00:01:18 aha, i just needed to change the colors 00:07:03 * AaronSw fiddles with his emacs HTML template 00:12:45 tomch has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)) 00:14:14 since "And she liked her lovers violent, and vicious: / Queenie was sexually ambitious." suddenly popped into my head, i'm adding The Wild Party to my books-to-read list 00:15:07 i don't argue with the voices in my head 00:15:22 * jillzilla nods solemnly. 00:19:42 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 00:20:40 * AaronSw deletes xoot-remnants from the blog 00:20:43 xoot (xoot@115.sanjose-03-04rs16rt.ca.dial-access.att.net) has joined #swhack 00:20:54 speak of the devil 00:21:46 chumpster (nobody@xd84b5c5a.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 00:22:06 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 00:22:32 Hmm... 00:22:57 weird 00:23:12 in the first ten minutes of running windows me, a BSOD appeared 00:23:26 let's see how that goes 00:23:27 that's a bit much 00:23:38 please take that off 00:25:19 chumpster (nobody@xd84b5c5a.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 00:25:41 sbp has changed the topic to: And now back to our normal programming... (kinda) 00:26:06 ick, funny character 00:26:15 which one? 00:26:31 sbp has changed the topic to: And now back to our normal programming... (kinda) 00:26:32 the one you always complain about when i use 00:26:34 ah, that one :-) 00:26:50 * sbp goes to get a drink 00:29:26 xoot has quit ("bbl :D") 00:30:05 Morbus and rm are going to *freak* :-) 00:30:14 Ash has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)) 00:31:09 xoot (xoot@115.sanjose-03-04rs16rt.ca.dial-access.att.net) has joined #swhack 00:55:21 Morbus (morbus@s96.terminal3.totalnetnh.net) has joined #swhack 01:00:34 did I miss anything exciting? 01:00:40 answered craploads of emails. 01:00:46 * AaronSw points to xena 01:00:46 now i'm revising the newest ora piece. 01:00:48 err xoot 01:00:56 you know, i never did hear back from them on the decepticons thing/ 01:01:08 i've sent like 5 emails on it. the last one was "are you just chuckling or ignoring me?" 01:01:19 holy crap. xoot's back. 01:01:19 what happened? 01:01:52 we cloned him just to freak you out 01:02:41 right down to his dns too. nice job! ;) 01:05:11 logster, where am I? 01:05:11 See http://blogspace.com/swhack/chatlogs/2002-04-16#T01-05-11 01:05:30 thanks, logster 01:06:58 xoot, you're in san jose. you going to wwdc? 01:07:46 Note that Apple says they're demoing 10.2 at WWDC, not releasing 01:08:17 yeah, well, i half-expected that anyways. 01:08:33 did you read that osopinion concerning amd/nvidia and apple? 01:08:51 nah 01:08:52 something along those lines, at least. 01:09:36 Gotta run: dinner 01:09:47 heh: 00:30:05 [sbp] Morbus and rm are going to *freak* :-) 01:18:31 tansaku has quit () 01:20:15 sniff. 01:26:05 sniff? 01:26:22 yeah. no discussions. 01:27:51 heh 01:33:54 wb Aaron 01:34:00 thanks 01:34:29 how about a discussion now? 01:34:44 nah. let's have a few minutes more silence :-) 01:35:05 'k 01:35:28 heh, heh. 01:35:42 what sort of discussion, per chance, xoot? 01:36:42 Interesting: M- searches thru your history in bash 01:36:56 whee! $ lynx http://blogspace.com/swhack/chatlogs/2002-04-16.txt -source -dump > swhack; lynx http://ilrt.org/discovery/chatlogs/rdfig/2002-04-16.txt -source -dump > rdfig; cat rdfig swhack | sort 01:37:11 curl, curl, curl! 01:37:11 [[[ 01:37:12 01:26:05 sniff? 01:37:12 01:26:22 yeah. no discussions. 01:37:12 01:27:51 heh 01:37:12 01:33:43 back. 01:37:12 01:33:54 wb Aaron 01:37:14 01:34:00 thanks 01:37:16 ]]] 01:37:26 heh 01:37:33 kinda scary 01:37:33 it makes so much more sense when you fold the two together :-) 01:38:23 what mac would you get instead if you had to have a top-of-the line PC 01:38:43 tibook. 01:38:44 G4, G3, 9600, Quadra, or Performa 01:38:57 heh. I said G3 01:39:00 g4. 01:39:20 oh? 01:41:33 GabeW (~Gabe@12-236-237-100.client.attbi.com) has joined #swhack 01:42:20 xoot has quit ("bbl :D") 01:45:53 AaronSw has changed the topic to: And now back to our normal programming... (kinda) 01:46:08 AaronSw has changed the topic to: € 01:46:13 ah, the xoot's on the other foot now 01:46:43 AaronSw has changed the topic to: [interrobang] 01:46:55 heh, heh 01:47:16 U+203D, BWT 01:48:01 AaronSw, my Leecharoo script has been modularized, and now uses an apache style config. 01:48:14 which is nice. 01:48:21 heh! 01:48:35 as it is right now, anyone could add a new scraping thing, and all the user would have to do is add a new block in his config file. 01:48:40 * sbp bets that that wasn't a reference to the Fast Show, but laughs anyway 01:48:41 can i blurb it here to discuss it with ya? 01:48:55 I don't have anything to discuss 01:49:00 hmm? 01:49:01 Leecharoo is such a kick-ass name... 01:49:30 right, but I wanted to talk about naming / functions. 01:49:41 sbp: the logo's gonna be even cooler. 01:49:46 i should get it in about two weeks. 01:50:04 ok, fine 01:50:20 heh, heh. 01:50:20 nevermind. 01:51:15 a big leech with the body of a kangaroo? 01:51:58 no. 01:52:02 aw 01:52:04 its either a kangaroo running around stealing shit into his pouch. 01:52:18 or a kangaroo with a super-overstuffed pouch and one of those innocent "who me?" looks. 01:52:36 heh; I don't envy the artist of their task 01:52:46 who is the artist? 01:52:51 or maybe a kangaroo with leeches for hands. 01:52:51 Hhmmm. 01:52:51 01:53:03 sbp: the same artist did the syncasaurus logo. 01:53:33 Aaron: apparently the same artist did the syncasaurus logo, according to Morbus 01:53:41 AaronSw: a long time friend of mine. she illustrates childrens books and other thingies. 01:53:53 heh 01:56:34 ooh, UFO spam! 01:56:36 UFO spam is so damn cool - choc full of conspiracy theory goodness, and not a porn/product in sight 01:56:38 it's still spam though, so annoying 01:57:05 i've been getting lots of casino spam recently. 01:57:20 ah, product oriented 01:57:24 spamassasin has killed all my spam 01:57:31 heh, poor Aaron 01:57:42 although, I got a good one from some Adobe guy recently 01:57:50 half-clever spam 01:57:56 i've been meaning to add that to my server for testing. 01:58:02 then was gonna move it to the main server 01:58:19 it said "hi, I read your article at [cover pages URI] about XML and PDF... here's my product!" 