY%DAYS_PER_MONTH).abs().floor(); |
12:21.12 | krow | Should include the offset or not? |
12:24.27 | krow | Using ceiling instead of flooring, the month now match. But the day is still off with 2. |
12:25.39 | Tek0516 | oh. It's that way so there's no 0 day. Days 1-100 in a month rather than 0-77. |
12:26.56 | Tek0516 | Since in base 10 the equation returns between 0 and 63. But like hoe we have no September 0th I correct for that. |
12:30.20 | krow | I believe I should return to flooring, because if I round (by either ceiling, traditional rounding and truncating), the year will become 12. |
12:30.47 | Tek0516 | Yes, it should round down. |
12:30.59 | Tek0516 | if I understand directly |
12:31.05 | Tek0516 | *correctly |
12:32.21 | krow | I feel like a bird-brain I can tell you |
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12:40.46 | Wormy_ | <PROTECTED> |
12:41.34 | Wormy_ | there are delelict brownfield sites all over the place that could be converted to flats or whatever |
12:42.31 | Monet | Wormy_: Well at least one good thing came out of Osbourne's new housing policy then. Since his proposal makes building on brownfields somewhat easier. |
12:42.54 | Wormy_ | That is a good move |
12:43.33 | Wormy_ | We got National Heritage or whatever they are called on our side for some of the countryside |
12:46.33 | Wormy_ | Mon: I think its the Labour councillors who want houses everywhere. I support more housing in brownfield sites but not the green areas |
12:50.34 | *** join/#sporewiki TekDroid (~TekDroid@24.114.59.93) |
12:54.01 | Wormy_ | The place they want to build on is defined as a greenbelt, a world heritage buffer zone, and a popular walking route |
12:54.29 | Monet | There;s only so much space on this island |
13:03.11 | Wormy_ | I can't believe they now want to get rid of sports meadows. Its obscene |
13:03.34 | Wormy_ | Hopefully all the sports clubs will really against them |
13:03.38 | Wormy_ | *rally |
13:04.23 | Monet | Maybe we need ot reconsider building up |
13:04.25 | *** join/#sporewiki Hachiman (56846e38@gateway/web/freenode/ip.86.132.110.56) |
13:04.29 | Hachiman | Hai |
13:04.35 | Monet | Hi |
13:04.51 | Monet | What largely killed the housing projectsi nthe 60s was possibly bad planning. |
13:04.57 | Wormy_ | As I said, there is loads of abandoned buildings and factories, they could build there |
13:05.05 | Wormy_ | Hi |
13:05.24 | Hachiman | "Ignorance is thinking Frankenstein was his monster. Knowledge is realising Frankenstein was the scientist. Wisdom is understanding that Frankenstein was the monster." |
13:07.09 | Monet | Hachiman: That's quite poignant |
13:07.24 | Wormy_ | yep |
13:07.54 | Wormy_ | The real monsters for me were the people who hunted down his monster |
13:08.01 | Monet | If the monster were built today or in the next 20 years, would it still be an abomination? |
13:08.27 | Wormy_ | To radical groups, yes. |
13:08.30 | Hachiman | Consider that the Monster consisted of parts taken from graves and the deceased and effectively reanimated |
13:08.52 | Monet | I recall that Victor Frankenstein made them onster so big because he was unable to make or use components that were small enough. |
13:09.13 | Hachiman | Frankenstein had attempted to play God by not only creating life, but recreating it |
13:09.18 | Wormy_ | In a way, we have this issue with GM, stem cells and vat grown meat or organs, and more precisely, hybrid cells |
13:10.10 | Wormy_ | I do not have an issue with "playing god", which I think it used in an anti-progressive and parichial stance |
13:10.41 | Hachiman | I am rather astounded that, as a proto-science fiction novel, the story of Frankenstein is nearly two centuries old |
13:11.21 | Monet | Victor became obsessed with restoring or creating life, but when he actually made the monster he was horrified. Is it possible that what he created wasn't what he expected? |
13:11.23 | Wormy_ | But the scientist who created it probably should have known better about how it should have been treated, and how people would react. |
13:12.44 | Wormy_ | Mary Shelley also wrote this https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_Man |
13:13.35 | Hachiman | I imagine that it was the revelation of the Monster which caused Victor to become horrified rather than the actual Monster itself |
13:14.21 | Hachiman | Although while initially the Monster acted childish due to being fresh into the world, in the novel he is actually shown as being quite a decent and well-read individual |
13:14.39 | Monet | He was very intelligent. |
13:16.33 | Hachiman | Also consider the era that the story was set in and was written in; if a mere man such as Victor Frankenstein could create / recreate life, what does this mean for the nature of the existence and influence of God? |
13:17.45 | Hachiman | Even if the Monster was not a grotesque abomination, the concept behind his origins |
13:17.47 | Hachiman | Fuck |
13:18.06 | Hachiman | The concept behind his origins would still have presumably irked the townspeople into treating him as a threat |
13:18.36 | Monet | I'm not sure if anyone knew where it came from, it looked inhuman enough for them to be terrified. |
13:18.48 | Monet | Come to think of it |
13:19.16 | Monet | Frankenstein sounds like a transhumanist story that was wrotten over a century before the movement began |
13:19.30 | Wormy_ | Personally I feel one of the early science fiction greats was Olaf Stapledon. The Star Maker, while it has some eccentricities, has exotic alien life, virtual reality (including one for smell rather than sight), cyberspace, dyson spheres (before their time), conscious stars and nebulae, swarm intelligences, using entire worlds as spaceships, a war between intergalactic civilisation and the stars |
13:20.04 | Wormy_ | correct orders of magnitude and the fate of the universe, and finally a meeting with the Star Maker, a being that creates entire universes foir aesathetic and moral appeal |
