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Wheany posted:i want to make a "worksafe" version of cloud-to-butt that changes "the cloud" to "a server or servers somewhere"
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 20:43 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 04:51 |
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"the cloud" to "someone else's computer" efb
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 20:43 |
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why is walking a networked directory so impossibly slow
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 21:10 |
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Bloody posted:why is walking a networked directory so impossibly slow are you using nfs? is it a big directory? are you doing a stat on every file? I have known this to be a bad combination because apparently it's not optimised in any way despite being an obvious case to expect
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 21:25 |
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i am recursively searching for files in a directory with names that match a pattern and either this directory is several orders of magnitude larger than i thought (it is pretty big & deep to be fair) or the throughput on this is literally tens of directories per second
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 21:28 |
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it doesnt help that .net's builtin directory walker (Directory.EnumerateDirectories/EnumerateFiles) fails terribly if you don't have read access to everything in the directory/subdirectories
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 21:29 |
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Shinku ABOOKEN posted:alt+prtsc is your frieond scrot -s is real good. also I don't have a prtsc key
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 21:52 |
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VOTE YES ON 69 posted:scrot -s is real good. also I don't have a prtsc key
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 21:53 |
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VOTE YES ON 69 posted:scrote -s is real good. also I don't have a prtsc key
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 21:54 |
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anthonypants posted:what if you don't have a scrot lol have fun not having something stuck to your leg on hot days!
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 22:03 |
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Got a surprise email just now that effective tomorrow until some undetermined time in the future (months) there is a company-wide coding freeze so that the big "fix our ancient, vast, tangled, and awful IT product suite for the entire company" project doesn't have to deal with moving goalposts. Good news is my job is not in danger.
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 22:21 |
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ThePeavstenator posted:company-wide coding freeze ahahahahahaha
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 22:24 |
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the best part about scrot is that it names all its file i.e. 2016-09-28-161423_690x213_scrot.png so you get to explain to people constantly why your screenshot is named _scrot.png
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 22:25 |
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i mean that and its real good at screenshotting stuff
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 22:25 |
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ThePeavstenator posted:Got a surprise email just now that effective tomorrow until some undetermined time in the future (months) there is a company-wide coding freeze so that the big "fix our ancient, vast, tangled, and awful IT product suite for the entire company" project doesn't have to deal with moving goalposts. Good news is my job is not in danger. stop-the-world garbage collection
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 22:26 |
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i once worked at a place that had a two week code freeze after each release during which we were to work on refactoring and cleanup, but were not allowed to make any changes to the code. i eventually gave up on trying to understand what this was supposed to consist of and just accepted the two week break every 6 months.
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:08 |
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JawnV6 posted:stop-the-world garbage collection
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:13 |
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JawnV6 posted:stop-the-world garbage collection
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:23 |
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btw this is a fortune-500 company with thousands of employees that does not make or sell software externally
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:27 |
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i'm not sure what a "coding freeze" even is, but it sounds like everyone would create local branches simultaneously and then when it ends you'd be paralysed by conflicting pull requests??
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:34 |
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it sounds like time id spend loving off to side projects or 'working from home'
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:34 |
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Gul Banana posted:i'm not sure what a "coding freeze" even is, but it sounds like everyone would create local branches simultaneously and then when it ends you'd be paralysed by conflicting pull requests?? If you try to write even a single line of code a nun from the local catholic school runs up to your desk and raps you on the knuckles with a ruler
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:39 |
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we also have a freeze but I think it has something to do with preventing insider trading or something like that
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:44 |
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Gul Banana posted:i'm not sure what a "coding freeze" even is, but it sounds like everyone would create local branches simultaneously and then when it ends you'd be paralysed by conflicting pull requests?? like looking at the JIRA backlog and taking a hard look if it's never going to get done so that it's closer to reality looking at the test suite and building up things that would've caught huge issues earlier looking at integration with other teams/business groups and taking the time to stake out "this is yours, this is ours, this is how we delineate in the future" that's one thing I miss about silicon work, when you finally say OK GO there's 8 weeks until first samples are back, it's mostly a time for pre-si to take the vacations that have been denied but it's also when the postmortems and other work like that starts
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:46 |
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JawnV6 posted:trying to put my charitable hat on, you wouldn't just be hiding coding work from view, you'd actually put the IDE away and work on the other collateral in your world
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# ? Nov 14, 2016 23:52 |
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Finster Dexter posted:lmao if you code six hours a day same. i got a basic grid working in mvc6 with some plugin, tried to get filtering working, got some bullshit javascript error and couldn't find the answer by googling it so i gave up
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 00:01 |
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also we have freezes every 3 months ish but you can usually release anyway if you have a good reason like "the US election is not going to have a knock on effect on [internal DMS] UI bugs please let me release this" but there's always one at christmas because everyone is away where you need CIO approval or something and without fail, the end users panic and demand we do a load of stuff just before and somebody somewhere always fucks up. one year was pretty funny though because a user deleted like 2500 records by mistake on day 1 of the freeze and we went "oh well our hands are tied, guess you'll need to enter them manually or wait until january lol".