01:58:21 AaronSw: you running it in daemon mode or through procmail or what? 01:58:24 or something like that 01:58:32 redmonk (~steve@ip68-2-102-26.ph.ph.cox.net) has joined #swhack 01:58:35 thru .qmail 01:58:56 sbp, yeah, i got that too 01:58:57 hey redmonk. close, but no biscuit 01:59:42 hi sbp, aaron 01:59:48 and Morb 02:00:06 lurking in the shadows lies the dormant Morbus of Iff 02:00:14 stalking your sensibilities 02:00:51 mu hah! mu hah, I say! 02:01:00 heh, heh 02:02:08 I can imagine you herding quezlots in your old age on Iffington Farm 02:02:12 hehe 02:03:20 quezlots? 02:03:25 this is just merkle puzzles all over again: http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99992067 02:04:51 sounds like a bit of a dead end 02:05:13 * sbp may end up eating his words... hopes that they taste of chocolate 02:05:28 "Attack success rate while Counterpane was watching: 0.006%. Attacks that succeeded long enough to cause damage while Counterpane was watching: 0.00%." 02:05:43 Merkle Puzzles are very cool. Poor Ralph. 02:06:10 Gee Charlie Brown, that sure is clever... yes sir! What's "Counterpane"? 02:06:48 Counterpane is Bruce Schneier's company to protect networks from intruders (crackers) 02:06:59 thru active monitoring 02:07:04 O.K. 02:08:15 Ralph? I heard Eve 02:08:42 but hey, there you go 02:08:47 Eve? 02:08:58 http://cactus.eas.asu.edu/partha/Teaching/539.2002/Merkles-puzzle.htm 02:09:29 (I know, Ralph Merkle...) 02:09:48 Oh. 02:10:05 but Eve's the one doing the puzzles, so I dunno what you meant :-) 02:10:15 I meant what I said. 02:10:24 Poor Ralph. 02:10:56 he lacks money? perhaps he should have patented his method 02:11:34 I meant it in the sense that he invented this great system and never got any of the credit. 02:11:57 asu.edu would disagree :-) 02:12:13 but yeah... I'd not heard of him 02:12:37 As in Diffie-Hellmann get all the credit 02:12:45 and he was years earlier 02:13:05 oh! it's the guy that patented the crap with them 02:13:09 I had heard of him 02:13:42 He didn't patent stuff with them, did he? 02:14:21 I think so (but the site appears to have gone down) 02:14:26 Morbus has quit ("http://www.disobey.com/") 02:14:28 Oh, so he did. 02:14:36 Well that patent was invalid anyway, cf. djb 02:15:31 tansaku (~sam@mtl10gw.mtl.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp) has joined #swhack 02:16:28 what did djb have to say about it? 02:17:22 GabeW has quit ("Client Exiting") 02:18:05 http://cr.yp.to/patents/us/4200770.html 02:19:30 thanks 02:20:04 interesting 02:20:11 nice piece on time: http://cr.yp.to/proto/utctai.html 02:20:25 djb is just filled with loads of good stuff 02:20:34 cool bit about leap seconds from that page: [[[ 02:20:34 1997-06-30 23:59:59 UTC = 1997-07-01 00:00:29 TAI 02:20:34 1997-06-30 23:59:60 UTC = 1997-07-01 00:00:30 TAI 02:20:34 1997-07-01 00:00:00 UTC = 1997-07-01 00:00:31 TAI 02:20:35 ]]] 02:20:46 it'd be good to hook xena up to a real NTP server 02:21:28 doesn't she run ntpd? 02:21:47 hm, guess not 02:25:48 uh oh: "Y2036 and Y2038 disasters" 02:26:47 redmonk has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)) 02:27:00 heh, let's worry about it now to save us doing it then 02:27:38 [[[ 02:27:38 In *CACM*, January 1997, page 15, Robert L. Glass reveals his shocking new 02:27:38 discovery that UNIX time, a 32-bit signed integer representing the number of 02:27:38 seconds after 1969 TAI, will overflow in mid-January 2038. (``And even 02:27:38 sooner for smaller-word processors.'') 02:27:44 ]]] - http://www.infowar.com/iwftp/risks/risks-18/18_77.txt 02:28:16 wmf (~wesley@valentine.felter.org) has joined #swhack 02:28:30 hi wmf, we're discussing the Y2038 crisis 02:28:53 chuckle:- 02:28:54 [[[ 02:28:54 P.S. In all seriousness: I'm converting my data to 64-bit signed times, 02:28:54 stored big-endian in 8 bytes, followed by 8 bytes for nanoseconds and 02:28:54 attoseconds just in case. This won't last for more than a few hundred 02:28:54 billion years, but neither will the Sun, and in any case I plan to throw 02:28:56 a big programming party on 1 January 2000000001 to upgrade to 128 bits. 02:28:58 ]]] 02:29:15 - ibid. 02:29:28 IRC needs to support Unicode so you can put a real interrobang in the topic 02:29:55 I still think that U+203D would have sufficed 02:30:10 anyone know some good ntp servers? 02:30:17 tock.usno.mil 02:30:27 can't trust the militrary 02:30:29 er... .navy/mil 02:30:33 they'll fake me out to break my crypto 02:30:43 xoot (~aquachat@91.sanjose-15rs16rt.ca.dial-access.att.net) has joined #swhack 02:30:58 argh, try again: tock.usno.navy.mil 02:31:08 apparently there's an extinction-causing asteroid that's going to hit around '38, so we don't need to worry about Unix 02:31:10 follow links from www.ntp.org 02:31:31 asteroid? 02:31:31 ooh, cool site 02:33:01 heh 02:33:31 * AaronSw apt installs clockspeed, removes ntp 02:33:51 * sbp tried compiling it, but it didn't want to go 02:35:24 * xoot uses raw irc commands 02:36:12 Anyone else know raw irc? 02:36:31 ircushi 02:37:04 like PRIVMSG 02:37:25 I hate them :p 02:37:37 requires a lot of typing 02:37:42 I know jack about IRC 02:38:27 xoot has left #swhack 02:38:56 Gotta run 02:42:25 Hm, clockspeed installation is high-maintenance 02:43:00 good thing i have entourage to remind me 03:10:27 Seth has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)) 04:01:03 heh: "rsync can use zlib to compress traffic (and introduce double-free() security holes :-), at the option of the client." 04:01:45 at least they're honest 04:03:12 The DFSG GPL problem is sort of funny. 04:03:21 ? 04:03:36 Debian has a policy of only distributing free software. 04:03:43 ok 04:03:45 and the GPL requires that the GPL is included with GPLed software 04:03:54 ah, I see where this is goin 04:04:00 but the GPL's license is in violation of the DFSG 04:04:14 (because it can't be modified) 04:04:42 so technically all GPL software is in violation of debian policy 04:05:08 actually, I don't think GPL'ed packages in Debian include the text of the GPL 04:05:19 there's probably one package that includes it 04:05:19 Why's that? 04:05:41 I think Debian has some policy about not wanting to put 5000 copies of the GPL on your disk 04:06:13 hm. it seems to be in /usr/share/doc/package-name/copyright, but it may just be a link 04:06:34 ls -la will tell you 04:06:41 ah, they just say: 04:06:43 Released under the terms of the GPL; see 04:06:52 /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL. 04:07:00 there you go 04:07:25 which in itself is a link to GPL-2 04:07:57 I was thinking the other day that we need URIs for gpl-x and gpl-x-or-later 04:08:13 and latest-gpl, i guess 04:08:26 if there's ever a GPLv3 I predict mass confusion 04:08:39 why's that? 04:09:19 hm. is gnomovision a real program? 