13:20.04 | Monet | In some interpretations the experiment was not just thrying ot create life, but make something artifical yet human |
13:20.27 | Wormy_ | It reads vividly as if the author astral projected and saw it all |
13:20.42 | Monet | Frankenstein's monster was quite possibly the world's first cyborg. |
13:21.00 | Hachiman | The Monster was shown and proven to be both stronger and more intelligent than the (then-)modern man of the era |
13:21.09 | Wormy_ | written just before WW2 |
13:22.28 | Monet | Hachiman: He was animated and improved though technology. |
13:22.37 | Hachiman | Aye |
13:24.38 | Hachiman | In all honesty, the idea and nature of the Monster and his creation is still quite a controversial subject that has remained in our culture and society over the course of 200 years after the publication of the novel |
13:26.40 | Hachiman | Humanity is already known to possess the technology to clone functioning biological organisms from collected biological materials - such as stem cells gathered from foetuses and corpses and such |
13:27.15 | Hachiman | And yet the idea of cloning and genetic modification is still vehemently opposed by the public |
13:27.49 | Monet | I feel a bit dissapointed at the general interpretation of the monster. |
13:27.58 | Monet | https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e6/Frontispiece_to_Frankenstein_1831.jpg this is an 1831 interpretation |
13:28.35 | Hachiman | He does not look too grotesque in that picture |
13:29.06 | Monet | Indeed. |
13:29.18 | Monet | And look at those abs. |
13:31.10 | Monet | It was Boris Karloff's 1930s film interpretation that gave us the Frankenstein we know |
13:31.17 | Monet | the monster we know, sorry. |
13:31.25 | Hachiman | I cannot remember if the Monster was actually described as being physically grotesque in the original novel |
13:31.50 | Hachiman | I remember some interpretations, may or may not have been the original novel, which made the Monster inhumanly beautiful or uncanny |
13:33.47 | Hachiman | "Because of the difficulty in replicating the minute parts of the human body, Victor is forced to make the Creature roughly eight feet tall. As a result, the beautiful creation of his dreams is instead hideous, with yellow eyes and skin that barely conceals the muscle tissue and blood vessels underneath. Repulsed by his work, Victor flees. Saddened by the rejection, the Creature disappears." |
13:34.21 | Monet | He wanted an ideal human. |
13:34.38 | Monet | WHich is what made me think, had he tried today, could he have succeeded in a beautiful creation? |
13:35.17 | Hachiman | Would it have made his experiment any more ethical? |
13:35.32 | Monet | Probably not. |
13:36.05 | Monet | Then again back in his day many teaching hospitals relied on grave diggers for a cadavear supply. |
13:36.17 | Monet | Wasn't legal, but it was neccessary. |
13:36.39 | Monet | Some doctors became notorious for their deals. |
13:37.39 | Hachiman | Aye |
13:38.53 | Monet | Although back in 1821, artificial intelligence was a fantasy |
13:41.23 | Monet | A Victor Frankenstein of 2021 could try adding microprocessors |
13:41.52 | Monet | Maybe he could have created the artificial man of his dreams? |
13:42.56 | Hachiman | He may have done, as we have the potential to genetically-engineer foetuses and such in the modern age today |
13:43.12 | Hachiman | And grow organs and tissues in artificial environments |
13:44.40 | Monet | We might be some way off from every little bit of our babies being tailored, but artificially-grown tissues, plus current-gen cybernetics and prosthetics, he might have gotten his dream |
13:44.48 | Monet | He was limited by the technology of the age, essentially |
13:45.27 | Hachiman | And the resources he had access to |
13:46.29 | Hachiman | Keep in mind he was not creating life from scratch; he was reanimating it from deceased and decayed tissues and such, and that is an entirely different matter from outright creating new biological material |
13:46.54 | Hachiman | I imagine this is why the Monster's creation concluded with it being hideous |
13:47.04 | Hachiman | Since it effectively looked like a zombie |
13:47.18 | Monet | Did the book say his dream included human flesh, or was that largely a decision he made? |
13:48.12 | Monet | Actually I think he used machine parts partially because he couldn't find the organic versions? |
13:48.28 | Wormy_ | I get the impression the author was inspired by the belief that electricity was a vital force of life. People knew by her time that muscles contract when put under an electric current. |
13:48.55 | Hachiman | I dunno given I am unsure how popular or widely-used prosthetics and such were in that eras |
13:48.58 | Wormy_ | So they assumed electricity could reanimate flesh and return life to it |
13:48.58 | Hachiman | era even |
13:50.15 | Hachiman | Wormy_: That is actually the exact inspiration behind the story on Mary Shelley's part; she had overheard conversations of new development into electrical technology and the potential for it to influence motion in deceased body parts |
13:50.49 | Hachiman | And as a result, she suffered a waking dream of what effectively played out as the creation of the Monster by Victor Frankenstein |
13:51.06 | Wormy_ | interesting |
13:52.22 | Monet | I think it was around the 1800s when prosthetic limbs started becoming more practical. Wooden hands and such |
13:52.58 | Hachiman | I imagine he had to use human flesh and animal leather in order to replicate skin for the Monster in order to keep all of its insides from becoming damaged |
13:53.06 | Monet | Yeah |
13:54.17 | Monet | "At university, he [Victor] excels at chemistry and other sciences, soon developing a secret technique to impart life to non-living matter, which eventually leads to his creation of the Monster." |
13:55.53 | Monet | "As a young boy, Victor is obsessed with studying outdated theories that focus on simulating natural wonders." |