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 00:07 |
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Bloody posted:gdocs is horrible. webapps are all horrible. also google docs is a good way to hand all your company's intellectual property to google on a silver platter they have to have access to the documents so they can index it to show the right ads, don't they? they couldn't possibly ever do anything else with information they extract
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 00:45 |
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if i was goggle i'd have someone who just sat & watched search queries from every big competitor's range bing couldn't possibly staff that lol eschaton posted:they couldn't possibly ever do anything else with information they extract
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 00:47 |
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google docs doesn't have ads
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 00:47 |
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JawnV6 posted:trying to put my charitable hat on, you wouldn't just be hiding coding work from view, you'd actually put the IDE away and work on the other collateral in your world lol that's when we start working on the next iteration or start taping out other stuff our process is p lol
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 00:59 |
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Gul Banana posted:i'm not sure what a "coding freeze" even is, but it sounds like everyone would create local branches simultaneously and then when it ends you'd be paralysed by conflicting pull requests?? a code freeze way back in the day was when a release was considered complete and ready to be shipped. Nowdays a code freeze is when management doesn't know why none of their 1000 critical items are done so they stop all work (except the really critical stuff) until they can figure out whats going on.
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:05 |
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learning typescript now. its better, but i have to say that it seems odd to me that theyd write a language specifically to take away the weirdness of js but then still hold onto stuff like the weird usage of colons in function signatures and poo poo like that. if youre going to make a good language that transpiles to js, why only take me half way in the name of preserving aesthetic similarity to js?
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:21 |
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Plorkyeran posted:google docs doesn't have ads isn't it widely understood that the ads google shows you all over the web are tailored based on the content you've viewed anywhere to which google has access, including Gmail and presumably Google Docs?
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:23 |
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LeftistMuslimObama posted:learning typescript now. its better, but i have to say that it seems odd to me that theyd write a language specifically to take away the weirdness of js but then still hold onto stuff like the weird usage of colons in function signatures and poo poo like that. if youre going to make a good language that transpiles to js, why only take me half way in the name of preserving aesthetic similarity to js? others tried to do more but JavaScript jockeys freaked out because it wasn't sufficiently JavaScript for them it's the same logic used to justify Java having a C++ style syntax instead of a Smalltalk like syntax like Objective-C did, and it really reaped a lot of rewards there by avoiding that immediate and superficial objection
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:28 |
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eschaton posted:isn't it widely understood that the ads google shows you all over the web are tailored based on the content you've viewed anywhere to which google has access, including Gmail and presumably Google Docs?
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:28 |
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eschaton posted:isn't it widely understood that the ads google shows you all over the web are tailored based on the content you've viewed anywhere to which google has access, including Gmail and presumably Google Docs? afaict only the free versions feed into what ads you see. i see ads suspiciously related to some random inbound email i got on a personal account all the time, but i've never noticed it happening for emails i got on a work account or "private" docs. obviously they still have all of that data and you'd be dumb to give them anything too critical without a contract significantly stronger than what the normal tos gives you, but they do appear to have at least some minimal separation
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:42 |
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eschaton posted:others tried to do more but JavaScript jockeys freaked out because it wasn't sufficiently JavaScript for them god ur making me want to implement a mumps-to-javascript transpiler, but i have no idea how to even begin implementing a full b+ tree in js. maybe someone's already written a lib whose syntax i can wrap in mumps syntax?
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:43 |
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you can't meaningfully implement a b+ tree in a language that doesn't give you any control over memory layout. you can write all of the algorithms and such, but if the end result doesn't have your leaves in contiguous blocks of memory it's all sort of pointless
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:48 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 04:51 |
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LeftistMuslimObama posted:god ur making me want to implement a mumps-to-javascript transpiler, but i have no idea how to even begin implementing a full b+ tree in js. maybe someone's already written a lib whose syntax i can wrap in mumps syntax? Plorkyeran posted:you can't meaningfully implement a b+ tree in a language that doesn't give you any control over memory layout. you can write all of the algorithms and such, but if the end result doesn't have your leaves in contiguous blocks of memory it's all sort of pointless you totally have control over memory layout you just write a little stack machine in JS that uses a bunch of giant arrays for its memory, and the target your compiler at the stack machine, not directly at JS
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# ? Nov 15, 2016 01:55 |