04:09:32 or maybe there will just be protests by people who put their code under GPLv2-or-later and don't like the terms of v3 04:09:43 yeah, probably 04:09:56 and everyone will be like "too bad, you were stupid" 04:10:01 heh, found a new joke in this: 04:10:03 Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program 04:10:03 `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker. 04:10:03 , 1 April 1989 04:10:03 Ty Coon, President of Vice 04:10:07 I love that bit 04:10:25 didn't alan cox write gnomovision? 04:10:50 hm: http://www.advogato.org/proj/Gnomovision/ 04:11:14 BlogniX is a blogger client for Linux. 04:11:18 interesting name 04:11:32 is http://www.advogato.org/person/linus/ linus torvalds? 04:11:36 * wmf is surfing freshmeat 04:11:47 I doubt it 04:12:17 i am disappointed. the real gnomovision does not make passes at compilers 04:12:29 the trust metric is great for what it does... 04:13:26 heh, Yoyodyne got bought out by yahoo 04:13:54 I really should delete all HTML mail that I get 04:14:05 Ty Coon is probably running the pay-for-submission systems these days 04:14:39 ooh, another joke: 1 April 04:15:38 Hm, GPL section 8 is quite sucky. I never noticed that before. 04:16:04 I wonder how many hackers with GPLed code actually read the GPL 04:16:24 very few 04:17:29 I was promoting the MPL for quite a while before I discovered the upgrade clause 04:17:45 Heh 04:18:29 I was thinking about writing a simplified GPL, but it'd probably just be a waste. 04:18:51 I wonder how many people follow 2a: "You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that you changed the files and the date of any change." 04:19:58 use diff 04:23:41 "If the Program does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation." 04:23:53 scary 04:24:23 what happens when stallman dies and someone crazy issues GPL -1 ;) 04:24:53 nah, there are plenty of stallmanistas lined up to take over for him 04:25:00 phew 04:26:52 Hm, the GPL refers to the old LGPL 04:27:22 what do you think about that web services GPL that came out recently? 04:27:40 web services GPL? 04:27:55 wizgipple? 04:27:56 yeah. affero something? 04:28:14 Hadn't heard of it. Interesting. 04:28:21 affero GPL 04:28:42 stallman's for it: http://www.gnu.org/press/2002-03-19-Affero 04:29:29 hm. the new clause is: " If the Program as you received it is intended to interact with users through a computer network and if, in the version you received, any user interacting with the Program was given the opportunity to request transmission to that user of the Program's complete source code, you must not remove that facility from your modified version of the Program or work based on the Program, and must offer an equivalent opportunity for all users int 04:29:29 twork to request immediate transmission by HTTP of the complete source code of your modified version or other derivative work. 04:29:44 the FSF "is considering including this additional provision in the upcoming version of the GNU GPL 3.0" 04:30:18 the dependence on HTTP is a bit sucky 04:32:27 hm, where is GPL 1? 04:34:17 aha: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/copying-1.0.html 04:35:59 I wonder what's at 59 Temple Place. I'm tempted to visit and ask for a license. 04:38:16 Hm. GPL1 lacks the patent clauses. Maybe I should use it instead... 04:38:56 another entourage bug: the scrollbar thumb doesn't track the cursor 04:45:18 It's named after my favorite unicode character! 04:45:29 I think he means this channel. 04:45:55 having a favorite unicode character might be a sign of problems 04:46:26 * jillzilla laughs to the point of pain. 04:46:28 I have to agree. 04:47:02 eric claims to be normal. He's threatening to do the normie-boy dance to prove it. 04:47:04 * jillzilla runs. 04:49:16 I think a lot of people like the interrobang, which predates Unicode, I might note. 04:49:19 @ 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510582097.org 04:49:32 oops 04:49:39 @ http://3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510582097.org 04:50:13 redmonk (~steve@ip68-2-102-26.ph.ph.cox.net) has joined #swhack 04:50:19 A: http://3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510582097.org from AaronSw 04:50:28 A::Awesome domain name! 04:50:44 commented item A 04:51:40 * jillzilla waves and goes home. 04:52:18 G'nie 04:52:20 err nite 04:55:57 Who's Eric? 04:56:10 One of my coworkers. 04:56:20 Not Mr. Eric, right? 04:56:23 dnm and he know someone in common. 04:56:27 er, Mr. Schmidt 04:56:30 No. 04:56:36 There are several erics. 04:56:40 Phew. 04:56:53 This one is a python demigod, or perhaps hemidemigod. 04:57:24 really going home now. :-) 04:57:26 * jillzilla disappears. 05:09:07 hey redmonk 05:18:29 .time pst 05:18:29 Apr. 15, 2002 10:18 pm US/Pacific 05:18:54 somebody's clock is screwed up 05:26:45 hi wes 05:28:53 that looks like a reasonable time 05:29:31 yes, that's reasonable but i was using it to compare with someone else's unreasonable time 05:29:37 they thought it was 5:40AM tomorrow PST 05:29:40 ah 05:30:04 today I discovered that the time zone on my new thinkpad was wrong 05:30:24 I got a meeting invitation that said 11:30 PM and I knew it couldn't be right 05:30:31 heh heh 05:32:19 ah Dan Brickley has discovered the relatable problem 05:37:10 hm, freeamp.org seems down 05:37:42 what is the relatable problem? 05:38:41 the TRM algorithm has two parts; one runs on the client and one runs on *one* server owned by relatable 05:38:57 oh, that problem. i thought everyone knew that 05:39:14 it certainly took me a while to discover it 05:39:48 hm. i guess it's mb's dirty secret 05:40:10 my laundry is done; time for bed 05:40:15 wmf has quit ("wmf has no reason") 05:51:50 hm, i need to exchange fingerprints more 05:51:58 odd, i'd never imported wmf's key 05:56:20 alright, i better sleep too. nite all 06:12:40 redmonk has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)) 07:06:03 tansaku has quit () 08:39:45 tansaku (~sam@n144-001.tokyu-net.catv.ne.jp) has joined #swhack 08:58:16 tansaku has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)) 08:58:37 tansaku (~sam@h131-245.tokyu-net.catv.ne.jp) has joined #swhack 12:53:25 * sbp waves 12:54:07 wow @ A on chumpster 14:00:14 hi 14:00:15 @ http://diveintoosx.org/ 14:01:53 B: http://diveintoosx.org/ from AaronSw 14:02:11 B:|Dive into OS X, An OS X Wiki 14:02:32 titled item B 14:12:12 ironic that free is the most expensive google adword 15:15:36 redmonk (~steve@63.149.73.20) has joined #swhack 15:20:29 heh, indeed 15:23:11 mornin sbp 15:23:42 * redmonk nods to aaronsw, jill*, oierw 15:25:12 Good Morning, Good Morning 15:25:22 actually, it's late afternoon over here. oh well 15:26:34 "Time-Zone-Appropriate Greetings to All!" 15:26:52 redmonk has changed the topic to: "Time-Zone-Appropriate Greetings to All!" 15:27:11 heh, heh 15:28:30 Hmm... what's a minimal set of features for a base RDF API? 15:29:02 I want to turn Eep into a black box type of thing for some other applications that I'll be working on 15:29:40 redmonk, what time is it where you are? 15:30:50 black box type of thing? 