13:57.00 | Monet | "Because of the difficulty in replicating the minute parts of the human body Victor is forced to make the Creature roughly eight feet tall." |
13:57.18 | Monet | It vaguely sounds like he wanted to create an artificial body. |
13:58.39 | Hachiman | I like that Mary Shelley, despite much of the focus of the story being on the harmful relationship between Victor Frankenstein and the Monster, also portrays the idea of men boldly travelling into and exploring the unknown as a positive; when Captain Walton retreats from the Arctic expedition, he knows that he returns "ignorant and disappointed" |
13:58.46 | *** join/#sporewiki TekDroid (~TekDroid@24.114.70.187) |
13:59.12 | Wormy_ | indeed |
13:59.13 | Wormy_ | hi |
14:00.32 | Hachiman | What Shelley effectively does is provide two sides to the argument of whether or not mankind should venture into unknown realms and depths that have not been explored before; her examples including the recreation and reanimation of life and traversing the Arctic continent |
14:00.35 | Monet | I recall that questions like these are what can make a novel last. |
14:02.37 | Hachiman | Overall, though, the two goals share something in common; neither could have been achieved without sacrifice and ambition and both ventures result in the deaths of those familiar with Victor Frankenstein and Captain Walton |
14:03.08 | Monet | I recall one thing Nostalgia Critic pointed out about the recent Lorax adaptation was that unlike the TV movie, it doesn't make you think and that it gives you answers; so viewers have no reason to come back and watch it again. |
14:03.14 | Wormy_ | I suppose unlocking the secrets of nuclear power is an example. It can be a great source of energy and gives us enormous knowledge of how matter forms and works. But it also opened Pandora's box, the weapons that could wipe out humanity |
14:03.35 | Hachiman | Aye |
14:04.09 | Hachiman | Ethical and philosophical questions allow works of media to sustain the passage of time |
14:05.15 | Hachiman | As the answers are open for interpretation without a direct or given answer, with the opinion of the answer of the question subject to change as modern attitudes change |
14:42.24 | *** join/#sporewiki drom (~powerluna@78-69-64-21-no123.tbcn.telia.com) |
14:42.24 | *** join/#sporewiki drom (~powerluna@unaffiliated/drom) |
14:42.52 | drom | Hello again |
14:46.58 | drom | Nuclear Throne is admittely one of the best games I know. |
15:29.30 | Wormy_away | Debunking "Quantum jumps" http://edge.org/response-detail/25453 |
15:33.55 | Wormy_away | http://cafehayek.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/miracle_cartoon.jpg |
15:49.25 | Wormy_away | drom kids http://imgur.com/gallery/9Elkh2p/comment/451535420 |
15:51.23 | Wormy_away | I think mine was a crafting program about building a bug house |
16:03.59 | drom | Wormy_away: "My favorite movie when I was a kid? An instructional video on how to use and maintain a fish tank." |
16:04.08 | drom | From memory, I can relate. |
16:04.38 | Wormy_away | I used to have an obsession with it too, and then stick insect vivariums |
16:10.52 | *** join/#sporewiki Imperios (~Imperios@95.140.92.80) |
16:10.58 | Imperios | Hi |
16:11.08 | Wormy_away | drom: Do you know anything about the Processing language? |
16:11.40 | Wormy_away | Nature of Code uses it, but I'd rather stick to Python or Javascript as they work well for web or Maya |
16:12.45 | Wormy_away | The OOP principles must be the same of course, but I'm going to need to translate them into Js syntax |
16:12.57 | drom | Nope. The only languages I do happen to know are Dart, JS, Java, C/C++, C# and little of Python and Bash. Excluding the document parsing languages PHP, HTML, CSS and XML. |
16:13.21 | Wormy_away | Khan Academy based a course in Js on it, but that practically tells me what to do too easily |
16:13.31 | Imperios | Hachiman OluapPlayer: Do you know if Xho will come today? |
16:13.40 | Imperios | I'm up for Wrath of Night |
16:13.50 | drom | Imperios: It is friday today, there is a chance. |
16:14.01 | OluapPlayer | I know he won't be online during the weekend |
16:14.05 | OluapPlayer | But he might show up today |
16:15.37 | Imperios | BTW OP I wanted to discuss Kimorgos's involvement in the section |
16:17.39 | Wormy_away | bbl |
16:17.42 | OluapPlayer | Alright |
16:20.17 | Wormy_away | drom: Oh well, it will be good experience to transalate it into different languages |
16:20.18 | drom | <PROTECTED> |
16:20.47 | Wormy_away | MEL would be a different story, it's a non-OOP so much harder/longer |
16:21.15 | Wormy_away | Very nice |
16:21.26 | Wormy_away | Better than anything I can do yet |
16:21.30 | Wormy_away | bbl again |
16:25.48 | Imperios | drom: Awesome |
16:26.07 | Imperios | Now we only need to make the numbers arbitrary |
16:28.08 | drom | Imperios: The numbers are currently so far arbitrary as I can get with the code. |
16:28.56 | drom | Some did give some sense of approval concerning the dates being closer to our current time, which is circa 2803-2805. |
16:31.23 | *** join/#sporewiki Cyrannian (562d6746@gateway/web/freenode/ip.86.45.103.70) |
16:31.23 | *** mode/#sporewiki [+o Cyrannian] by ChanServ |
16:31.40 | Cyrannian | Hai |
16:32.38 | drom | Hey |
16:40.02 | *** join/#sporewiki Ghelae (0597000d@gateway/web/freenode/ip.5.151.0.13) |
16:40.15 | *** mode/#sporewiki [+o Ghelae] by ChanServ |
16:40.20 | Ghelae | Hello. |
16:40.57 | OluapPlayer | ~dropkick Cyrannian |
16:40.57 | infobot | ACTION sends Cyrannian flying like a yipping chihuahua |
16:41.17 | Cyrannian | ~explode OluapPlayer |
16:41.17 | infobot | ACTION blows up OluapPlayer with bombs |
16:41.24 | Cyrannian | Hello |
16:59.57 | drom | Wormy_away: http://i.imgur.com/1hf7Sgo.jpg |
17:14.08 | Wormy_away | indeed |
17:15.38 | Wormy_away | drom, Cyrannian, Imperios: Scroll down http://imgur.com/gallery/BJO9FAs |
17:16.09 | Cyrannian | lol |
17:17.16 | drom | Seen |
17:17.52 | drom | Wormy_away: http://imgur.com/gallery/XDQm9 |
17:19.20 | *** join/#sporewiki The_Randomness (~chatzilla@2601:441:0:6:715a:f5f0:3f78:e9ba) |
17:19.20 | *** mode/#sporewiki [+o The_Randomness] by ChanServ |
17:19.39 | The_Randomness | Hello |
17:19.43 | Ghelae | Hello. |
17:19.58 | Cyrannian | Hello Random |
17:20.26 | *** join/#sporewiki TekDroid (~TekDroid@24.114.70.187) |
17:22.13 | drom | Cyrannian Hachiman OluapPlayer Imperios: http://imgur.com/gallery/u1BgU |
17:22.14 | Wormy_away | Cat fax |
17:27.09 | drom | Wormy_away Ghelae: http://i.imgur.com/I9wNwVJ.webm |
17:27.13 | drom | Argentina |
17:28.55 | drom | http://i.imgur.com/D1NOEG0.webm |
17:40.02 | drom | http://i.imgur.com/UPuZN3A.jpg |
17:41.24 | Wormy_away | http://imgur.com/gallery/yZTpHW1 |
17:44.34 | drom | http://i.imgur.com/3XqeoWe.jpg |
17:47.42 | Wormy_away | Why didn't this guy call the agency the debt collector worked for? http://imgur.com/gallery/dYQ7jBR |
17:48.53 | Wormy_away | Probably for the better anyway, silly violent people |
17:53.00 | *** join/#sporewiki Monet (50bdbce6@gateway/web/freenode/ip.80.189.188.230) |
17:53.30 | drom | Wormy_away: Yeah, about that: http://i.imgur.com/AvwDaLd.webm and http://i.imgur.com/XiwPN7Z.webm |
17:55.04 | drom | Bouncer overreacts by pushing an angry guest by pushing down a flight of stairs. When it erupts to a fight, the bearded guy, who is drunk, gets a uppercut by the blue-shirted bouncer. |
17:56.16 | Wormy_away | You can kill a drunk person by pushing them like that |
17:56.56 | Wormy_away | Actually I saw something that wasn't right once |
17:57.50 | Wormy_away | Someone ran out of a supermarket with a stolen bag of shopping, the security guard followed and punched him in back of his kidneys wow running, he body slammed the floor. |
17:58.01 | Wormy_away | *while running |
18:01.14 | drom | Yeah. Whatever you do working as a bouncer/security guard, DO NOT push people into dangerous/harmful environments/cirumstances and don't pick a fight on a guy just because he called you an asshole or if you simply don't like him/her. |
18:02.23 | Wormy_away | If they are beyond safe restraint or won't go away they should call the police to arrest them |
18:02.50 | *** join/#sporewiki Luxor (b2ebe733@gateway/web/freenode/ip.178.235.231.51) |
18:02.54 | drom | Secondly, drunk people are unpredictable and weak targets, it can be hard to take care of or help them peacefully. |
18:02.55 | Wormy_away | hi |
18:02.55 | Luxor | Hypetrain! |
18:02.57 | drom | Hey |
18:02.59 | The_Randomness | Hello |
18:03.10 | Luxor | Finally U17 for warframe |
18:03.28 | drom | more like grindframe |
18:03.46 | Luxor | Well, literally, yes. |
18:03.58 | Wormy_away | One thing I don't like was the guard who punched the youtuber in the face who was asking people if he could kiss them on the cheek. For one, the guy asked him and guard let him |
18:04.40 | drom | Wormy_away: The funny part of this one is the guy who packed a punch, but miss and hit the door. http://i.imgur.com/dEPXLhD.webm |
18:04.44 | *** join/#sporewiki Luxor (b2ebe733@gateway/web/freenode/ip.178.235.231.51) |
18:04.51 | Luxor | Unecspected error. |
18:05.19 | Luxor | Still 25 mins to verify the files :/ |
18:05.31 | *** join/#sporewiki GD12 (427591e7@gateway/web/freenode/ip.66.117.145.231) |
18:05.35 | The_Randomness | Hey |
18:05.40 | Luxor | Hai |
18:05.45 | Wormy_away | Too slow in his punch I guess |
18:05.48 | Wormy_away | Hi |
18:05.59 | GD12 | Hallo |
18:06.23 | drom | Hallo polen |
18:06.36 | drom | zuess zat? |
18:06.55 | GD12 | wat? |
18:07.05 | Wormy_ | vat? |
18:07.09 | drom | surprise anschluss |
18:07.53 | drom | a joke so dumb that I'm like that seal laughing for himself |
18:07.54 | Luxor | Polish Language, Lesson #1: Good morning = DzieÅ dobry /Jen' Dobry/ |
18:08.06 | The_Randomness | I cannot into joke |
18:08.16 | drom | kurwa! |
18:08.25 | Luxor | Drom, that's the lesson #2! No spoliers! |
18:08.32 | Luxor | spo!lers* |
18:08.38 | Wormy_ | I had a Polish geology lecturer. |
18:08.39 | GD12 | lol |
18:08.41 | Luxor | lol |
18:09.03 | Luxor | U wanna hear a joke? |
18:09.08 | GD12 | alright |
18:09.16 | Luxor | Where does the Germany lie? |
18:09.16 | drom | Wormy_: You also went to a college that had a polish bus driver that your schoolmates always played "pranks" on. |
18:09.25 | Wormy_ | yes indeed |
18:09.26 | drom | Like it was something out of a comedy sketch |
18:09.30 | Luxor | *Under the Stalingrad |
18:09.50 | Luxor | hur hur |
18:09.54 | Wormy_ | And he bought pheasants from one of the students, and feathers blew all over the bus |
18:09.59 | GD12 | Is anyone here from Poland? |
18:10.03 | Luxor | Me |
18:10.11 | drom | tak |
18:10.12 | Luxor | DzieÅdobry, Gie-De-DwanaÅcie. |
18:10.17 | Wormy_ | The whole coillege lecturers included was a comedy sketch |
18:10.38 | drom | "coillege" |
18:10.43 | drom | *bzt* |
18:11.08 | Wormy_ | I wasn't attempting a Polish accent there, just encase |
18:11.24 | Luxor | Lol, u dont spell that in Polish |
18:11.30 | Luxor | in fact we have many 'borrowed' words |
18:11.47 | Luxor | But college is spelled /koledż/ |
18:11.52 | GD12 | Luxor, do you have a link to ur fiction? |
18:11.57 | Luxor | + |
18:12.05 | drom | Wormy_: You should novelize your experience in that college. |
18:12.07 | GD12 | I was probably on hiatus when you joined the wiki |
18:12.36 | Wormy_ | I don't know *how* the Polish bus driver got tricked, from my college there was one road, one to Derby, one to Chesterfield. His bus came from Derby, and was going to Derby, but students kept tricking him to go the wrong way for a few miles |
18:13.34 | *** join/#sporewiki Luxor_ (b2ebe733@gateway/web/freenode/ip.178.235.231.51) |
18:13.46 | Luxor_ | Got easy translation: |
18:14.00 | Luxor_ | College in Polish - /Koledż/ - /Coal-Edge/ |
18:14.23 | GD12 | Luxor_ : do you have a link to ur fiction? I was probably on hiatus when you joined the wiki |