15:31:37 yeah; something I can point people to and say "here, this is only a few KB, go and get it" 15:34:17 I have like three projects for which I need a base API, but I don't want to have them as Eep extensions necessarily (Since I've all but abandoned Eep) 15:34:20 is they're a content-type for rfc822 headers? 15:34:49 I think that there is... 15:34:51 * sbp checks 15:38:14 text/rfc822-headers 15:38:18 - http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/media-types/media-types 15:38:50 cool 15:38:55 thanks 15:42:50 np 15:43:19 heh, orasis got pretty excited about that 15:47:09 Seth (~seth@12-230-243-179.client.attbi.com) has joined #swhack 15:50:00 Rolling another API for each RDF application is so uncool... but perhaps it's for the best - each application has different needs 15:50:13 .time mst 15:50:13 Apr. 16, 2002 9:50 am US/Mountain 15:50:24 ah, cheers rm :-) 15:50:43 oops 15:50:48 .time PST 15:50:48 Apr. 16, 2002 8:50 am US/Pacific 15:50:53 better 15:51:01 .time America/Phoenix 15:51:02 error: Site Error occurred: KeyError 15:51:03 oh, in PST? 15:51:05 ugh 15:51:20 AZ does not do DST 15:51:32 (well, except for the Navaho lands) 15:51:37 ah, interesting. so it's mountain time, but without summer time 15:51:39 so right now we're PST 15:51:43 yeah 15:51:49 "Daylights savings? Why do we need daylight savings? we got too much daylight already!" 15:51:54 heh, heh 15:51:56 damn straight 15:53:24 it hit 100 here on sunday 15:53:39 * sbp wonders why the bots are auto-voiced now; never did get an explaination 15:53:42 it was like 90 here yesterday, gonna be hotter today 15:53:45 100? wow. what humidity? 15:54:09 about 0 15:54:17 hehe 15:54:19 auto-voiced: so that i count the bots more easily 15:54:22 heh, heh 15:54:22 maybe 5 15:54:56 and so that people stop trying to chat xena up 15:55:11 but you should voice the humans! don't we deserve more respect? Hmm... I should know better than to ask a question like that 15:55:25 ha! 15:55:54 it's so freaky when you do that 15:56:37 who does what? 15:56:47 you do that 15:56:55 i do what? 15:57:00 that 15:57:04 this? 15:57:21 no, that. the other thing 15:58:32 AaronSw has changed the topic to: do YOU want to move to Virtual Tonga? 15:58:56 .google "Virtual Tonga" 15:58:59 "Virtual Tonga": http://www.tonga-island.com 15:59:26 i was actually thinking of hits 3 or for 16:02:17 ah, so you mean google:Virtual%20Tonga[2:3] 16:02:36 er, 1:2 16:03:04 er, 2:4 16:03:06 i give up 16:03:26 ooh: http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/et2002/view/e_sess/2223 16:03:59 it's a bit odd to me that [1:2] should be equal to [1] 16:04:03 tomch (~lambda@modem-678.porcupine.dialup.pol.co.uk) has joined #swhack 16:04:26 it's not equal to [1] 16:04:32 >>> foo = [1,2,3,4,5] 16:04:32 >>> foo[1:2] 16:04:32 [2] 16:04:32 >>> foo[1] 16:04:33 2 16:04:39 wow, that is rather interesting 16:04:46 ah, [foo[1]], then 16:04:56 same amount of characters 16:05:49 (rather intersting: i.e. the talk) 16:06:26 i'm tempted to print out the schedule and start circling stuff 16:06:40 * Seth noodles on the meaning of sbp's "RDF is its own RDF Path syntax" 16:07:24 ugh, big conflict: reputation, google and megnut all at once 16:07:51 don't forget the qualifying "to a great extent" :-) 16:08:08 heh, conference conflicts... how I'd love to have that dilemma 16:08:42 Seth, for example:- 16:08:42 [[[ 16:08:43 /[a rdfs:ContainerMembershipProperty] 16:08:43 Returns the values of all container membership properties (_1, _2, etc.) for all resources. 16:08:48 well if i know what you do mean, i wouldnt even qualify it :) 16:08:49 ]]] - http://logicerror.com/RDFPathProposal 16:09:04 that's just: ?x [ a rdfs:ContainerMembershipProperty ] ?y . 16:09:58 some of the stuff that was raised on the RDF Path group list is even more bizarre 16:10:14 shirky-winer, flickenger-khare 16:10:26 what we do need is a way to create a formula out of the triples returned 16:11:08 huh? ... the triples returned are formulas ... arn't they? 16:11:31 that depends upon how you use the expression above :-) 16:11:53 a query system would just need to return everything that unifies with query. 16:11:54 I think the API norm is to return a list of bindings 16:12:21 oh, you mean some dumb api would just return a list [(?x, ?y) .... ] ? 16:12:25 yeah, that's what unify does 16:12:29 uh huh 16:13:04 but then how you use that information is up to the application 16:13:32 well my api would return the actual triples in vivo 16:14:04 pardon? 16:14:38 return a collection of triples with the variables in them bound 16:14:50 ie the variables dissapear 16:15:03 ah, right 16:15:22 well, that should be passed along too, I agree (Eep does that) 16:16:00 so really it's a set of bindings and triples... I see your point. just that the bindings have traditionally been more important 16:16:24 whereas with some applications of RDF Path, the triples are the important thing 16:16:56 so if there is only one place in the graph that qualifies for the query, then that place in the graph is what is returned 16:17:24 you I guess you want asBindings(), asTriples(), and asBoth() query methods to a store 16:17:47 well, a set with just that as the single member, yes 16:17:56 im not familure with those methods, ref? 16:18:01 if you start reducing the lists whenever you can, you'll get into trouble 16:18:05 I just made 'em up :-) 16:18:37 wow, you can google for the and a now 16:18:38 nope, the actual triple in the graph. not a new graph with that as the only arrow. 16:19:11 surely that triple is the same triple no matter where it is? 16:19:20 that is, if it's in the root context... 16:19:34 not at all, triples are context sensitive. 16:19:43 Hmm.. but it's not going to be if I start saying stuff about it... 16:19:47 right 16:20:12 in the annotation example that I gave, note that I used <> to say that the annotation was for this document only 16:20:44 because what you'd get is foaf:mbox :annotation (<> "a machine can have an earl:email, but not foaf:mbox") . 16:21:22 * Seth goes back to reading sean's email 16:21:23 so I might get foaf:mbox :annotation ( "a machine can have an earl:email, but not foaf:mbox"), ( "blargh) . 