18:14.23 | drom | You also told that you (you students of that college) bought lot of chickens and decapticated them? |
18:14.37 | drom | Only to later be sold to the said bus driver? |
18:14.43 | Wormy_ | drom: I had lots of fun times there, and i should document it. However, I was also bullied every day, so it wasn't all good. I was the only geek amongst a college of farmers, horse riders, horticulturists and townies |
18:14.47 | Luxor_ | GD12: http://spore.wikia.com/wiki/Fiction%3AUnited_Republic_of_Nations |
18:14.57 | Luxor_ | Not completed yet, that's the problem |
18:15.08 | Luxor_ | I need to find a slave which would finish it for a piece of bread |
18:15.24 | drom | Wormy_: In what way? |
18:16.33 | drom | In Sweden, bullying means discrimination, unjustified beating and forced outsidership. |
18:17.28 | Luxor_ | In sweden one of the political parties decided to form a homo manifestation in Stockholm's muslim district |
18:17.42 | Wormy_ | Well, they picked on me especially because I couldn't relate or socialise very well, I didn't go to xsecondary school and was home educated. I also wasn't that strong or practical with tools or machines, they all had been brought up tossing hailstacks. I'd get ganged up on, my stuff stolen and dropped all over the place. I'd get pushed out of conversations, told I never should have been born |
18:17.44 | Luxor_ | Other party said 'It's discrimination' and seeks a way to terminate it |
18:17.49 | Wormy_ | <PROTECTED> |
18:18.09 | Wormy_ | I got chucked into bushes and scratched because of it |
18:18.18 | GD12 | Luxor_ : Good start! The models are beautiful! |
18:18.32 | drom | Luxor_: Intergration here is garbage. |
18:18.34 | Luxor_ | Oh mann, I need to get human template asap |
18:19.41 | drom | Wormy_: Sucks to hear that. |
18:20.38 | Wormy_ | They were some of the worst, but also most memorable moments of my life, and weirdly more vivid in my memory than university |
18:20.53 | Luxor_ | Warframe U17 verified, i'll try to appear today once again, but not rly possible |
18:20.58 | Wormy_ | and it toughened me up |
18:21.04 | Luxor_ | I need to learn all this Parkour 2.0... |
18:21.29 | Wormy_ | Hah, that reminds, students would free-run along the buildings |
18:23.22 | GD12 | \wat |
18:23.30 | GD12 | parkour sounds cool tbh |
18:23.32 | Wormy_ | The lecturers were awesome too. They would let us tear up the fields with landrovers, make fires (as long as they had practical purpose) and took us on long trips to see wildlife areas or historical land use |
18:23.50 | Wormy_ | And one of them was hilarious |
18:24.01 | drom | Wormy_: I was victim of verbal abuse from my classmates for many years. So that has thoughened me as well. But I've noticed a downside in that though, I would often easily feel terrible or ill when I hear banter or critism directed to me. |
18:24.22 | drom | So I'm lot more anxious about introducing myself to new communties and friends. |
18:24.24 | Wormy_ | Yes I get that feeling too |
18:24.26 | *** join/#sporewiki Hachiman (5684e680@gateway/web/freenode/ip.86.132.230.128) |
18:24.29 | Hachiman | That skeleton webcomic was adorable |
18:24.43 | Luxor_ | Polish Lesson #4 - If u want to say 'hello' to somebody, never use 'Sp!erdalaj' - /S-pier-daal-ai/ |
18:24.58 | drom | Wormy_: Despite that, I'm still friends with them. |
18:24.58 | Wormy_ | You are right, I might document my experiences from college and maybe upload some photos, since people enjoy hearing these stories |
18:25.04 | drom | Stockholm syndrome. |
18:25.48 | Wormy_ | Yes, I don't hate any (all but two) of the people that bullied me. For the rest it was just group banta and everyvody got it. But a couple really tried to make my time miserable |
18:26.09 | Hachiman | Should have eaten their hearts |
18:26.14 | Wormy_ | I still have all of them on Facebook |
18:27.59 | *** join/#sporewiki Sweden (51aaca37@gateway/web/freenode/ip.81.170.202.55) |
18:28.55 | drom | Wormy_: Banter is an everyday meal for me |
18:29.24 | Luxor_ | HERE I COME WRFRM |
18:29.33 | Luxor_ | HYPETRAIN CONFIRMED, ILLOOOMINARTY |
18:30.01 | drom | Funny that people treat victims of verbal abuse as "robots" due of the lack of emotions when threatened, abused or mocked. |
18:31.50 | Wormy_ | That was my tactic. I didn't fight back (though wanted to at times), I had absolutely all my wit drained so I gave up verbally reciprocating. I just ignored, blanked or nodded, or even pretended to act out this character they were stereotyping on me |
18:32.07 | Wormy_ | In fact I decided to *be* annoying |
18:32.09 | drom | Wormy_: I even had that guy who attempted to silence me and my presence by over-voicing me. |
18:32.35 | drom | The others told him to shut up. |
18:33.02 | Wormy_ | But not to be on your side, but to attack him for *being like you*? |
18:33.32 | drom | It started with that I told him that he was annoying. Start of story. |
18:34.51 | *** join/#sporewiki Tybusen (ae43e34c@gateway/web/freenode/ip.174.67.227.76) |
18:35.19 | drom | In fact I managed to humiliate him in front of my class by telling him that he had a "nice ass" when he pulled down his pants when overtaking me and two other friends on a stakeboard. |
18:35.53 | drom | Short story, the two friends presuded me to tell it to them again while one was filming my speech. |
18:35.56 | Wormy_ | I think if I went to that college now I might not have been bullied as much, having been to university and being more socialised, growing a beard and naturally stronger |
18:36.01 | drom | It felt good. |
18:36.41 | drom | Growing a beard is the nicest feeling ever. |
18:37.46 | Wormy_ | My best come back was when one of them told me how they enjoyed fucking my mum, so I told them "Yeah, she was saying she was disappointed". It put a stop to that joke but he told me "shut up or I'll break your nose" |
18:41.23 | Wormy_ | also this short-arsed student bullied me the most, one day he tried to push me off a rock and he couldn't, which earned him humiliation |
18:41.45 | Wormy_ | the same happened to him when he tried to yank me off a coach seat |
18:42.00 | Tybusen | that portable gravity enhancer came in handy didn't it |
18:42.13 | drom | hur |
18:42.15 | Wormy_ | indeed it did |
18:43.22 | Wormy_ | I could put up with the group "shits and giggles", but as I said, some did try to single me out |
18:45.12 | Wormy_ | <PROTECTED> |
18:45.13 | drom | I prefer to be more of a listener becuase it helps me to learn about the individuals without risking to make myself a joke. |
18:46.30 | drom | This is because I'm deaf and I hear through implantats capable of a slightly accurate-replication of normal hearing. |
18:47.00 | drom | So I can preceive speech in an other way. |
18:47.03 | Wormy_ | I start out as quiet, but my problem is that when I've been with people for a few months, I get a bit too much. My eccentricities can work against me if I'm with the wrong crowd |
18:50.18 | drom | Tybusen Monet Techno The_Randomness Cyrannian: http://martinlyra.github.io/Ficlock/ c |
18:50.31 | The_Randomness | oh nice |
18:50.41 | The_Randomness | I had something similar to that, but you had to download it |
18:50.46 | Tybusen | Nice |
18:50.55 | Tybusen | Though Farengeto Time gets cut off on the right side |
18:51.14 | Cyrannian | Very nice |
18:51.39 | Tybusen | Tek made one like this too |
18:51.40 | Cyrannian | https://www.chromeexperiments.com/experiment/ancient-earth - This is interesting |
18:51.55 | drom | It is currently not capable of "time-travel" or conversion, neither it does support resolutions smaller than 1980x1050. But said support and features are definitely planned. |
18:53.02 | drom | Tybusen The_Randomness: Yep, but the thing that differs from the Tek's is the fact that mine is slower. |
18:53.10 | Wormy_ | I love three.js |
18:53.16 | Tybusen | I guess one issue of trying to line up IRL time with Fictionverse time is that Fictionverse does not advance at the same rate as IRL time due to the way fiction is written |
18:53.45 | Tybusen | Tek's was aligned such that it was 2804 or so when he first made it |
18:54.11 | Tybusen | It's probably been an IRL year since then and we're still in Fictionverse 2804 or so |
18:54.48 | drom | About the Farengeto time, The_Randomness. The layout is yyyy.mm.dd.hh=mm-ss and I've decided to cut the time and do only keep the dates (year, month and day). |
18:55.24 | drom | Of course did I forget to add the "FUC" to the end, but that will be fixed in the next version. |
18:56.13 | Ghel | I also have "Apalos Time Units" which are basically never used and just appear on the Apalos page (IIRC; I haven't looked at it in ages). That's exceptionally simple; it starts at 0 at the Annihilation and tracks one Unit per real-life year. |
18:56.29 | Wormy_ | I want to program things like this in the future http://pmneila.github.io/jsexp/grayscott/ |
18:57.03 | drom | That does indeed look awesome. |
18:57.04 | The_Randomness | :o |
18:57.10 | Monet | drom: CLock's lookign sharp |
18:57.54 | *** join/#sporewiki Luxor (b2ebe733@gateway/web/freenode/ip.178.235.231.51) |
18:58.00 | drom | Tybusen: Interestingly, Tek's follow the 1 year/52 days ratio while mine follows 1/263. |
18:58.01 | Luxor | U17 is awesome!!! |
18:58.10 | drom | follows* |
18:59.07 | Tybusen | That certainly is interesting |
18:59.45 | Luxor | ...test |
19:01.15 | Tybusen | Really the best purpose of these Fictionverse clocks is to show which dates line up on the alternative calendars |
19:01.35 | Cyrannian | I was planning on introducing a new calendar for Cyrannus funnily enough |
19:04.13 | Wormy_ | I better get on my with my projects or I never will! |
19:04.49 | drom | Wormy_semi_here: http://vincentgarreau.com/particles.js/#nasa |
19:06.16 | *** join/#sporewiki Wormy_ (4e90a5d4@gateway/web/freenode/ip.78.144.165.212) |
19:06.20 | Wormy_ | Odd, Chrome froze up on that |
19:06.53 | *** mode/#sporewiki [+o Wormy_chop] by ChanServ |
19:06.58 | *** kick/#sporewiki [Wormy_semi_here!4e90a5d4@gateway/web/freenode/ip.78.144.165.212] by Wormy_chop (wibble) |
19:08.25 | Wormy_chop | *sigh*, nick still in use on a channel I'm not a mod on |
19:09.03 | Luxor | Polish Lagnuage - Lesson #5 - Do not confuse Polish with Russian. n e v e r. |
19:16.36 | Wormy_semi_here | drom: Me tonight: http://www.swapsamoa.com/images/gr580_ballmer_peak.jpg |
19:17.02 | drom | Hachiman: There is more: http://tapastic.com/episode/96899 |
19:20.05 | drom | Wormy_semi_here: Why I love Unix: https://blog.glyphobet.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/usingcomicsans1.png |
19:20.47 | Wormy_semi_here | the book that ruined com sans through popularity |
19:22.41 | drom | If Wormy's life was a book: http://vignette3.wikia.nocookie.net/fixpa/images/3/3e/Coding_Drunk.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20110128183850 |
19:22.59 | Wormy_semi_here | "Guinness press" |
19:23.29 | Wormy_semi_here | I did find a site which described what programming was like with different kinds of drugs |
19:23.37 | Wormy_semi_here | Can't find it now |
19:24.35 | Wormy_semi_here | But once I created a probabalistic decision tree, spent all day on it, went to bed fatigued and couldn't sleep because a damn coin flip would happen on the verge of sleep "will you sleep or awaken", and i would always wake up |
19:24.58 | Wormy_semi_here | *probabilistic |
19:25.40 | drom | Wormy_semi_here: Here http://brej.org/edit/influence/ |
19:25.51 | Wormy_semi_here | That's the one! |
19:26.47 | Wormy_semi_here | Should have tried something psychedelic, but that might end up sending you to a world like I did that night |
19:27.37 | Wormy_semi_here | I do not even want to think about it too much encase that hypnagogic algorithm is remembered tonight |
19:29.30 | Wormy_semi_here | I get this http://www.researchgate.net/publication/8693347_Daytime_parahypnagogia_a_state_of_consciousness_that_occurs_when_we_almost_fall_asleep |