16:21:29 http://google.blogspace.com/archives/000221 16:21:38 s/h)/h")/ 16:22:04 Aaron: heh, cool report 16:22:16 ugh 16:22:19 .google www 16:22:20 www: http://www.microsoft.com 16:22:23 I even snuck in @@. 16:22:25 .google @@ 16:22:26 no results found. 16:22:35 yep, that's a cool bit :-) 16:22:36 .google the 16:22:37 the: http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/acrobat/readstep.html 16:22:45 adobe and MS. What a Web... 16:23:49 however, the other form of annotation is to start annotation sets of triples in some document, which is harder 16:23:56 ick @ w3c.com and w3.com 16:24:15 .google world wide web 16:24:15 world wide web: http://www.w3.org 16:24:27 ah, that's good at least 16:24:37 s/annotation sets/annotating sets/ 16:24:40 talli (~talli@xd84b5c59.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 16:25:09 so you might have a document that parses to { :x :y :z . :p :q :r }, and I want to say { :p :q :r } a :GreatTriple . 16:25:09 davb (dave@alb-24-58-162-46.nycap.rr.com) has joined #swhack 16:25:21 talli, davb... it's an openacsinvasion 16:25:29 heh 16:25:45 ah, perhaps { :p :q :r } :annotation ( "a great triple") . 16:25:56 works for me 16:26:32 Heh, now we're going to get baby photos of triples 16:26:43 lol! 16:26:48 like http://www.panic.com/birthday/ 16:27:05 { :x :y :z } :annotation ("this was when he took his first steps") 16:27:10 err http://www.panic.com/birthday/gift3.html 16:27:49 ah, I guess that's different: an evolving set of triples. that's like the diff things 16:27:54 s/gs/s/ 16:28:03 you're combining my two wanted apps! 16:28:21 heh: 3PM 16:30:17 * Seth loads his mentographer before he loads his python ... oh well 16:33:31 Gotta run 16:40:27 I think I'm going to start my talk like this: 16:40:32 GabeW (~Gabe@12-236-237-100.client.attbi.com) has joined #swhack 16:40:34 1989: "The aim would be to allow a place to be found for any information or reference which one felt was important, and a way of finding it afterwards." 16:40:43 1999: "Now, miraculously, we have the Web. For the documents in our lives, everything is simple and smooth. But for data, we are still pre-Web." 16:50:55 Morbus (~morbus@morbus.totalnetnh.net) has joined #swhack 16:55:30 Hm, this is a lot of talk for not a lot of time. 16:59:31 xoot would like to come back in and participate in the discussions 17:00:31 too bad moderating doesn't work on IRC 17:01:25 talli has left #swhack 17:05:14 where'd xoot go? what happened? 17:05:19 dammit. i always miss the good stuff. 17:06:10 AaronSw has changed the topic to: do YOU want to move to Virtual Tonga? 17:06:16 AaronSw has changed the topic to: do YOU want to move to Virtual Tonga? 17:06:20 xoot (xoot@12.81.8.57) has joined #swhack 17:07:37 McLuhan bit on NPR 17:10:54 Anyone know a free web host that allows PHP scripting? 17:14:23 cornerhost is cheap 17:14:26 not free 17:14:32 though 17:14:40 check out cornerhost.com 17:14:40 xoot, there's a list of them on the php.net site. 17:14:47 Morbus: 17:14:51 ok 17:14:57 monk monk 17:15:09 have you seen this? http://www.aaronland.net/toys/otlml 17:15:39 alternative outline xml format 17:15:46 i've heard of it, but never looked into it. 17:15:46 not much more complicated than opml 17:15:53 http://otlml.org/1.1b1/otlml.dtd 17:16:04 anyway, i don't have time to fool with it 17:16:10 heh, same here :) 17:16:11 but thought you might like to know about it 17:16:16 heh 17:16:39 xoot, try: http://hosts.php.net/ 17:20:36 heh 17:23:28 "glocalization" sense of having worldwide reach but local access or local culture 17:23:37 does mac.com support php? 17:23:41 hmmm.... 17:23:45 i sincerely doubt it. 17:26:54 sean, had to introduce some new concepts, but her is my response: 17:26:57 http://robustai.net/mentography/annotation.gif 17:29:27 GabeW has quit ("Client Exiting") 17:32:42 * xoot is seeing whether homepage supports cgi 17:33:57 what the hell are you talking about? 17:34:01 homepage supporting cgi? 17:34:09 homepage is just a text editor. 17:34:19 if you mean, does it color code perl / php syntax, yes. 17:34:25 apple homepage 17:34:33 ah. 17:34:39 oh. lol. 17:34:42 man, my fault. whoo. 17:34:57 its just so fun to be angry at xoot. 17:35:06 jillzilla, you around? 17:36:03 heh 17:36:06 fun? 17:36:12 why is it fun? 17:36:14 :D 17:36:30 "literacy is doing just fine .... more books sell today than ever before" 17:45:16 McLuhan: "it's very difficult to travel at the speed of light looking thru the rear-view mirror" 17:47:07 what the heck is a mentograph? 17:47:22 heh... "You're spooging international character noise!" 17:49:18 um, that was only funny when it was true 17:49:57 Heh, they're making fun of the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program "What they're grappling with is..." "no, what they're grappling with is how to shorten the name!" 17:55:07 "a key mcluhan concept is decentralization" 17:55:52 he blames anthrax on decentralization 18:01:23 Heh, I remember when sbp was marveling at how short infogami was. now he complains that it's too long 18:01:43 tomch has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)) 18:02:26 * Seth seth goes back to codinglearning python 18:04:11 i gotta do that someday. 18:04:19 i'm forcing myself to code in php for this movie project thing. 18:04:25 i should force myself to code python for something. 18:04:47 yeah, python is cool 18:05:11 chumpster got coded in python... 18:05:27 too bad I don't have the right version to run it in my irc channel 18:05:37 (right version of Python) 18:09:00 * sbp has two minutes to lookl at Seth's annotation mentography, and think she gets it 18:09:17 although I need a little while to play around with the diff/annotation thing that Aaron came up with 18:09:27 sbp became female? 18:09:29 afk. 18:09:37 [GlobalNotice] Hello everyone! I hope everyone's day is going well. I just wanted to remind everyone that we're still accepting artwork for our logo and t-shirt campaign. Questions or submissions may be sent to mysticone@openprojects.net, or you may contact me here with the nick MysticOne. Any help you can give us is much appreciate, and as always we thank you for using the Open Projects Network. 18:09:37 lol! 18:09:40 oOh! sbp, a woman! 18:09:42 !afk. 18:09:43 s/think she/thinks he/ 18:09:47 * jillium peeks in. 18:09:48 tell me, sbp. tell me more! 18:09:57 aw, man. I didn't even notice the transition 18:10:00 hey - no peeking jill! 18:10:10 * jillium hides her eyes. 18:10:15 sbp! have you no shame!? 18:10:19 BTW, it's not that infogami's too long, just that it's not customizable - just like every other API 18:10:25 shame? 