19:41.18 | Wormy_semi_here | This applies for me as well https://energyjobgateway.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/what-my-friends-think-i-do-geology.jpg |
19:43.40 | drom | http://ct.perceptionvsfact.com/ol/pf/se/i57/2/11/2/frabz-Programmer-What-my-parents-think-I-do-What-my-friends-think-I-do-1e5a2b.jpg |
19:43.46 | drom | So accurate that it hurts |
19:48.43 | TekDroid | drom: Very accurate. XD |
19:48.52 | Wormy_semi_here | So funny |
19:49.44 | drom | TekDroid Wormy_semi_here: There is also this: https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/2b/e6/b5/2be6b5b6bd68520c3fc0f9a1d26ed706.jpg |
19:50.09 | TekDroid | >.> |
19:51.29 | Wormy_semi_here | The closest I can find to countryside management/conservation, from college http://ct.perceptionvsfact.com/ol/pf/se/i50/5/4/4/frabz-Wildlife-Conservationist-What-my-friends-think-I-do-What-my-mom--cf96e8.jpg |
19:52.18 | Wormy_semi_here | Either asking google or using stack exchange |
19:53.29 | Wormy_semi_here | I ought to make one |
19:53.59 | MOnetSemi | https://balnacra.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/artist.jpg this I'd say might be accurate for me. Wel laside fro mthe second frame, my mum understands the industry quite well |
19:54.21 | drom | http://thecomputerboys.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/datamation-1965-well-dressed-programmer.png |
19:57.14 | Wormy_semi_here | Number 4 |
19:57.27 | Wormy_semi_here | should be 5 |
19:57.30 | MOnetSemi | http://www.muezli.com//ForumPics/Animator.jpeg hmm possibly this too. |
19:57.38 | MOnetSemi | Animation these days is a loot of MATHS |
20:00.13 | drom | So does programming |
20:00.27 | drom | integer remaindation urgh |
20:00.32 | MOnetSemi | Actually good point there. |
20:00.39 | Wormy_semi_here | I wonder if we could make SporeWiki versions of these lol |
20:01.22 | MOnetSemi | WOrking in maya...I'd say that animation using 3D software is a little like Programming only society thinks you're illiterate, sleep late int othe day and smoke weed. |
20:01.33 | MOnetSemi | a lot like programming rather* |
20:01.40 | Wormy_semi_here | Wiki beaurecrat - "What I actually do" = IRC |
20:02.53 | Wormy_semi_here | Maya has visual programming tools as well as a MEL or Python editor, but the visual graph editors are just that in buttons |
20:02.53 | drom | Average fantasyverse writers - "What I actually do" = He: let's do the thing Me: later |
20:03.18 | OluapPlayer | What I think I do - fiction What I actually do - complain about not doing fiction |
20:03.45 | MOnetSemi | http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Qbon9RHzr2M/UX0opSYDcyI/AAAAAAAAE38/YJUdEmGyXOs/s1600/funny+lego+meme.jpg that is both genius and evil |
20:04.32 | The_Randomness | lol |
20:04.34 | OluapPlayer | Just wear shoes |
20:05.13 | MOnetSemi | Still going to eb uncomfrotable walking over it |
20:05.58 | Wormy_semi_here | SporeWiki admin: New users: Scary boss Users: Authoritarian rule What I think I do: Society building /or blueprints Other admins: Lazy Family: Lazy person typing on Facebook |
20:06.03 | drom | You are also more likely to fall over when stepping on lego with shoes than stepping on one bare-footed. |
20:06.12 | Wormy_semi_here | Reality: IRC |
20:08.11 | drom | OR have a version of this: http://img0.joyreactor.com/pics/post/auto-9gag-1767158.jpeg |
20:08.25 | drom | ugh, I linked a 9gag image |
20:09.53 | *** join/#sporewiki Tek0516 (~TekDroid@CPEbc1401540283-CMbc1401540280.cpe.net.cable.rogers.com) |
20:10.24 | *** join/#sporewiki Zillafire101 (4933de11@gateway/web/freenode/ip.73.51.222.17) |
20:10.32 | Zillafire101 | Hello everyone. |
20:10.38 | Wormy_semi_here | still funny do |
20:10.41 | The_Randomness | Hello |
20:10.42 | Wormy_semi_here | hi |
20:10.49 | Ghel | Hello. |
20:11.46 | drom | ey |
20:13.02 | drom | Tek0516 The_Randomness Techno Wormy_semi_here: http://i.imgur.com/1gF1j.jpg |
20:13.37 | The_Randomness | lol |
20:17.06 | Wormy_semi_here | drom https://lispmachine.files.wordpress.com/2013/03/chart-luke-welling.jpg |
20:25.13 | The_Randomness | lol, Java's at the very bottom |
20:32.18 | *** join/#sporewiki SomeGuyOfPolan (b2ebe733@gateway/web/freenode/ip.178.235.231.51) |
20:32.33 | SomeGuyOfPolan | DzieÅdobrywieczór. |
20:40.06 | *** join/#sporewiki GD12 (427591e7@gateway/web/freenode/ip.66.117.145.231) |
20:40.18 | GD12 | Hi |
20:40.59 | Monet | hi |
20:41.04 | The_Randomness | Hello |
20:41.11 | OluapPlayer | Hi |
20:41.28 | Ghel | Hello. |
20:41.40 | SomeGuyOfPolan | How long did you try to resolve this word? |
20:43.22 | SomeGuyOfPolan | That's the lesson #6 of Polan Lang: DzieÅdobry - Good Morning, + wieczór - evening. So it's Goodmorningevening, suitable for all times of day. |
20:44.17 | SomeGuyOfPolan | Cya tomorrow! |
20:44.25 | Ghel | Okay, bye. |
20:44.26 | The_Randomness | bye |
20:44.35 | The_Randomness | But when can I into polan? |
20:44.43 | Ghel | And there I was going to comment that we also have a word in English that's suitable as a greeting for all times of day. |
20:44.46 | Ghel | "Hi". |
20:45.14 | The_Randomness | Heh |
20:46.38 | OluapPlayer | Who the hell was that even |
20:46.52 | The_Randomness | he was polan man |
20:47.35 | drom | The_Randomness: That chart is so accurate |
20:48.31 | The_Randomness | Java feels like a lazy version of C++ when I use it |
20:48.38 | drom | Also I can recitate if C# were a car, in my experience; C# is a fancy sports car, but it has no engine - and has to be towed by a tow truck, restricted to a railroad. |
20:49.04 | The_Randomness | heh |
20:49.15 | The_Randomness | I don't have to deal with memory management myself, but the syntax is almost identical to C++ |
20:49.37 | drom | Except that NullPointers makes it explode |
20:49.51 | The_Randomness | yeah, love that error |
20:50.35 | drom | For C++, null pointers are dangling pointers iirc. So that means; that it is a car, with no parking brake. |
20:51.32 | drom | Assembly language? YOU are the car. |
20:51.48 | The_Randomness | pretty much |