18:10:26 { earl:email :seeAlso foaf:email } :annotation "earl:email can work with a foobar" 18:10:53 er... what formula did you get that triple from? 18:11:12 that's why I did [ :annotation ( "annotation") ] . 18:11:29 well, I'm in a Simpsons break here... 18:11:35 (aka. borrowed time) 18:11:36 Gotta run 18:18:57 [GlobalNotice] Just to clarify a few things. We're looking for a logo that emphasis community involvement and work, not just software development. Also, high resolution/dpi is desired if you're submitting a final proof, but concept sketches are fine too. Just e-mail submissions to mysticone@openprojects.net. Thank you! 18:36:29 Hi all. If you've experienced any service difficulties, particularly in connecting to the servers. Please let us know. Thanks. 18:43:59 i just got booted, evil lilo. 19:02:14 * Seth wonders id sem is a good name for a Graphnode\arrow rdf type api 19:03:54 don't ask me. 19:03:57 i'm evil when it comes to names. 19:04:07 * Morbus remembers the Aaron / Morbus naming spat of '01. 19:05:13 as one would expect with a name like "Morbus" 19:06:32 oh? 19:06:45 whatever do you mean, dear child? 19:08:07 .google "Morbus" 19:08:08 "Morbus": http://www.disobey.com 19:08:42 well where's the dictionary etomology bot? 19:08:43 whoo. 19:08:55 seth, more than likely, i've got you covered: http://www.disobey.com/about/morbus.shtml 19:09:43 yep, you do 19:09:56 :) 19:09:58 i was relating to the word 'morbid' 19:10:07 * Morbus nods. 19:10:13 i like names. 19:10:18 er. making names, rather. 19:10:24 to which one could associate evil 19:11:06 naming stuff right sure helps it grow :) 19:11:23 seth likes platitudes 19:11:46 seth: 19:11:51 .google amphetadesk naming 19:11:52 amphetadesk naming: http://www.disobey.com/amphetadesk/naming.htm 19:12:06 i've got more, but they're all at home, right now. 19:12:29 where do you get xena? 19:12:44 xena is one of a kind. 19:13:19 last name i used for this back in the 80's was CyberMind 19:13:30 really? 19:13:35 CyberMind to Seth? good jump. 19:13:41 is it free? 19:13:54 it ? 19:14:01 xena 19:14:03 xena? yeah. cvs.espnow.com/creature/ 19:14:18 thanx 19:21:26 xoot has left #swhack 19:28:54 .google sememory 19:28:55 sememory: http://www.specialistinfo.com/rrsi/SEmemory.html 19:29:01 Good evening, all. At the request of ada6, I'm announcing the creation of #eurobsdcon, a channel dedicated to the 2002 BSDCon in Europe. If you are interested, please stop by their channel. Thank you. 19:29:45 This is WOPN, what we like to believe is the premier wallops radio station on the Open Projects Network. If you'd prefer not to listen to our broadcast, simply /mode YourNick -w to tune us out. As always, we thank you for your patronage. 19:30:14 grumble. 19:32:03 how many other OPN wallops radio stations are there? 19:33:52 morbus: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/f_headline.cgi?bw.041602/221062126&ticker=ADBE 19:36:13 xoot (xoot@12.81.8.57) has joined #swhack 19:43:24 xoot has left #swhack 19:45:51 redmonk: aahhh. finally! 19:46:19 yeeeessss 19:46:27 heh: http://scriptingnews.userland.com/backissues/2002/04/16#lf22e801295d3bcd705d2676996473a93 19:46:48 is the # supposed to go anyway? 19:46:57 my browser just plopped me at the top. 19:47:04 it's the first item 19:47:08 mmkay 19:47:19 dave on python indentation 19:47:29 "We don't argue about indentation in our community. There's only one way to do it (the right way of course, since I designed it. Heh. Sorry.)" 19:47:40 :) 19:49:20 ooh, MoinMoin generates tables of contents 19:56:05 python-AIM: http://jamwt.com/Py-TOC/ 20:12:18 * sbp waves 20:18:00 hi sean 20:18:39 * sbp started on a new RDF serialization, but was distracted by danbri's math thing 20:20:39 YARS? 20:20:46 hm, how does one turn on a Newton 20:25:54 slider on left hjand sie 20:25:57 side 20:26:19 no luck 20:26:23 i guess it's out of batteries 20:26:26 if you hold it in yr left hand it should be at your thumb 20:26:30 pull down and let go 20:26:32 ah 20:26:38 that would 'splain it 20:26:47 oh, that slider! 20:27:06 where'd you get a newton? 20:27:21 * redmonk wonders where his 120 is... 20:27:25 we got one a long time ago from the friend who gave us the next 20:27:29 it's one of the clear ones 20:27:31 cool 20:27:35 a 110 20:27:38 clear? 20:27:50 never saw a clear one before 20:27:55 would have been cool 20:27:56 yeah, apparently they had a couple clear ones for some special thing 20:28:03 sweet 20:28:08 i want a 2100 20:28:12 but no cash 20:28:31 (just bought a DVD player and are buying a digicam too) 20:28:52 (heh, fun) 20:29:25 yeah, we've been building a dvd library but just had to hold them up to a light and turn it real fast 20:29:59 a really bright light 20:30:14 oh maybe that was the problem... 20:30:29 so you know MPEG now? 20:30:49 heh 20:31:21 this is the one we got: 20:31:22 http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005AY8R/qid=1018989043/br=1-6/ref=br_lf_e_6/104-6988275-2499954 20:31:44 redmonk: i have about 350+ movies. about 100 of which are dvds. 20:32:02 DVD-Video, DVD-Audio, CD, MP3, CD-R, DVD-R 20:32:31 multi-video out (for multiple tvs) 20:32:35 it's got all the goodies 20:32:40 we bought some cheapo one at best buy 20:32:49 and amazon has them cheap, plus we had a gift certificate for $100 20:33:00 so we got it for like 130 20:33:20 lol!! 20:33:31 "# Video black-level expansion and PLUGE (for optimizing theater-like conditions in your home)" 20:33:39 our DVD player has PLUGE! 20:33:43 woohoo! 20:34:07 how onamatapaeic? 20:34:09 ! 20:34:27 onomatopoeic, I think 20:34:37 yeah, i can't spell 20:34:54 (spel?) 20:35:00 PLUGE?! 20:35:02 wow, neither can I, but I remembered it. miraculous 20:35:06 yep! 20:35:35 big red button in the middle of the remote: PLUGE! 20:35:53 we bought the cheapest dvd player at best buy, but then we found it had this weird flicker thing so we returned it and the new one did the same thing 20:36:00 turns out it was "copy protection 20:36:01 " 20:36:03 (whoever thought PLUGE was a good name for a fearure?) 20:36:05 ugh 20:36:15 were you copying dvds onto vhs? 20:36:52 er, feature 20:37:04 nope 20:37:16 hm. weird 20:37:53 it was because our tv didn't support rca-style cables, so we had to run the dvd thru the vcr (which converted rca-style to coax) 20:38:01 ah 20:38:04 gotcha 20:38:09 interesting 20:38:23 so it thought you were ccopying perhaps 20:38:28 (or may try) 20:38:55 loser 20:39:01 uh huh 20:39:04 dvd player, that is 20:39:08 yeah ;-) 20:39:40 ooh, the Supreme Court shut down the Child Porn Act. woo! 20:40:02 heh: check this out 20:40:08 * 1 set Y/Pr/Pb out 20:40:08 * 1 S-Video 20:40:08 * 1 RCA-Video 20:40:09 * 1 Optical Out 20:40:09 * 1 Coaxial Out 20:40:10 * 1 pair L-R Audio 20:40:11 * 6-Channel Out 20:40:29 it's got everything. geez 20:40:37 * 6-PLUNGE IN 20:40:45 PLUGE 20:40:47 ;-) 20:41:02 AaronSw has changed the topic to: 97.6% PLUNGE compliant 20:41:22 it'd be cooler if it was splunge 20:41:41 quit putting an "n" in it 20:41:48 it's pluge 20:41:51 ;-) 20:41:58 AaronSw has changed the topic to: 97.6% PLUGE compliant 20:42:02 lol 20:42:19 .wn pluge 20:42:25 .acronym PLUGE 20:42:26 PLUGE: Picture Line Up Generation Equipment 20:42:41 heh, fancy-sounding 20:42:52 yeah 20:43:12 "Does your DVD Player PLUGE?" is much better than "Does your DVD Player Picture Line Up Generation?" 20:43:36 hehe 20:43:37 yeah 20:43:48 still - PLUGE? what a moronic acronym 20:44:42 not if you pronounce it "pluggy" 20:45:00 i thought it was plooj 20:45:07 * redmonk too 20:45:16 it most certainly is, but that sucks 20:45:21 uh huh 20:45:33 hence pluggy 20:45:43 most dvd players have pluggies, but few can really plooj! 20:45:49 heh 20:48:06 "hey, plooj this in for me will ya?" 20:54:35 hm. DW thinks he's getting the semantic web: http://scriptingnews.userland.com/backissues/2002/04/16#l3e6e9a6eb00a8fa741cc701d72da8255 20:56:41 hey, he sorta got it this time 20:56:48 Gotta run 20:57:02 indeed he did 20:57:10 what kind of photo is this? http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object.cgi?object=/chronicle/pictures/2002/04/16/bu_web2.jpg&paper=chronicle&file=BU155164.DTL&directory=/c/a/2002/04/16&type=business 20:57:11 but then he veers off onto... google? 20:57:19 google google google 20:57:45 if google started reading rss or rdf natively... 20:57:59 anyway 20:59:24 the photo is time-lapse 20:59:34 the guy is holding a flashlight 20:59:51 the guy == tbl 21:00:03 ah, good idea 21:00:10 which one? 21:00:14 * Morbus goes back to reading faif. 21:00:19 time-lapse flashlight photos 21:00:21 ah 21:00:37 old as dirt - I remember WORLD doing pics of kids with sparklers 21:00:45 back when i was half your age ;-) 21:00:58 yeah, but sparklers don't look the same. 21:01:11 (22 year ago... agh!!) 21:01:23 tbl almost looks american in that photo. weird 21:01:35 hehe 21:12:58 i need a url for N3 21:13:01 er, URI 21:13:24 "N3, beginnners guide to" if possible 21:14:43 got it 21:14:43 http://www.w3.org/2000/10/swap/Primer.html 21:15:05 filled with Genuine Tim Typoes 21:15:51 i shot dave off an email congratulating him and introducing him to n3 21:15:53 ;-) 21:15:59 ouvh 21:16:00 since he hates XML+namespaces so much ;-) 21:20:04 Morbus has quit ("http://www.disobey.com/") 21:27:55 * Seth implements the readRaw method of sem ... goes back to working in mines of speaktomecatalog.com 22:00:46 xoot (xoot@12.81.8.16) has joined #swhack 22:05:29 GabeW (~Gabe@12-236-237-100.client.attbi.com) has joined #swhack 22:05:56 hello, gabe 22:16:49 groovy flash interface: http://www.wireframe.co.za/default1.htm 22:17:24 * jillzilla gets frustrated. I wish I could read code. I can only write it. Everyone else's code just leaves me stumped. 22:18:13 Hm. I thought Perl was supposed to be the write-only language. ;-) 22:19:06 Oh, I can tell what's going _on_ in the functions, easily. But all of the functions in this library take a parameter called "servers" and I can't figure out how I'm supposed to generate it. It's a dictionary. 22:19:07 chmod 400 22:19:08 But seriously, I've found that if you stare at code long enough, it slowly begins to make sense. For a while it's very disheartening, though. 22:19:28 Perhaps I get discouraged too easily. 22:19:34 don't you have anything that calls them? 22:19:41 maybe. I was going to look for that. 22:20:00 print print print (or in "C", its printf, printf, printf) 22:20:08 Morbus (morbus@s108.terminal3.totalnetnh.net) has joined #swhack 22:20:25 I'm getting indignant that nobody bothered to put in a stupid comment telling how to use this. I mean, _every_ function in this library takes this argument; it seems obvious that someone using the library would have to know what it is. 22:20:50 what lib? 22:20:55 Heh. I'm being like my grandfather, who gets self-righteous when things are not As They Should Be. 22:21:02 It's a work-internal thing. 22:21:07 Heh, coders no like documentation. 22:21:21 i love documentation 22:21:21 i love writing it. 22:21:22 But code reviewers should. 22:21:35 Further evidence that Morbus is not well. ;-) 22:21:35 ok, except for Morbus 22:22:03 I actually get a sense of satisfaction out of writing docs that I think are good. Well, comments. I still don't like docs. 22:22:25 all I do is write docs these days 22:22:31 heh. jillz, have you seen my code? i go overboard on commentin. bad on the other end of the spectrum 22:22:34 * jillzilla feels much better for having complained. :-) Thanks, folks. 22:22:44 Morbus: You fill the code with stories? 22:23:00 jill: you wold not believe 22:23:03 it's insane 22:23:05 heh, sometimes. 22:23:05 who told you that? 22:23:07 he writes poetry and stuff 22:23:15 and fancy borders all over 22:23:17 * jillzilla laughs. 22:23:18 lol 22:23:19 whoo hoo! i'm infamous. 22:23:25 hheheh 22:23:30 "you're a looney" 22:23:56 "# "moving on down the world. looking for a place." " 22:24:01 1.0 Initialization ("wake up, you angst-filled goose!") 22:24:20 if i ever wrote a book about coding, it'd be one big code lsiting ;) 22:24:30 Oh, Morbus, you should! 22:24:35 * Morbus whistles... 22:25:00 :D 22:25:10 yeah, for or.... oh 22:25:12 yeah? 22:25:12 :) 22:25:56 i'd love to write a book on game programming in some "can't be done" langauge, like perl. 22:26:09 you don't see many games besides parlor tricks in perl. decent open source games, i mean, 22:26:14 it'd be a happy challenge. 22:26:55 maybe because perl is too slow for 3d graphics 22:27:13 well, it wouldn't be a video based game. 22:27:13 it'd be console/browser based only. 22:27:21 * jillzilla grins and goes back to the code. 22:27:22 i actually have a large design doc with a good portion of it planned out. 22:27:24 oh, that 22:27:30 have you seen 2d quake? 22:27:38 ascii quake? 22:27:50 (i mnea) 22:27:52 mean 22:27:52 although, i have been eveloping ideas of a client app that communicates strictly with a server. 22:27:52 rm: yeah 22:28:00 pretty funny 22:28:11 does anyone like iphoto in here? 22:28:15 Seth has quit () 22:28:16 i do 22:28:17 i dislike how it names things rolls on exports. 22:28:22 imports, rather. 