20:51.52 | The_Randomness | From what I've heard |
20:52.24 | The_Randomness | I've heard Pascal is actually a really cool language |
20:52.39 | drom | JavaScript: A golf-car pimped beyond recognisation, but it is still a goddamn golf-car. |
20:53.42 | The_Randomness | I've just heard that JavaScript is absolutely awful |
20:54.00 | drom | Python: A electrified car for children |
20:54.59 | drom | COBOL: Steam-driven vehicle, back in time when it was a good idea. |
20:55.23 | *** join/#sporewiki Jepardi (b24b970e@gateway/web/freenode/ip.178.75.151.14) |
20:55.24 | Jepardi | Hi |
20:55.32 | drom | Forthran: A car with a GPS-advisor that SHOUTS at you. |
20:56.08 | The_Randomness | Isn't Fortran the first high level language? |
20:57.04 | The_Randomness | And basically the only reason why it's still around is because of old devices |
20:57.04 | drom | Probably. But it appeared after Assembly and Flow-matic |
20:57.08 | drom | http://blog.josephwilk.net/rhetorical-programming/why-are-you-shouting-programmer.html |
20:57.47 | drom | Modern Forthran no longer enforce capitalized code. |
20:58.02 | The_Randomness | Interesting |
20:58.47 | drom | LISP: A car that breaks every entry of the car safety regulations. |
21:00.45 | drom | PHP: A car that is easy to use and learn driving with, but it breaks some of the car safety regulations and has alien functions. |
21:01.46 | drom | COBOL is the most evil thing I've ever heard. |
21:02.41 | drom | I pity my parents. For they used alongside with Forthran to write and work with it back in time when they were software developers. |
21:03.18 | The_Randomness | What sort of language is cobol? |
21:04.34 | drom | The full name "Computer Object Business-Oritented Language" can tell you. |
21:04.47 | The_Randomness | ah |
21:04.55 | The_Randomness | that last half though |
21:06.19 | drom | I'm wrong |
21:06.26 | drom | The actual name is: "common business-oriented language" |
21:07.42 | The_Randomness | That's an interesting name for a language |
21:08.26 | drom | It was mainly used to process transactions, finansical data and enterprise-scale batch and data-processing |
21:08.48 | The_Randomness | Ah |
21:10.49 | drom | But the language itself is too verbose so it mainly exists as a support for legacy machines and systems. |
21:15.50 | Wormy_semi_here | MEL feels like a steamwagon in comparison to Python or JS, as it is non-OOP and scripts are 10 pages long |
21:22.18 | Wormy_semi_here | I had to create a script that imports PDB files from the Protein Data Bank into Maya, building up the molecular structure. It was extremely laborious and only half worked |
21:26.00 | drom | Reminds me of trying to learn a new language by unconventionally rewritting an app written in an other language |
21:26.29 | drom | In this instance, this was the web app I finished writing the first public revision |
21:26.59 | drom | Java -> Dart |
21:28.08 | Wormy_semi_here | This is what I'm kind of doing. I'm following "Nature of Code" book but doing it in JS and probably Python so I can work it into Maya and have nice emergent patterns |
21:28.13 | drom | Dart is a scripting language that works like Java; PHP, LUA, Ruby and Python, just feed it into the language's VM program and bam! You got it running in matter of seconds. |
21:28.37 | Wormy_semi_here | or three.js and put it on the web |
21:29.03 | drom | The best part of it is that you can feed it into the sdk's JS-translator and it has JIT-support. |
21:29.28 | drom | The output JS file is all perfect and flawless. |
21:30.10 | drom | In fact I'm impressed that it loaded and kicked up very fast compared to when I lanuched it from the IDE. |
21:30.58 | drom | http://rlv.zcache.com/works_on_my_machine_classic_round_sticker-r56ce1cc314be46efbe749e9c58c761d5_v9waf_8byvr_512.jpg |
21:31.25 | drom | Just programmer things |
21:35.45 | *** join/#sporewiki Zillafire101 (4933de11@gateway/web/freenode/ip.73.51.222.17) |
21:39.58 | Ghel | http://spore.wikia.com/wiki/Fiction:New_Cyrandia_Wars/Year_Two/The_Halcyon_Scheme#Lyrebird_Feathers - New section of Cyr's and my story. |
21:43.42 | *** join/#sporewiki Primius (63eee964@gateway/web/freenode/ip.99.238.233.100) |
21:43.43 | Primius | Ey m8s |
21:43.51 | The_Randomness | Hello |
21:44.08 | Primius | Vincent can we continue our titanpad? |
21:44.15 | Ghel | Hello. |
21:45.11 | Wormy_semi_here | I'll read it later |
21:46.59 | Primius | Wormy, can we do a civ/primfed fic? |
21:49.10 | Wormy_semi_here | Not right now. You need to arrange roleplays with me. |
21:50.14 | Wormy_semi_here | I could do one in the next couple of days. |
21:50.35 | Wormy_semi_here | I don't know about tomorrow, I'll probs be out at this time. |
21:52.44 | drom | Goddamnit I forgot to talk impy about the NTA-NS relations |
22:02.04 | drom | The "isToday()" function in my clock is working! |
22:02.13 | drom | Now I can finally go to bed now. |
22:05.48 | Tek0516 | O.o |
22:13.23 | Hachiman | https://scontent-lhr3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/11825648_1610934905821655_8095830371731877324_n.jpg?oh=4c99ae0a905bfd4b27995303e7723147&oe=5645A060 |
22:14.09 | The_Randomness | wtf |
22:14.31 | The_Randomness | That's the strangest thing I've seen this week I think |
22:15.43 | Hachiman | You haven't seen the post of the Brony keeping a MLP toy in a jar full of suspicious substances then |
22:16.20 | The_Randomness | must unthink |
22:22.12 | Zillafire101 | O_o |
22:24.13 | Hachiman | Where did the Orcs in The Lord of the Rings go to learn? |
22:24.18 | Hachiman | Uruk High |
22:24.47 | The_Randomness | dat pun |
22:25.55 | Zillafire101 | Olol. |
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22:43.22 | Cyrannian | Night folks |
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23:27.07 | Wormy_semi_here | hi |
23:27.58 | *** join/#sporewiki DrodoEmpire (adfc264b@gateway/web/freenode/ip.173.252.38.75) |
23:28.46 | DrodoEmpire | Hi everyone |
23:37.24 | Hachiman | Hello |