22:28:26 uh huh 22:28:38 you can rename them though 22:28:39 any way around that? 22:28:49 i think 22:28:53 not sure 22:28:55 i mean, i add like an image a day, and they're coming in as "rolls 1-2". i don't want any rolls whatsoever. 22:29:00 not even by hiding the roll name. 22:29:04 hm. 22:29:06 no clue 22:29:07 then just hit delete 22:29:11 it's just like itunes in that sense 22:29:20 have not got our digicam yet 22:29:47 * Morbus sets up his fan. 22:29:48 man. 85 degress. ugh! 22:30:15 * redmonk points at morbus and laughs. 22:30:20 it was 100 here on sunday! 22:30:31 (85 today - it feels cold) 22:30:35 heh. yeah. well. 22:30:50 thats why i don't live in monkville. 22:30:52 freakin nahwtheners 22:31:25 yeah, what's your coldest weather, bitch, eh? 22:31:53 in PHX? probably about 15-20 22:32:09 overnight in winter 22:32:13 but very rare 22:32:46 it's the desert - the temperature fluxuations are pretty drastic day->night 22:34:07 xena has quit () 22:36:14 oh! 22:36:19 derrick said he lost the decepticon piece. 22:36:20 so i'm resending tonight. 22:36:23 maybe... maybe 22:37:53 heh 22:37:59 riiight. "Lost it" 22:38:05 heheheh. 22:38:10 heh 22:44:42 lol @ Further evidence that Morbus is not well. ;-) 22:44:51 lol 22:45:07 wb, sbp :) 22:45:22 heh: thats why i don't live in monkville. 22:45:43 thanks 22:45:43 bummer about the decepticon piece 22:45:43 but at least it means that they didn't laugh at it 22:45:52 xena (xena@mewtwo.espnow.com) has joined #swhack 22:46:08 either that, or it was a veiled attempt to cajole me into "losing" it as well. 22:47:00 or a hint that you'd already "lost it" 22:47:20 Seth (~seth@12-230-243-179.client.attbi.com) has joined #swhack 22:47:23 like these people in #infoAnarchy who claim that PDF is much nicer to read than HTML 22:48:00 i've been noticing that. 22:48:06 i've been trying not to comment 22:48:08 that's just stupid 22:50:05 i read lots of both and pdf is hands down nicer - you are all wrong! 22:50:15 heh, the losers 22:51:04 heh, if I didn't think that Gabe was joking... 22:52:06 actually, comparing html and pdf seems a little like apples and oranges to me 22:52:53 * GabeW slaps sbp silly 22:53:16 no, it's more like comparing dogshit and catshit. they both stink, and I don't like touching them with barge poles 22:53:27 too bad: I'm already silly 22:53:50 well, anyway, bye 22:54:05 bye 22:54:46 GabeW has quit ("Client Exiting") 22:55:02 heh: "One can write complex XSLT code in XSLScript and then generate the 100% XSLT stylesheet. Like I do. Occasionaly." - http://www.pault.com/XSLScript/pault/prod/XSLScript 22:57:48 AaronSw, you'll be happy to know that i'm transitioning from rss .9 on gamegrene to only 1.0. yay. 22:57:57 woo! 22:58:00 :) 22:58:10 its currently at index.rdf, just unlinked. 22:58:27 it'll be moving to index.xml sometime tonight. 22:58:36 to replace fully the rss 9 version without broken links. 22:58:47 nice 22:58:50 ooh. crap. the descirption is broken. 22:59:02 welp, guess i'll be making the change now ;) 22:59:19 xoot has quit ("bbl :D") 23:01:39 done! 23:01:40 xoot (~xoot@12.81.8.114) has joined #swhack 23:01:48 it's rael 1.0 template for MT, so it should be fine. 23:01:48 http://www.gamegrene.com/index.xml 23:02:21 yeah, i use rael's template too 23:02:26 ah. good. 23:02:35 hey, when you view it in IE view-source, do you have linefeed boxes? 23:02:39 yours and/or mine? 23:03:08 redmonk has quit (Remote closed the connection) 23:03:09 boxes? like funny box-chars? 23:03:13 yeah 23:03:14 IE does that for all XML 23:03:17 it's a little weird 23:03:22 well, no, this is for the line feeds. 23:03:29 like i've seen this in normal HTML source too 23:03:29 odd. you have
in one of your titles 23:03:33 yeah. 23:03:37 thats actually intentional. 23:03:41 for display on the site. 23:03:50 i've got to remove_html on it. 23:04:07 * AaronSw runs the feed thru the rss validator 23:04:34 lemme know. 23:05:17 i'm regen'ing now. 23:05:19 looks good. just one warning: one of your descriptions apparently > 500 characters 23:05:32 that's bad? 23:05:51 no, but it does break my.netscape.com... but who cares, since they're not around anymore 23:05:57 ah. 23:06:03 yeah, that rarely happens so i'm not going to worry about it. 23:06:17 yeah, i wouldn't 23:07:45 @ http://www.scottsweeney.com/projects/slip 23:08:11 what is with this XP fuzz 23:08:23 it's like in the process of anti-aliasing they drank too much 23:08:26 C: http://www.scottsweeney.com/projects/slip from sbp 23:08:34 or i'm using one of those bad LCD displaus 23:10:29 C:|SLiP: Sorta LIke Python shorthand for XML by Scott Sweeney 23:10:40 C::Neat, but the () should be optional if there are no attributes 23:10:48 titled item C 23:11:08 commented item C 23:11:22 exactly what I thought 23:12:50 this damn connection! it's terrible tonight 23:12:59 not as bad as DanC's :0 23:14:02 i actually need a better ad software. 23:14:11 this one is getting crufty and uses too much resources on heavy loads. 23:14:19 anyone have any experience with one? 23:14:35 oh, it's ClearType that's making everything look like some bad LCD display 23:15:25 xoot has quit (Killed (NickServ (Ghost: xooter!xoot@191.sanjose-05-10rs16rt.ca.dial-access.att.net))) 23:16:02 xoot (xoot@191.sanjose-05-10rs16rt.ca.dial-access.att.net) has joined #swhack 23:17:03 wow, this image makes my eyes hurt: http://www.microsoft.com/typography/faq/lines.gif 23:17:28 what's it supposed to be? 23:17:39 i can't connect to microsoft.com, dunno why 23:17:45 on my machine it's alternating black and white stripes 23:18:03 it is 23:19:47 mainly black, with thin bits of grey in between 23:24:20 you must have a crt 23:25:13 ah, no, you're right. my graphics program blurred it by mistake (er.. O.K., I blurred it by mistake) 23:27:09 wow, mozilla is way faster than IE5 23:27:14 well, chimera 23:27:20 i love chim 23:27:27 of course! 23:27:49 and I also like the anti-aliased text 23:27:58 wow, deus_x wins the Dave Winer "very smart guy" award! 23:28:06 heheheheh. 23:28:14 fanfare for deus_x! 23:28:51 how does one increase/decrease font-size in Chimera? 23:28:59 ummm... 23:29:02 it's a beta 23:29:11 or maybe an alpha 23:29:16 but it seems promising 23:29:17 so you can't? 23:29:21 no 23:29:45 don't worry, Aaron; It is promising 23:29:52 indeed it is 23:30:06 AaronSw, do you know if osascript can do a multiple line AS? 23:30:12 sure it can 23:30:18 i'd like to cron a popup window, with two buttons, etc. 23:30:37 for a backup script. 23:32:04 neat 23:32:31 cos, i can't just cron the thing, cos then itd go online at weird momemts, etc. 23:32:37 (this is a FTP-to-HD backup thing) 23:32:50 so I want a "yes, i'm online" button. 23:32:53 gotta run: dinner